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EarthSpace 2026

Register now for 2026! A discussion of Earth and space on Earth Day, with Frank White, me, and other great guests!


EarthSpace 2026 brings together leaders, thinkers, and builders to explore one core idea: the future of Earth and the future of space are not separate conversations.

From climate solutions to space infrastructure, from policy to culture, the choices we make today will define how humanity lives on this planet—and beyond it.

This is not a passive webinar. It’s a focused, high-signal conversation with people actively shaping the frontier.

Nociceptive neurons protect cancer cells against oxidative stress

How cancer cells exploit the tumor microenvironment to alleviate oxidative stress remains largely unclear. Zhang et al. find that nociceptive neurons, via secretion of EREG, protect HNSCC against oxidative stress-induced cell death. Targeting nociceptive neurons improves the therapeutic efficacy of chemotherapies, including cisplatin.

A simple shot shows promise to reverse osteoarthritis within weeks

A research team including scientists and engineers from University of Colorado Boulder, CU Anschutz and Colorado State University has developed a suite of new therapies that prompt aging or damaged joints to repair themselves within weeks, according to animal studies.

The new osteoarthritis treatments include a single, regenerative injection to a joint and a biomaterial repair kit that recruits the body’s own cells to patch holes in damaged cartilage.

To expedite the research, the federal Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H) announced this week that the multidisciplinary team will advance to the next phase of the project.

The sun is tearing an asteroid to pieces, and Earth is now flying through the fallout

Across Earth, every night, thousands of automated stargazers are waiting to take pictures of shooting stars. I am one of the scientists who study these meteors.

Most movies and news alerts focus on large asteroids that could destroy Earth. And your phone notifies you every few months that an object nine washing machines wide is going to just narrowly skim past. However, the small dust and rubble that enter our atmosphere daily tell an equally interesting story.

My planetary science colleagues and I use camera observations of the night sky to better understand dust, car-sized asteroids and debris from comets in our solar system.

Targeting KRAS G12C Mutation in Colorectal Cancer, A Review: New Arrows in the Quiver

Kirsten rat sarcoma virus oncogene homolog (KRAS) is the most frequently mutated oncogene in human cancer. In colorectal cancer (CRC), KRAS mutations are present in more than 50% of cases, and the KRAS glycine-to-cysteine mutation at codon 12 (KRAS G12C) occurs in up to 4% of patients. This mutation is associated with short responses to standard chemotherapy and worse overall survival compared to non-G12C mutations. In recent years, several KRAS G12C inhibitors have demonstrated clinical activity, although all patients eventually progressed. The identification of negative feedback through the EGFR receptor has led to the development of KRAS inhibitors plus an anti-EGFR combination, thus boosting antitumor activity. Currently, several KRAS G12C inhibitors are under development, and results from phase I and phase II clinical trials are promising.

Frontiers: As a significant mental health disorder worldwide

The treatment of depression has long faced the challenges of a low treatment rate, significant drug side effects and a high relapse rate. Recent studies have revealed that the gut microbiota and neuronal mitochondrial dysfunction play central roles in the pathogenesis of depression: the gut microbiota influences the course of depression through multiple pathways, including immune regulation, HPA axis modulation and neurotransmitter metabolism. Mitochondrial function serves as a key hub that mediates mood disorders through mechanisms such as defective energy metabolism, impaired neuroplasticity and amplified neuroinflammation. Notably, a bidirectional regulatory network exists between the gut microbiota and mitochondria: the flora metabolite butyrate enhances mitochondrial biosynthesis through activation of the AMPK–PGC1α pathway, whereas reactive oxygen species produced by mitochondria counteract the flora composition by altering the intestinal epithelial microenvironment. In this study, we systematically revealed the potential pathways by which the gut microbiota improves neuronal mitochondrial function by regulating neurotransmitter synthesis, mitochondrial autophagy, and oxidative stress homeostasis and proposed the integration of probiotic supplementation, dietary fiber intervention, and fecal microbial transplantation to remodel the flora–mitochondrial axis, which provides a theoretical basis for the development of novel antidepressant therapies targeting gut–brain interactions.

Depression is a disorder that severely affects the mental health of the global population and is characterized by persistent low mood, loss of interest and cognitive dysfunction (GBD 2017 Disease and Injury Incidence and Prevalence Collaborators, 2018; COVID-19 Mental Disorders Collaborators, 2021; Salari et al., 2020). Globally, depression is one of the leading causes of mental disability. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), the global prevalence of depression is approximately 4.4%, which means that more than 300 million people worldwide suffer from depression (Xu et al., 2024). In addition, depression is one of the major causes of suicide deaths, with nearly 800,000 people worldwide dying by suicide each year (World Health Organization, 2021).

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