FlashFeed

England held to dull 0-0 by Ghana – a reality check but no need to panic
⚽ Sport

England held to dull 0-0 by Ghana – a reality check but no need to panic

England drew 0-0 with Ghana in a friendly, producing a flat and uninspiring performance. BBC journalist Phil McNulty argues the result is not cause for panic but is a genuine reality check for Thomas Tuchel's side. The display exposed weaknesses England must address heading into competitive fixtures.

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Streptomyces bacteria naturally evolved combo antibiotics targeting biotin synthesis
🔬 Science

Streptomyces bacteria naturally evolved combo antibiotics targeting biotin synthesis

Scientists have discovered that Streptomyces bacteria carry a conserved biosynthetic gene megacluster encoding multiple distinct antimicrobial compounds. All these antibiotics converge on the same bacterial target — biotin biosynthesis — acting as a naturally evolved combination therapy. The finding was published in Nature on 24 June 2026 and could inform new antibiotic development strategies.

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Alternate RNA decoding produces stable, abundant proteins — reshaping molecular biology
🔬 Science

Alternate RNA decoding produces stable, abundant proteins — reshaping molecular biology

A study published in Nature on 24 June 2026 shows that alternate RNA decoding — a previously understudied process in mammals — causes peptide sequence modifications with significant functional consequences. These changes affect protein stability, tissue-specific proteomes and may be linked to disease mechanisms. The findings open a new dimension in understanding gene expression beyond standard translation.

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Deep learning finds ECG biomarker predicting sudden cardiac death better than current methods
🏥 Health

Deep learning finds ECG biomarker predicting sudden cardiac death better than current methods

A deep-learning model trained on electrocardiogram (ECG) waveforms has identified an easily visible biomarker that predicts sudden cardiac death more accurately than current clinical approaches, according to research published in Nature on 24 June 2026. The biomarker can be detected directly from standard ECG recordings, potentially making it straightforward to implement in clinical practice. The discovery could help identify high-risk patients before a fatal event occurs.

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New tantalum alloy withstands 2,400°C while staying ductile at room temperature
🔬 Science

New tantalum alloy withstands 2,400°C while staying ductile at room temperature

Researchers have developed a boron-stabilized, oxide-strengthened tantalum alloy that achieves 100 MPa tensile strength at 2,400°C — a record for ultrahigh-temperature materials. Crucially, it also maintains exceptional ductility at room temperature, a combination previously unattainable. Published in Nature on 24 June 2026, the alloy is suited for load-bearing components operating above 2,000°C.

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AI designs drug-binding proteins from scratch with high accuracy and affinity
🔬 Science

AI designs drug-binding proteins from scratch with high accuracy and affinity

Scientists have developed a zero-shot design method pairing two neural networks in an iterative selection-expansion algorithm to build small-molecule binding proteins from scratch. The approach achieves high accuracy, binding affinity and success rates without relying on existing protein templates. Published in Nature on 24 June 2026, the method shows strong potential for drug delivery and drug sequestration applications.

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Nature review explains immunological mechanisms of mRNA vaccines and how to fine-tune them
🏥 Health

Nature review explains immunological mechanisms of mRNA vaccines and how to fine-tune them

A comprehensive review published in Nature on 24 June 2026 examines the immunological mechanisms of mRNA–lipid nanoparticle vaccines used against infectious diseases. It details how individual components of this vaccine platform can be modified to fine-tune immune responses, with implications for developing vaccines against challenging pathogens such as HIV and tuberculosis. The review consolidates lessons learned from COVID-19 vaccine deployment and points to future design strategies.

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Ring laser gyroscope eliminates lock-in limit using spontaneous symmetry breaking
🔬 Science

Ring laser gyroscope eliminates lock-in limit using spontaneous symmetry breaking

Researchers have eliminated the lock-in problem in ring laser gyroscopes by exploiting spontaneous symmetry breaking in a helium-neon (He–Ne) laser. This allows accurate sensing of near-zero rotation rates without any external mechanical or optical components. Published in Nature on 24 June 2026, the advance paves the way for smaller, more precise navigation and rotation-sensing instruments.

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Gravitational wave GW250114 detects black hole horizon signatures after merger
🔬 Science

Gravitational wave GW250114 detects black hole horizon signatures after merger

The gravitational wave event GW250114, reported in Nature on 24 June 2026, revealed a direct wave following the merger of two black holes that carries signatures associated with the remnant black hole's event horizon. This establishes a new observational channel for directly measuring frame-dragging effects in black-hole ergospheres and probing horizon surface gravity. It marks a significant step forward in observational black-hole physics.

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Kino Lorber acquires U.S. rights to Manuela Martelli's Cannes film 'The Meltdown'
🎬 Entertainment

Kino Lorber acquires U.S. rights to Manuela Martelli's Cannes film 'The Meltdown'

U.S. distributor Kino Lorber has acquired the American rights to Chilean director Manuela Martelli's Cannes 2026 film "The Meltdown." The mystery centres on a girl and a vanished friend, set against the backdrop of Chile's political history. Martelli, an actress-turned-director, is known for featuring strong and complex female protagonists in her work.

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Polyacrylonitrile membranes fractionate crude oil, slashing energy use and CO2 emissions
🔬 Science

Polyacrylonitrile membranes fractionate crude oil, slashing energy use and CO2 emissions

Mesoporous polyacrylonitrile membranes, previously used only as non-selective support layers, can effectively fractionate crude oil at the molecular level under steady-state conditions, researchers report in Nature on 24 June 2026. The membrane-based process delivers substantial reductions in energy consumption, cooling water use and CO2 emissions compared with conventional distillation. The advance could reshape refinery operations globally.

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Genome sequencing of late Neanderthals reveals genetic diversity in northwestern Europe
🔬 Science

Genome sequencing of late Neanderthals reveals genetic diversity in northwestern Europe

Genetic sequencing of multiple late Neanderthals who lived less than 52,500 years ago in northwestern Europe has provided a detailed overview of their genetic diversity, according to a study published in Nature on 24 June 2026. The research shows that even low-coverage nuclear genome data can meaningfully improve resolution of variation within the Neanderthal population. The findings deepen understanding of the final chapters of Neanderthal prehistory.

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John Cale ended up on Charli xcx album cover by chance, teams up with Scorsese
🎬 Entertainment

John Cale ended up on Charli xcx album cover by chance, teams up with Scorsese

Avant-garde legend John Cale has revealed he ended up on the cover of Charli xcx's album after finding himself in a kitchen where the shoot was taking place. Cale is also collaborating with director Martin Scorsese and designer Marc Jacobs on a new project titled "Music, Fashion, Film." The interview highlights his unexpected crossover connections with contemporary pop culture.

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Fourier pixels enable full control and sensing of light wavefronts in miniaturized optics
🔬 Science

Fourier pixels enable full control and sensing of light wavefronts in miniaturized optics

A new platform of miniaturized Fourier-optics-based diffractive elements creates multifunctional pixels capable of fully controlling and sensing the amplitude, phase and polarization of optical wavefronts, researchers report in Nature on 24 June 2026. The versatile system is designed for advanced photonic applications including imaging, sensing and communications. It represents a significant step toward compact, all-in-one optical devices.

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Human pre-gastrula embryo analysis reveals blood formation from hypoblast before gastrulation
🔬 Science

Human pre-gastrula embryo analysis reveals blood formation from hypoblast before gastrulation

High-resolution spatial transcriptome analysis of a human embryo at Carnegie stage 6, published in Nature on 24 June 2026, identified three distinct developmental trajectories from the epiblast toward the amnion, primitive streak and axial mesoderm. Strikingly, the study detects the initiation of haematopoiesis (blood formation) before gastrulation, originating from the hypoblast rather than the epiblast as previously assumed. The findings rewrite early human developmental biology.

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Musk drops below $1 trillion net worth after tech stock sell-off
📈 Business

Musk drops below $1 trillion net worth after tech stock sell-off

Elon Musk has fallen below the $1 trillion net worth threshold, losing his status as the world's first trillionaire after a sharp global decline in tech stock values, Bloomberg reported. He had briefly become the first person in history to cross the trillion-dollar mark. Musk remains among the world's wealthiest billionaires despite the drop.

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Gigaparsec-scale anisotropic cosmic structures detected, challenging cosmological isotropy assumption
🔬 Science

Gigaparsec-scale anisotropic cosmic structures detected, challenging cosmological isotropy assumption

Using a parameter-free method called the Angular Distribution of Pairwise Distances, researchers have found evidence for coherent anisotropic structures extending over gigaparsec scales across the Universe, according to a study in Nature on 24 June 2026. The discovery challenges the cosmological principle — the fundamental assumption that the Universe is statistically isotropic on sufficiently large scales. If confirmed, it would require significant revisions to the standard model of cosmology.

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Optical cooling in 2D semiconductor heterostructures demonstrated without cryogenic equipment
🔬 Science

Optical cooling in 2D semiconductor heterostructures demonstrated without cryogenic equipment

Researchers have demonstrated optical cooling in two-dimensional semiconductor heterostructures through phonon-assisted interfacial charge transfer, as reported in Nature on 24 June 2026. The method enables cryogen-free thermal management, removing the need for liquid nitrogen or helium cooling systems, and does not require stringent quantum-efficiency conditions. The advance could simplify cooling solutions for quantum devices and electronics.

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Albania protests demand PM resignation and anti-corruption reform
🌍 World

Albania protests demand PM resignation and anti-corruption reform

Albania is experiencing some of its largest protests since the fall of communism in 1991. What began as anger over a Trump-linked luxury resort project has grown into nationwide demonstrations demanding the prime minister's resignation and sweeping anti-corruption reforms. Protesters are calling for fundamental changes to how the country is governed.

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Allosteric regulatory site on -arrestins discovered, revealing new drug target mechanism
🔬 Science

Allosteric regulatory site on -arrestins discovered, revealing new drug target mechanism

Integrated pharmacological, biochemical, biophysical and structural analyses of small-molecule -arrestin inhibitors have revealed how these compounds block -arrestin engagement with activated G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), according to research in Nature on 24 June 2026. The study also uncovers a previously unrecognized allosteric regulatory site on -arrestins. The findings clarify the mechanism of action of this drug class and open a new avenue for designing GPCR-targeted therapeutics.

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Medical AI models vulnerable to membership inference attacks on patient data
🔬 Science

Medical AI models vulnerable to membership inference attacks on patient data

AI models used in medical diagnostics are vulnerable to membership inference attacks, which can reveal whether a specific individual's data was included in the training dataset. The privacy risk is disproportionately higher for groups that are underrepresented in training data. The findings raise serious concerns about patient confidentiality in the age of AI-driven healthcare.