Nanohydrogels steer cancer drugs to tumors, aiming to spare healthy tissue

Researcher is working to send cancer drugs to tumors—and avoid healthy tissue
a) A schematic representation of the synthesis and composition of fluorescently labeled siRNA-loaded SANGs. b) Physicochemical property characterization of SANGs. c) Negative-stain TEM image of SANGs. Credit: Nature Communications (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-66788-4

Exhaustion creeps in. Appetite vanishes. Hair thins. The person in the mirror looks gaunt. It’s the paradox of cancer treatment: The same drugs meant to save a life can also wear the body down. Nick Housley, assistant professor in Georgia Tech’s School of Biological Sciences, wants to change that. He studies where cancer drugs go once they’re inside the body, including places they were never intended to reach. Some of the medicine finds the tumor. The rest interacts with healthy tissue.

This approach has saved mill...

Read More

Aerosol jet printing creates durable, low-power transistors for next-generation tech

Printing electronic parts for next-generation technologies
Aerosol jet printer at Argonne used to deposit custom nanoparticle inks and build printed electronic parts for low-power transistor devices. Credit: Argonne National Laboratory

Tiny electronic devices, called microelectronics, may one day be printed as easily as words on a page, thanks to new research from scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory. Building on years of progress in printed electronics, the team has shown how to create durable, low-power electronic switches, called transistors, by combining custom inks and a specialized printing process.

These switches, which control the flow of electrical current to turn circuits on and off, use very little power, are built to last and show new behaviors not seen in earlier printed devices...

Read More

Astrophysicists trace the origin of valuable metals in space, from colliding stars to merging galaxies

An illustration shows a galaxy merger, an event that leads to star collisions and the creation of valuable metals. Fortuna, Dichiara/ERC BHianca 2026, CC BY-NC-SA 4.0, CC BY-SA

Billions of light years away in a remote part of the universe, two neutron stars—the ultradense remnants of dead stars—collided. The catastrophic cosmic event sent light and particles, including a sudden flash of gamma rays, streaming through the universe. These gamma rays traveled for 8.5 billion years before reaching Earth.

In a new study, our team of astrophysicists examined this gamma-ray signal. We learned that the stellar collision it came from was likely caused by an even more catastrophic encounter—a merger between two galaxies.

This is the first time astronomers associated this type of sig...

Read More

Circadian rhythm drives metabolic dysfunction in fat cells, study finds

Joseph Bass, MD, PhD, the Charles F. Kettering Professor of Endocrinology and Metabolism and director of the Center for Diabetes and Metabolism, was senior author of the study published in Nature Metabolism. 

Northwestern Medicine scientists led by Joseph Bass, MD, Ph.D., the Charles F. Kettering Professor of Endocrinology and Metabolism and director of the Center for Diabetes and Metabolism, have discovered how disruptions in the circadian rhythm impair metabolic function in fat cells, providing new insights into the molecular mechanisms that cause obesity and metabolic disease, according to a recent study published in Nature Metabolism.

“It’s not simply the accrual of excess fat that leads to disease...

Read More