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Synthetic Droplets Cause Stir In Primordial Soup – Mirage News

Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University

Our bodies are made up of trillions of different cells, each fulfilling their own unique function to keep us alive.

How do cells move around inside these extremely complicated systems? How do they know where to go? And how did they get so complicated to begin with? Simple yet profound questions like these are at the heart of curiosity-driven basic research, which focuses on the fundamental principles of natural phenomena. An important example is the process by which cells or organisms move in response to chemical signals in their environment, also known as chemotaxis.

A constellation of researchers from three different research units at the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology (OIST) came together to answer basic questions about chemotaxis by creating synthetic droplets to mimic the phenomena in the lab, allowing them to precisely isolate, control and study the phenomena. Their results, which helps answering questions about the principles of movement in simple biological systems, have now been published in the Journal of The American Chemical Society. “We have shown that it is possible to make protein droplets migrate through simple chemical interactions,” says Alessandro Bevilacqua, PhD student in the Protein Engineering and Evolution Unit and co-first author on the paper. Professor Paola Laurino, head of the unit and leading author, adds that they “have created a simple system that mimic a very complex phenomenon, and which can be modulated through enzymatic activity.”

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How do the droplets move, and what determines their direction? Each green droplet is densely packed with proteins as well as an enzyme that increases the pH-value within and around the droplet, which may lead to the answer to these questions.

Tensions on the surface

While the process of creating droplets might not sound like the most complicated task, mimicking biological processes as close to reality as possible while keeping accurate control over all the variables certainly is. The synthetic, membrane-less droplets contain a very high concentration of the bovine protein BSA to mimic the crowded conditions inside cells, as well as urease, an enzyme that catalyzes the breakdown of urea into ammonia.

Ammonia is basic, meaning it has a high pH-value. As the enzyme gradually catalyzes the production of ammonia, it diffuses into the solution, creating a ‘halo’ of higher pH around the droplet, which in turn enables droplets to detect other droplets and migrate towards each other.

Three figures showing the principles of droplet movement
Three figures showing the principles of droplet movement caused by the Marangoni flow. The synthetic droplets contain the enzyme urease which catalyzes the breakdown of urea into ammonia, which has a high pH-value. Droplets migrate due to the pH gradient, from low to high, because of the Marangoni effect.

The researchers found that the key to understanding the chemotaxis of the droplets is the pH-gradient, as it facilitates the Marangoni effect, which describes how molecules flow from areas of high surface tension to low. Surface tension is the measure of energy required to keep molecules at the surface together, like glue. When pH increases, this glue weakens, causing molecules to spread out and lowering surface tension, which in turn makes it easier for molecules to move. You can see this by adding soap, which has a high pH, to one end of a bathtub of still water: the water will flow towards the end with soap because of the Marangoni effect.

When two synthetic droplets are close enough, their halos interact, raising the pH in the environment between them, which makes them move together. Because the surface tension is still strong on the opposite ends of the droplets, they keep their shape until the surfaces touch, and the cohesive forces within the droplets overcome the surface tension, causing them to merge. As larger droplets both produce more ammonia and have a larger surface area (which decreases surface tension), they attract droplets smaller than themselves.

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Numerical models showing what happens when the halos of two synthetic droplets interact. pH in the space between the droplets is higher (and surface tension lower), which causes the droplets to migrate towards each other while keeping their spherical shape, as pH is lower within the droplets, until they meet and merge. Larger droplets attract smaller droplets.

Collaborating on ancient soup and future biotech

Thanks to the development of these droplets, the researchers have made headway in answering basic questions about biological movement – and in doing so, they have gained insight into the directed movement of the earliest forms of life in the primordial soup billions of years ago, as well as a lead on creating new biologically inspired materials.

Our knowledge of life as it looked billions of years ago is fuzzy at best. A prominent hypothesis is that life originated in the oceans, as organic molecules gradually assembled and became more sophisticated in a ‘primordial soup’ – and this could have been facilitated by chemotaxis through the Marangoni effect. “It would have been beneficial for droplets to have this mechanism of migration in the hypothetical origin of life scenario,” as Professor Laurino puts it. This migration could have triggered the formation of primitive metabolic pathways whereby enzymes catalyze a variety of substances that ultimately produce a chemical gradient that drives the droplets together, leading to larger and more sophisticated communities.

The research also points ahead in time, providing leads on new technology. “One example is the creation of responsive materials inspired by biology,” suggests Alessandro Bevilacqua. “We have shown how simple droplets can migrate thanks to a chemical gradient. A future application of this could be technologies that sense or react to chemical gradients, for example in micro-robotics or drug delivery.”

The work to produce and analyze the synthetic droplets is the result of a combination of deeply integrated interdisciplinarity and the human factors undergirding scientific work. The project began during the coronavirus pandemic, when a member of the Protein Engineering and Evolution Unit was in quarantine with a member of the Complex Fluids and Flows Unit. The two began talking, and though the two units are from two disparate fields – biochemistry and mechanics, respectively – the project evolved in tandem. Eventually, members from the Micro/Bio/Nanofluidics Unit joined the project with sophisticated measurements of the droplets’ surface tension.

The unique non-disciplinary research environment at OIST catalyzed the collaboration. As Professor Laurino puts it, “this project could never have existed if we were separated by departments. It hasn’t been an easy collaboration, because we communicate our field in very different ways – but being physically close made it significantly easier.” Alessandro Bevilacqua joins in: “The coffee factor has been very important. Being able to sit down with other unit members made the process much faster and more productive.” Their cooperation doesn’t stop here – rather, this paper is the beginning of a fruitful partnership between the three units. “We see a lot of synergy in our work, and we work effectively and efficiently together. I don’t see a reason why we should stop,” as Professor Laurino states it. It’s thanks to the combined efforts of the three units that we now know more about the minute movements of life at the smallest, earliest, and possibly future scale.

The researchers at OIST behind the chemotaxis study
The researchers at OIST who made the research possible. From left to right: Dr. Giovanni Soligo, PhD-student Alessandro Bevilacqua, Professor Paola Laurino, Professor Amy Shen, Dr. Vincenzo Calabrese and Professor Marco Rosti. Not pictured is co-first author Mirco Dindo, who is now at the University of Perugia. Photo: Adrian Skov

/Public Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).View in full here.

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Funding boost of $36.5m will help eliminate blinding disease in Africa – NewsDay

Plans to eliminate the blinding disease trachoma from 16 African countries, including Zimbabwe, have been boosted with $36.5m in new funding. Twelve of the countries supported through the Accelerate programme, led by the non-profit Sightsavers, hope to eliminate trachoma by 2027 and three will make significant progress towards this goal in that time.

Trachoma begins as a bacterial infection, with symptoms similar to conjunctivitis. But repeated infections cause scarring that makes people’s eyelashes turn inwards and scrape painfully against the eye with every blink. Left untreated it can lead to sight loss and permanent blindness. 

Peter Bare, Country Director for Sightsavers Zimbabwe, said: “Trachoma is a horrific disease which stops people from earning a living, growing food, cooking and caring for their families and going to school. People describe the pain as like having sand or thorns in their eyes.”

“Through Accelerate, Sightsavers were able to support the government of Benin to eliminate trachoma in 2023 and this new funding will supercharge our support for 16 more countries, including Zimbabwe, to finally end the scourge of trachoma.”

The additional funds will extend the Accelerate programme, which began in 2018, as part of The Audacious Project, hosted by TED. The new funding is from international donors which include the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Children’s Investment Fund Foundation, The ELMA Foundation and, for Zambia, The Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust as well as Sightsavers own contribution.

Sightsavers has more than 70 years’ experience working with governments in more than 30 countries to control and eliminate NTDs. To date, they have supported ministries of health to deliver over 1.7 billion NTD treatments and worked with governments in Ghana, Gambia, Malawi, Benin and Mali to successfully eliminated trachoma as a public health problem.

The twelve countries targeted to eliminate trachoma as a public health problem by 2027 are: Botswana, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Guinea-Bissau, Guinea, Namibia, Senegal, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe. Meanwhile Nigeria, Kenya and Mozambique will make significant progress towards elimination. The fund will also contribute support to Ethiopia, which carries the highest burden of the disease in the world.

Find out more about Accelerate at www.sightsavers.org/programmes/accelerate/

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Wempe And Girard-Perregaux Unveil Limited-Edition Laureato Chronograph – Forbes

Watch and jewelry retailer, Wempe, launched the latest iteration of its “Signature Collection” with Girard-Perregaux.

This Signature Collection consists of a series of limited edition and exclusive timepieces made in collaboration with best-in-class watch manufacturers, available only at Wempe, which includes the retailer’s Fifth Avenue New York store in the Peninsula New York Hotel. Previous Signature Collection releases partnerships were with Nomos, Chopard and Breitling.

The latest release with Girard-Perregaux is the 42mm Laureato Chronograph. The most distinctive feature of this timepiece is the shiny copper-colored dial with a Clous-de-Paris pattern that plays with light. Adding contrast are three silver-colored subdials with radial polishing. The rhodium plated baton-shaped hour markers and hour and minute hands are topped with a luminous green coating. The subdial hands and central chronograph seconds hand are gold plated. The date disk at 4:30 has a copper-color finish and the Girard-Perregaux logo at 12 o’clock is gold-plated.

The small seconds is at 3 o’clock. The two other counters for the chronograph measure elapsed minutes at 9 o’clock and hours at 6 o’clock; with the elapsed seconds measured on the central chronograph hand. The dial is completed with an anti-reflective sapphire crystal top.

The dial is housed in a 42mm 904L stainless steel satin-finished and polished case with the signature Laureato octagonal bezel. The stainless steel three-position screw-down winding crown is at 3 o’clock with the chronograph pushers on either side of the crown.

The stainless-steel screw-down caseback is water resistant to 10 bar. It’s engraved with “Wempe Signature Collection” and “One of 100.”

The watch is powered by the caliber GP03300-2361 automatic movement, produced in-house with 419 components, including 63 jewels. It operates at 4 hertz (28,800 vph) and has a 46-hour power reserve.

The watch is completed with an integrated bracelet made of satin-finished and polished 904L stainless steel.

Kim Eva Wempe, owner and managing director of Wempe, says the watch “has a modern look, yet at the same time, still stays true to the original design of the 1970s.”

Patrick Pruniaux, CEO of Girard-Perregaux, adds, “The partnership between our two companies is rooted in a shared history, tradition, and a free-spirited mindset that allows us to push the boundaries of Haute Horlogerie,” adding that the launch of the signature collection Laureato is “evidence of our ongoing commitment to celebrate and advance the heritage of gifted watchmakers, aesthetes, and visionaries.”

Ruediger Albers, president of Wempe US, says the Laureato collection has been a top seller for the New York retail store since it was re-introduced in 2017. “There are a lot of synergies between the two brands, both being independently owned and rooted in tradition. I am delighted to have the opportunity to offer such an exceptional watch to our clientele.”

The Wempe Signature Laureato Chronograph is limited to 100 pieces and retails for $18,600. It is available at all Wempe boutiques worldwide and online at www.wempe.com.

Wempe is a family-owned retailer based in Hamburg, Germany, founded in 1878. It has 32 retail locations in Europe, the United Kingdom and the U.S., including New York, Paris, Vienna and Madrid.

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Manchester City vs Wolves LIVE: Premier League latest score and updates – The Independent

(EPA)

Erling Haaland scored four goals – including a first-half hat-trick – as champions Manchester City crushed Wolves 5-1 to retain control of the Premier League title race.

Pep Guardiola’s side needed to respond to leaders Arsenal’s victory over Bournemouth earlier on Saturday and they did so emphatically, with a clinical take-down of their hapless visitors at the Etihad Stadium.

Haaland struck twice from the penalty spot in the first half, either side of a towering header, before adding a fourth with a stunning strike. Substitute Julian Alvarez also got on the scoresheet, while Wolves’ consolation came from Hwang Hee-chan.

The victory lifted City, chasing an unprecedented fourth successive league crown, back within a point of the Gunners with a game in hand. Haaland’s outstanding display took his tally for the campaign to 36 in all competitions and lifted him to 25 – five clear of his nearest challengers – in the race for the Premier League’s Golden Boot. His hat-trick was also his ninth in City colours.

Relive all the action below:

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Erling Haaland shows Man City’s transformation from the recent past

After a glimpse of Manchester City’s stylish past came an illustration of their powerful present. David Silva was on the pitch at the Etihad Stadium before kick-off, his first return since his 2021 departure allowing the City faithful to pay tribute to an old favourite. Erling Haaland took the field after that, scored four goals in under an hour and left City only requiring three more wins to clinch a record fourth consecutive title.

Silva captained them to the first but if he was upstaged on his return, that is probably how a self-effacing figure prefers it. If there has been a shift in City’s identity, from the small Spanish passer to the giant Norwegian scorer, the midfielder may be far more emblematic of Pep Guardiola’s natural philosophy than the striker. But goals have an eloquence of their own and on days like this, when Haaland is marauding and magnificent, there is a pragmatic logic to recalibrating the side around him.

Chris Wilson4 May 2024 20:15

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FT: Manchester City 5-1 Wolves

Guardiola is next to speak to Sky. He says that Haaland was angry with refereeing decisions, rather than his decision to bring the Norwegian off.

“With the long balls sometimes they push him and he is pulled,” he adds.

“It looks comfortable but it was not. In the end we created more chances but in the transition we were not precise in the last pass. But Erling is back to business. Penalties are a guarantee but the second and fourth were unbelievable.

“They are a really, really good team but we made calls in the right moment, especially with the fourth because at 3-1 anything can happen.

“Goal difference is not possible, we cannot draw. The way Arsenal have been playing has been so good and consistent.

“It’s three games, hopefully we win the first and the second and arrive to the third with our destiny in our own hands.”

Chris Wilson4 May 2024 20:00

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FT: Manchester City 5-1 Wolves

Haaland is the first in front of the Sky cameras.

He says that City need to “keep going and focus on next week”.

He says that 25 goals this season is “not bad”, and adds that he finds motivation from “a not so bad manager who pushes me”.

“Look at the players around me, without them it would not be possible. 

“I try to develop every single day. I had some problems but let’s not focus on them, focus on the positive things.”

He adds that City need to “look ahead to the next one”.

“We’ve got four finals ahead,” he adds.

When asked about the potential importance of goal difference, he replies: “First of all it’s about winning the games, but of course you want to have the best goal difference”.

“But don’t think about that – think about Fulham.”

Chris Wilson4 May 2024 19:50

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FT: Manchester City 5-1 Wolves

For the home side, attention turns to their trip to south London on 11 May. They face Fulham in the early kick-off next Saturday, before a midweek trip to Tottenham for their game in hand.

Wolves also travel to south London next week, for a game against Crystal Palace.

Chris Wilson4 May 2024 19:42

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Real Madrid are La Liga champions!

Meanwhile in Spain, Catalan giants Barcelona have been beaten 4-2 by regional rivals Girona. That result means that Real Madrid are La Liga champions after beating Cadiz 3-0 today!

Girona have also guaranteed themselves Champions League qualification for the first time.

Chris Wilson4 May 2024 19:37

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FT: Manchester City 5-1 Wolves

(Getty Images)
(Getty Images)
(Getty Images)
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Chris Wilson4 May 2024 19:35

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FT: Manchester City 5-1 Wolves

FULL-TIME! The ref blows the whistle and City have strolled to another win. There’s one point in the title race once more.

A comprehensive home victory, and they’re one behind with a game in hand. Business as usual for Guardiola’s side.

Chris Wilson4 May 2024 19:29

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Manchester City 5-1 Wolves

94 mins: Grealish spreads it wide to Doku, who beats Ait-Nouri again as he surges into the box. He cuts a cross back, but Alvarez hits it behind. That’ll be that.

Chris Wilson4 May 2024 19:28

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Manchester City 5-1 Wolves

92 mins: City still on the attack as Rodri and Doku look to create something, but nothing else yet.

The Belgian beats Ait-Nouri down the right, but his cross is headed behind.

Chris Wilson4 May 2024 19:26

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Manchester City 5-1 Wolves

90 mins: Nunes has a chance to extend the lead further as he tries to control Doku’s cross, but it runs to the ‘keeper. Should have hit it first time.

There’ll be four minutes of added time.

Chris Wilson4 May 2024 19:24

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