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Biology

“Reviving the Northern White Rhino: A Genome-Mapped Hope for Conservation”

The northern white rhinoceros is one of the rarest animals on Earth, with just two females left and no natural way for the species to reproduce. Now, scientists have mapped the entire genome of a northern white rhino. This represents a crucial step toward bringing the critically endangered species back from the edge using advanced reproductive technologies. The complete genome can be used as a reference to analyze the health of previously developed northern white rhinoceros stem cells. Eventually, those stem cells may be able to generate sperm and eggs to yield new rhinos.

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“Reviving the Northern White Rhino: A Genome-Mapped Hope for Conservation”

In a groundbreaking achievement, an international team of scientists has successfully mapped the entire genome of the northern white rhinoceros, one of the rarest animals on Earth. This milestone marks a crucial step towards bringing this critically endangered species back from the brink of extinction using advanced reproductive technologies.

The complete genome serves as a reference point to analyze the health of previously developed northern white rhino stem cells. These stem cells may eventually be able to generate sperm and eggs, leading to the birth of new rhinos. The genome was published in PNAS on May 13, 2025.

“This is great progress not only for white rhinos but for the entire field of animal conservation,” says co-senior author Jeanne Loring, Professor Emeritus at Scripps Research and a research fellow at the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance. “We’re getting closer to being able to rescue animals that otherwise might go extinct during our lifetimes.”

The new genome was created using cutting-edge DNA sequencing and genome mapping techniques combined with cells previously collected from a male northern white rhinoceros named Angalifu, who lived at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park until his death in 2014. At the time, his skin cells were cryopreserved in the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance’s Frozen Zoo.

“We layered together multiple technologies to make the most accurate genomic map possible,” says Loring. “It’s like the rhino version of the Human Genome Project.”

This new genome represents a vital tool for saving the endangered species. In 2011, Loring’s team created the first induced pluripotent stem cells from northern white rhinos. They have since created other lines of stem cells from nine different individual northern white rhinos.

Collaboration was integral to achieving this milestone, and the high-quality reference genome is a key piece of the puzzle that helps scientists understand how the stem cells are functioning and guides their next steps in the genetic rescue process.

One major hurdle has always been quality control. Without a reference genome, scientists didn’t know whether any of those stem cells had picked up harmful mutations during lab growth. In the new research, Loring’s team was able to use the new, complete genome to analyze the previously created stem cell lineages and discovered that one of the most promising lines had a large chunk of DNA missing.

“If we hadn’t built this genome, we wouldn’t have known that,” adds Loring. “We thought we had a good stem cell line, but it turns out it had a mutation that could have made it unsafe to use for reproduction. Now we can go back and screen all the others.”

The new genome also settled lingering questions about how different northern and southern white rhinos really are. Some earlier data suggested significant DNA differences that might make it risky for southern white rhinos to be implanted with northern white rhino embryos. But updated comparisons show their genomes are strikingly similar, giving scientists confidence that southern white rhinos can serve as surrogates without major complications.

For Loring, who’s been working on this project since 2007, the new genome is a symbol of what’s possible. “Now that we have their genome, we can apply all the tools we’ve developed for humans — CRISPR gene editing, reporter genes, everything — to help rescue them.”

The work sets a powerful example for other endangered species, Loring says. Efforts to save hundreds of different endangered species depend on careful biobanking like that being done by the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance.

Ultimately, the goal is to grow healthy embryos and implant them into surrogate mothers, then raise the resulting calves in protected environments. It’s not Jurassic Park, Loring is quick to point out, and it doesn’t depend on gene editing or engineering.

“We’re not resurrecting a mystery species — we’re restoring one we still know intimately,” she adds. “The rhino is big, gentle and unforgettable. It’s the perfect symbol for what science can do to fight extinction.”

Animals

Baboons’ Social Bonds Drive Their Travel Patterns, Not Survival Strategies

Researchers have discovered that baboons walk in lines, not for safety or strategy, but simply to stay close to their friends.

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Researchers at Swansea University have made an intriguing discovery about the behavior of wild chacma baboons on South Africa’s Cape Peninsula. By using high-resolution GPS tracking, they found that these intelligent primates walk in lines not for safety or strategy, but simply to stay close to their friends.

For a long time, scientists believed that baboons structured their travel patterns, known as “progressions,” to reduce risk and optimize access to food and water. However, the new study published in Behavioral Ecology reveals that this behavior is actually driven by social bonds rather than survival strategies.

The researchers analyzed 78 travel progressions over 36 days and found that the order in which individual baboons traveled was not random. They tested four potential explanations for this phenomenon, including strategic positioning to avoid danger or gain access to resources. However, their findings show that the consistent order of baboon movement patterns is solely driven by social relationships.

According to Dr. Andrew King, Associate Professor at Swansea University, “The baboons’ consistent order isn’t about avoiding danger like we see in prey animals or for better access to food or water. Instead, it’s driven by who they’re socially bonded with. They simply move with their friends, and this produces a consistent order.”
This discovery introduces the concept of a “social spandrel.” In biology, a spandrel refers to a trait that arises not because it was directly selected for but as a side effect of something else. The researchers found that the consistent travel patterns among baboons emerge naturally from their social affiliations with each other and not as an evolved strategy for safety or success.

The study highlights the importance of strong social bonds in baboon society, which are linked to longer lives and greater reproductive success. However, this research also shows that these bonds can lead to unintended consequences, such as consistent travel patterns, which serve no specific purpose but rather as a by-product of those relationships. The findings have implications for our understanding of collective animal behavior and the potential for social spandrels in other species.

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Agriculture and Food

Standardizing Psychedelic Research: A Breakthrough in Understanding the True Potential of Mind-Altering Drugs

As psychedelics gain traction as potential treatments for mental health disorders, an international study stands to improve the rigor and reliability of clinical research.

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Standardizing Psychedelic Research: A Breakthrough in Understanding the True Potential of Mind-Altering Drugs

The use of psychedelics as potential treatments for mental health disorders has gained significant traction in recent years. However, a critical flaw in psychedelic clinical trials has hindered their progress – the failure to properly account for how a person’s mindset and surroundings influence the effects of these substances.

A group of international researchers from McGill University, Imperial College London, and the University of Exeter have tackled this issue by developing a set of guidelines to standardize psychedelic clinical trials. The Reporting of Setting in Psychedelic Clinical Trials (ReSPCT) guidelines are a 30-item checklist that represents the first global agreement on which psychosocial factors have the greatest impact on a psychedelic experience.

“For decades, we’ve known that psychedelics don’t work in isolation,” said co-lead author Chloé Pronovost-Morgan. “The person’s mindset, the therapy room, even the music playing all influence outcomes.” This approach challenges the traditional way psychoactive drugs are typically studied, where scientists try to control or eliminate outside variables to isolate a drug’s effects.

These guidelines recognize that context is crucial and should be studied directly. By offering a standard framework for evaluating and reporting these variables, the ReSPCT guidelines aim to make trial outcomes more consistent and comparable across studies.

Having clear guidelines for contextual considerations is essential to understand the effects of psychedelics and how they work differently from other psychiatric medications,” said co-senior author Leor Roseman. “Our guidelines will also help in replicating results and understanding the true therapeutic potential of psychedelics.”

The lack of standards has had consequences beyond the research lab, Pronovost-Morgan explained. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration recently rejected MDMA-assisted therapy for post-traumatic stress disorder, citing inconsistent reporting across trials as a key reason for the decision.

“There is immense public interest in psychedelic therapies, particularly for individuals suffering from debilitating mental health conditions like PTSD, depression and anxiety, which have not responded to existing treatments,” said co-senior author Kyle Greenway. “Our guidelines offer a new gold standard for psychedelic research, helping bring these treatments to those who need them most.”

The research team is organizing a three-day workshop in October, funded by McGill’s Healthy Brains, Healthy Lives initiative, where leading experts in psychedelics and neuroscience will discuss how the guidelines can be integrated into research and clinical practice.

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Biology

Independent Evolution of Ipecac Alkaloid Biosynthesis in Two Distantly Related Plant Species

The biosynthesis of the great variety of natural plant products has not yet been elucidated for many medically interesting substances. In a new study, an international team of researchers was able to show how ipecacuanha alkaloids, substances used in traditional medicine, are synthesized. They compared two distantly related plant species and were able to show that although both plant species use a comparable chemical approach, the enzymes they need for synthesis differ and a different starting material is used. Further investigations revealed that the biosynthetic pathways of these complex chemical compounds have developed independently in the two species. These results help to enable the synthesis of these and related substances on a larger scale for medical use.

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The discovery of ipecac alkaloids in two distantly related plant species has shed light on the independent evolution of this complex biosynthetic pathway. Ipecac Carapichea ipecacuanha, a member of the gentian family, and Alangium salviifolium, a sage-leaved alangium from the dogwood family, both produce these medically interesting substances. While earlier studies had identified some enzymes involved in their production, the elucidation of the entire biosynthetic pathway has provided valuable insights into the evolutionary history of this process.

The researchers found that ipecac alkaloids are present throughout all plant tissues of both species but accumulate more heavily in young leaf tissues and underground organs. By comparing tissues with high and low levels of these compounds, genes involved in their synthesis were identified. Further genetic transformation and model plant experiments allowed the stepwise reconstruction of the biosynthetic pathway in both species.

Surprisingly, the first step in this process does not involve an enzyme but occurs spontaneously. The subsequent steps are catalyzed by a unique sugar-cleaving enzyme that has a distinct three-dimensional structure compared to other enzymes performing the same reaction. This enzyme’s unusual nature and spatial separation from its substrate within the cell may have evolved as a defense mechanism against herbivores.

The discovery of this independent evolution of ipecac alkaloid biosynthesis in two distantly related plant species highlights the plant’s ability to develop complex natural products through convergent evolution. The study also provides valuable insights into the potential pharmacological effects of downstream metabolites, such as tubulosin, which have been poorly studied due to their low abundance.

In further research, the final steps of the biosynthesis are to be elucidated, providing a more complete understanding of this complex metabolic pathway. This knowledge could ultimately lead to the production of these substances in larger quantities, allowing for more detailed investigations into their pharmacological activities.

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