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War update: Offensive in south continues, Ukrainian troops gaining foothold on achieved frontiers – Ukrinform

  1. War update: Offensive in south continues, Ukrainian troops gaining foothold on achieved frontiers Ukrinform
  2. Ukrainian Forces Face ‘Difficult’ Advance In Zaporizhzhya Region Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
  3. Ukrainians hold defence on several fronts, Russians deter them on two – General Staff report Yahoo News
  4. ‘Three times the Soviet-Afghan war’: New data sheds light on scale of Russian deaths in Ukraine FRANCE 24 English
  5. Russia Has ‘Precious Little’ Reserve Strength Left: U.K. Defense Secretary Newsweek
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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89bio’s Phase 2b ENLIVEN Trial of Pegozafermin in Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis (NASH) Achieved High Statistical Significance on Both Primary Histology Endpoints with Weekly (QW) and Every-Two-Week (Q2W) Dosing at 24 Weeks – Yahoo Finance

  1. 89bio’s Phase 2b ENLIVEN Trial of Pegozafermin in Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis (NASH) Achieved High Statistical Significance on Both Primary Histology Endpoints with Weekly (QW) and Every-Two-Week (Q2W) Dosing at 24 Weeks Yahoo Finance
  2. Chasing Akero, 89bio reduces scarring in midphase NASH trial to hit primary goals, tee up phase 3 FierceBiotech
  3. ETNB Stock Rockets As It Takes On Akero In Fatty Liver Disease Investor’s Business Daily
  4. ETNB stock jumps on topline data for NASH candidate (NASDAQ:ETNB) Seeking Alpha
  5. 89bio’s stock rallies 48% on new NASH data MarketWatch
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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First observation of de Broglie-Mackinnon wave packets achieved by exploiting loophole in 1980s theorem

UCF CREOL Graduate Research Assistant Layton Hall, ’22MS (left) and Dr. Ayman Abouraddy. Credit: University of Central Florida

University of Central Florida College of Optics and Photonics researchers achieved the first observation of de Broglie-Mackinnon wave packets by exploiting a loophole in a 1980s-era laser physics theorem.

The research paper by CREOL and Florida Photonics Center of Excellence professor Ayman Abouraddy and research assistant Layton Hall has been published in the journal Nature Physics.

Observation of optical de Broglie–Mackinnon wave packets highlights the team’s research using a class of pulsed laser beams they call space-time wave packets.

In an interview with Dr. Abouraddy, he provides more insight into his team’s research and what it may hold for the future.

You accomplished several ‘firsts’ during this phase of your research. Will you provide some history of the theoretical ideas that brought you here?

In the early days of the development of quantum mechanics almost 100 years ago, Louis de Broglie made the crucial conceptual breakthrough of identifying waves with particles, sometimes called wave-particle duality. However, a crucial dilemma was not resolved. Particles are spatially stable: their size does not change as they travel, however waves do change, spreading in space and time. How can one construct a model out of the waves suggested by de Broglie that nevertheless correspond accurately to a particle?

In the 1970s, L. Mackinnon proposed a solution by combining Einstein’s special theory of relativity with de Broglie’s waves to construct a stable ‘wave packet’ that does not spread and can thus accompany a traveling particle. This proposal went unnoticed because there was no methodology for producing such a wave packet. In recent years, my group has been working on a new class of pulsed laser beams that we have called ‘space-time wave packets,’ which travel rigidly in free space.

In our recent research, Layton extended this behavior to propagation in dispersive media, which normally stretch optical pulses—except for space-time wave packets that resist this stretching. He recognized that the propagation of space-time wave packets in a medium endowed with a special kind of dispersion (so-called ‘anomalous’ dispersion) corresponds to Mackinnon’s proposal. In other words, space-time wave packets hold the key to finally achieving de Broglie’s dream. By carrying out laser experiments along these lines, we observed for the first time what we have called de Broglie-Mackinnon wave packets and verified their predicted properties.

What is unique about your results?

There are several unique aspects of this paper. This is the first example of a pulse propagating invariantly in a medium with anomalous dispersion. In fact, a well-known theorem in laser physics from the 1980’s purports to prove that such a feat is impossible. We found a loophole in that theorem that we exploited in designing our optical fields.

Also, all previous pulsed fields that propagate without change have been X-shaped. It has long been theorized that O-shaped propagation-invariant wave packets should exist, but they have never been observed. Our results reveal the first observed O-shaped propagation-invariant wave packets.

The U.S. Office of Naval Research is supporting your research. How are your findings useful to them and others?

We don’t know yet exactly. However, these findings have practical consequences in terms of the propagation of optical pulses in dispersive media without suffering the deleterious impact of dispersion.

These results may pave the way to optical tests of the solutions of the Klein-Gordon equation for massive particles, and may even lead to the synthesis of non-dispersive wave packets using matter waves. This would also enable new sensing and microscope techniques.

What are the next steps?

This work is a part of a larger study of the propagation characteristics of space-time wave packets. This includes long-distance propagation of space-time wave packets that we are testing at UCF’s Townes Institute Science and Technology Experimentation Facility (TISTEF) on Florida’s space coast. From a fundamental perspective, the optical spectrum that we have used in our experiments lies on a closed trajectory. This has never been achieved before, and it opens the path to studying topological structures of light on closed surfaces.

More information:
Layton A. Hall et al, Observation of optical de Broglie–Mackinnon wave packets, Nature Physics (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41567-022-01876-6

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First observation of de Broglie-Mackinnon wave packets achieved by exploiting loophole in 1980s theorem (2023, January 27)
retrieved 28 January 2023
from https://phys.org/news/2023-01-de-broglie-mackinnon-packets-exploiting-loophole.html

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High-visibility quantum interference between two independent semiconductor quantum dots achieved

Experimental configuration of quantum interference between two independent solid-state QD single-photon sources separated by 302 km fiber. DM: dichromatic mirror, LP: long pass, BP: band pass, BS: beam splitter, SNSPD: superconducting nanowire single- photon detector, HWP: half-wave plate, QWP: quarter-wave plate, PBS: polarization beam splitter. Credit: Advanced Photonics (2022). DOI: 10.1117/1.AP.4.6.066003

This year’s Nobel Prize in Physics celebrated the fundamental interest of quantum entanglement, and also envisioned the potential applications in “the second quantum revolution”—a new age when we are able to manipulate the weirdness of quantum mechanics, including quantum superposition and entanglement. A large-scale and fully functional quantum network is the holy grail of quantum information sciences. It will open a new frontier of physics, with new possibilities for quantum computation, communication, and metrology.

One of the most significant challenges is to extend the distance of quantum communication to a practically useful scale. Unlike classical signals that can be noiselessly amplified, quantum states in superposition cannot be amplified because they cannot be perfectly cloned. Therefore, a high-performance quantum network requires not only ultra-low-loss quantum channels and quantum memory, but also high-performance quantum light sources. There has been exciting recent progress in satellite-based quantum communications and quantum repeaters, but a lack of suitable single-photon sources has hampered further advances.

What is required of a single-photon source for quantum network applications? First, it should emit one (only one) photon at a time. Second, to attain brightness, the single-photon sources should have high system efficiency and a high repetition rate. Third, for applications such as in quantum teleportation that require interfering with independent photons, the single photons should be indistinguishable. Additional requirements include a scalable platform, tunable and narrowband linewidth (favorable for temporal synchronization), and interconnectivity with matter qubits.

A promising source is quantum dots (QDs), semiconductor particles of just a few nanometers. However, in the past two decades, the visibility of quantum interference between independent QDs has rarely exceeded the classical limit of 50% and distances have been limited to around a few meters or kilometers.

As reported in Advanced Photonics, an international team of researchers has achieved high-visibility quantum interference between two independent QDs linked with ~300 km optical fibers. They report efficient and indistinguishable single-photon sources with ultra-low-noise, tunable single-photon frequency conversion, and low-dispersion long fiber transmission.

The single photons are generated from resonantly driven single QDs deterministically coupled to microcavities. Quantum frequency conversions are used to eliminate the QD inhomogeneity and shift the emission wavelength to the telecommunications band. The observed interference visibility is up to 93%. According to senior author Chao-Yang Lu, professor at the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC), “Feasible improvements can further extend the distance to ~600 km.”

Lu remarks, “Our work jumped from the previous QD-based quantum experiments at a scale from ~1 km to 300 km, two orders of magnitude larger, and thus opens an exciting prospect of solid-state quantum networks.” With this reported jump, the dawn of solid-state quantum networks may soon begin breaking toward day.

More information:
Xiang You et al, Quantum interference with independent single-photon sources over 300 km fiber, Advanced Photonics (2022). DOI: 10.1117/1.AP.4.6.066003

Citation:
High-visibility quantum interference between two independent semiconductor quantum dots achieved (2022, December 28)
retrieved 29 December 2022
from https://phys.org/news/2022-12-high-visibility-quantum-independent-semiconductor-dots.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.



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Dare We Say Consensus Achieved: Lecanemab Slows the Disease

The top-line results last September from Eisai’s Phase 3 trial of the anti-amyloid antibody lecanemab galvanized the field, but scientists said they needed to see the data before passing judgement. Now they have. At the 15th Clinical Trials on Alzheimer’s Disease conference, held November 29 to December 2 in San Francisco and online, scientists presented detailed findings to a standing-room-only audience of some 2,000 people and many more on livestream. Four speakers reported that secondary and biomarker measures were consistent, and of similar magnitude to the effect on primary. Overall, lecanemab appeared to slow disease progression by about one-quarter, and caused the brain edema known as ARIA-E in one of eight participants. The data were published in the New England Journal of Medicine November 29, the same day as the presentation.

  • On lecanemab, all clinical outcomes showed similar slowing of decline.
  • Amyloid plaque dropped below 25 centiloids after 18 months.
  • AD biomarkers fell; neurodegeneration markers were mixed.

The audience responded positively. Many scientists praised the trial’s execution, and expressed relief that the presentations appeared thorough and transparent. “The Clarity trial is a landmark in AD therapeutic research, the culmination of over three decades of efforts across the field,” said Paul Aisen of the University of Southern California in San Diego. Randall Bateman of Washington University, St. Louis, presented the biomarker evidence, concluding that it indicates the treatment modified underlying biology. “These findings support the ability to change the course of Alzheimer’s disease,” he told Alzforum. Takeshi Iwatsubo of the University of Tokyo agreed, saying “This is a monumental event for patients.” All three are co-authors on the NEJM paper. Other researchers mentioned aspects of the trial design that strengthened their confidence in the findings, such as Eisai using separate medical teams to handle participants’ clinical trial evaluations and ARIA to minimize the risk of unblinding.

At the same time, researchers said the ARIA risks need to be taken seriously, and stressed that not all patients will be candidates for this therapy. Everyone agreed on the need to build on a small effect size by adding other therapeutic approaches and finding ways to give lecanemab earlier in disease.

Diverging Trajectories. People on lecanemab worsened more slowly on the CDR-SB than did people on placebo, resulting in a quarter less progression at 18 months. [Courtesy of Eisai.]

A Consistent Clinical Benefit
The 18-month Clarity trial enrolled 1,795 people with mild cognitive impairment or mild dementia due to AD, half of whom received 10 mg/kg intravenous lecanemab every two weeks. Eisai previously reported that lecanemab slowed decline on the primary outcome measure, the CDR-SB, by 0.45 points on the 18-point scale, or about one-quarter of the 1.66-point decline seen in the placebo group (Sep 2022 news).

In San Francisco, Christopher van Dyck of Yale School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut, fleshed out details on secondary measures. These mirrored the CDR-SB, with participants on lecanemab declining 1.44 fewer points on the ADAS-Cog14 and 0.05 fewer on the ADCOMS than the placebo group, for relative slowings of 26 and 24 percent, respectively. On a functional measure, the ADCS MCI activities of daily living (ADL), lecanemab put on the brakes by 2 points, or 37 percent. For all four clinical measures, the difference between lecanemab and placebo became statistically significant by six months and grew over time. On the CDR-SB and ADL, the slopes continued to diverge up to 18 months, whereas the difference between the curves appeared to stabilize on the ADAS-Cog14 at 15 months, and on the ADCOMS at 12.

“Because there is such mild decline in these patients over 18 months, it’s very difficult to see a positive signal,” noted Eric Musiek of Washington University in St. Louis, adding, “I’m impressed the signal is so clear, even if it is small in an absolute sense.”

The slightly larger effect on ADLs caught the interest of some scientists, since these can feel most important to participants. “[This] indicates that patients and families could benefit from slowing of observable functional worsening,” Joshua Grill of the University of California, Irvine, wrote to Alzforum (full comments below).

Left of Center. Lecanemab had similar effects in all subgroups examined, though men appeared to benefit more than women, older people more than younger, and APOE4 non-carriers more than carriers. [Courtesy of Eisai.]

Van Dyck also showed results from several sensitivity analyses that suggested the findings were not caused by confounding factors. In the treatment and placebo groups, 81 and 84 percent of participants, respectively, completed the trial, but dropouts did not affect the results. Imputing missing data and accounting for the COVID-19 pandemic did not change the data either. Nor did removing data from participants who developed ARIA-E, suggesting the positive results were not due to inadvertent unblinding of participants.

Likewise, subgroup analyses breaking down participants by age, sex, race, ethnicity, geographic region, disease stage, and use of symptomatic AD medications found treatment benefits across the board. Women appeared to benefit somewhat less than men, a potential difference that sparked discussion in the field. One possibility is that women have more advanced tau pathology at a given stage of cognitive impairment than men, making amyloid removal less effective for them, Maria Teresa Ferretti of the University of Zurich told Alzforum (Nov 2019 news).

The researchers also found a difference by APOE genotype. APOE4 carriers made up two-thirds of the cohort, and seemed to benefit less from lecanemab than noncarriers. In particular, the 15 percent of participants who carried two copies of APOE4 appeared to post no treatment effect on the CDR-SB, and but a small one on the ADAS-Cog14 and ADCS MCI-ADL. However, several scientists told Alzforum that they suspect the homozygote finding represents statistical noise. They pointed out that APOE4 homozygotes on placebo barely declined during the trial, muddying the ability to see a treatment effect in this small subgroup.

Colin Masters of the University of Melbourne, Australia, believes greater effects of lecanemab in APOE4 noncarriers make sense. “We know APOE4 leads to amyloid deposition starting earlier in life than in E4 noncarriers. I suspect the noncarriers had a better result because they started out with a lower amyloid burden,” Masters told Alzforum. He suggested letting trials run longer than 18 months to better detect effects in carriers.

The findings contrast with data from aducanumab, where more of the cognitive benefit in the positive EMERGE trial occurred in APOE4 carriers (see Nov 2020 news).

The Pesky Question: Does This Help Patients?
As with the FDA approval of aducanumab in June 2021, researchers at CTAD debated whether the measured benefit on these clinical tests is clinically meaningful. Sharon Cohen of the Toronto Memory Program, a site investigator for the Clarity trial, argued that it is. She noted that participants on lecanemab and their caregivers reported from one-quarter to one-half less worsening on measures of quality of life and caregiver burden compared to the placebo group. Looking at the data another way, the slower decline translated to a one-third lower risk of advancing to the next stage of AD during the trial, Cohen said.

More Time. Alzheimer’s disease progressed more slowly in people on lecanemab, delaying arrival of the next disease stage. [Courtesy of Eisai.]

This equates to a five- to six-month delay in disease progression, said Eric Siemers of Siemers Integration LLC (full comment below). Others noted this is similar to the benefit of acetylcholinesterase inhibitors, and wanted a Cohen’s d analysis of effect size for easier comparison with other treatments.

Researchers agree that the key question is what happens when people stay on lecanemab for longer periods. Will the clinical benefit persist, grow, as many argue, or diminish? Clinicians are eager to see data from open-label extension studies that might answer this question. “If the reduction in decline were to persist for, say, three to four years, I would expect it to be appreciated by families and patients. On the other hand, if the effect is not durable and fades within a year or so, there will be much less enthusiasm for its use, which after all is somewhat arduous,” David Knopman of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, wrote to Alzforum (full comment below).

Amyloid as Surrogate?
As expected, lecanemab’s slashing of plaque was dramatic. In Clarity, participants started with an average amyloid PET of 76 centiloids at baseline. This rose by four in the placebo group and dropped by 55 in the treatment group, for a difference of 59 centiloids at 18 months. The divergence between groups became statistically significant at three months, and another three months later clinical measures started changing. Participants on lecanemab ended up with an average of 23 centiloids, which is below the threshold for amyloid positivity typically set at 25. Put another way, two-thirds of the treatment group became PET amyloid-negative at 18 months.

Roger Nitsch of Neurimmune, Switzerland, believes there is also a threshold effect for clinical benefit. In a keynote talk at CTAD, he noted that positive trials of anti-amyloid antibodies, such as Clarity, aducanumab’s EMERGE, and donanemab’s TRAILBLAZER, all brought plaque below 25 centiloids. Negative trials, such as aducanumab’s ENGAGE and the recent GRADUATE studies of gantenerumab, did not. “We have to lower amyloid load to 25 or less to get a clinical effect,” Nitsch proposed.

Others concurred that the relationship between amyloid removal and clinical benefit may not be linear, but stepwise. Eisai has not yet shown data on the correlation between how much of a person’s plaque vanished and their clinical response in Clarity. Ron Petersen of the Rochester Mayo Clinic said that more data are needed on whether it makes a difference how fast amyloid was removed.

At CTAD, researchers debated whether the Clarity results are strong enough to validate plaque removal as a surrogate biomarker for disease slowing. Maria Carrillo of the Alzheimer’s Association made a case for this; others want to see more data. Van Dyck noted that plaques could well be a stand-in for smaller aggregates, which might be the toxic species responsible for cognitive decline. Grill suggested that downstream markers of tangle burden and neurodegeneration may be more important for predicting the cognitive effects of treatment.

Tangle, Inflammation Markers Down. Tau tangle spread slowed on lecanemab (top), while a fluid marker of astrogliosis fell (bottom). [Courtesy of Eisai.]

Alzheimer’s Biomarkers Down, Neurodegeneration Signals Mixed
Regarding those markers, CTAD provided a wealth of data. Bateman reported that on lecanemab, the Aβ42/40 ratio rose by about 60 percent in cerebrospinal fluid and 10 percent in plasma, while p-tau181 dropped around 16-18 percent in both. These measures became statistically different from placebo at six months, in tandem with the clinical benefits. Tau PET showed a slowing but not stoppage of tangle accumulation in the medial temporal lobe, and trends toward slowing in other brain regions, with the PET signal increasing about half as much as in controls. The astrogliosis marker GFAP fell about 15 percent on lecanemab, but rose 10 percent in those on placebo.

“I was particularly pleased to see the significant fall in plasma GFAP levels,” Dennis Selkoe of Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, wrote to Alzforum. “This suggests a notable amelioration of an inflammatory component that is increasingly recognized as a main feature of AD.”

Neurodegeneration markers gave a more ambiguous picture. CSF total tau fell about 4 percent on lecanemab, while rising 15 percent on placebo. Neurogranin, which reflects synapse loss, normalized as well, falling about 15 percent. On the other hand, plasma NfL only trended toward improvement on lecanemab, while CSF NfL did not change.

As has been seen with other amyloid immunotherapies, structural MRI revealed more shrinkage of whole brain and of cortical thickness on lecanemab, and an expansion of the brain’s fluid-filled ventricles. Curiously, however, atrophy in the much smaller hippocampal region slowed. Brain atrophy used to be considered bad, and is used routinely as a diagnostic aid for many brain diseases. Alzheimerologists still do not know what to make of these findings. An early hypothesis—that gray matter shrinkage may reflect amyloid removal—is not in vogue anymore, but nothing else has emerged in its place. Knopman cautioned that the increase in ventricle size in particular deserves further study. “We are willing to ignore this finding now because we have a clinical benefit, which is the gold standard. But we need to keep it in mind,” he said.

Overall, the data support the idea that lecanemab modifies underlying biology, Bateman said. Eric Reiman of Banner Alzheimer’s Institute in Phoenix, whose abiding interest is in enabling prevention, believes these data will help facilitate future prevention trials for a range of drugs by clarifying how biomarker changes predict clinical outcomes.

ARIA Lower, but the Risk Is Real
Safety is a major concern for the widespread use of any amyloid immunotherapy. Eisai and Biogen previously announced that 12.6 percent of people taking lecanemab developed the brain edema known as ARIA-E. In San Francisco, Marwan Sabbagh of the Barrow Neurological Institute in Phoenix showed details. About one-quarter of ARIA-E cases came with symptoms, which were typically mild and cleared up within three to six months. Three people in the trial had severe symptoms, though Sabbagh did not identify what they were.

As expected, a person’s ARIA-E risk was driven by his or her APOE genotype. One-third of APOE4 homozygotes developed ARIA-E, compared to 10 percent of heterozygotes and 5 percent of noncarriers. For reference, in aducanumab’s Phase 3 trials, those percentages were 66, 36, and 20 (Dec 2021 news).

Researchers said the overall risk/benefit calculation favors lecanemab. “I view the safety profile to be acceptable,” Grill said. Nick Fox of University College London agreed. “Any risk is clearly important, but I believe many of my patients would be willing to take such a risk,” he wrote (full comment below).

Nonetheless, they cautioned that clinicians will need to understand well what concurrent illnesses might magnify their patients’ risk so they can counsel them appropriately. Recent reports of two deaths from brain hemorrhage in the lecanemab open-label extension have broadly publicized the issue. One was a man with atrial fibrillation who was taking blood thinners; the other, a woman with cerebral amyloid angiopathy who received tissue plasminogen activator after a stroke (see Science story).

Neither death has been definitively linked to lecanemab, but they have reignited discussion about whether blood thinners and tPA should be contraindicated for people taking lecanemab. Anticoagulant use was allowed in the Clarity trial, in part because Eisai felt it needed to collect these data to learn about the issue, Eisai’s Mike Irizarry told the audience during his presentation. Macrohemorrhages, defined as any brain bleed larger than 1 cm, came in at 0.7 percent in the treatment group, higher than the 0.2 percent in the placebo group. For people on anticoagulants, the rate of macrohemorrhage on lecanemab was 2.4 percent, a more than threefold increase.

“tPA and anti-Aβ antibodies perhaps should not be given to the same AD patient, especially in the presence of CAA,” said Mathias Jucker, Hertie Institute, Tuebingen. Twenty years ago, Jucker’s group described how both tPA and Aβ immunotherapy induced cerebral bleeding in mouse models with CAA, though the scientists did not test the combination (Winkler et al., 2002; Pfeifer et al., 2002).

Stepping Stone to Disease Modification?
With a decision on accelerated approval of lecanemab scheduled by January 6, researchers expect the drug to become clinically available in 2023 (Jul 2022 news). Fox noted that this will create a tremendous challenge for healthcare systems, which at present lack the resources to do the diagnosis, counseling, imaging, IV infusions, and MRI monitoring needed. Most clinics are unprepared to roll out amyloid immunotherapy quickly at a large scale.

Even so, researchers at CTAD liked that the Clarity cohort was more representative of the general AD population than were previous trial cohorts. It included 22.5 percent Hispanic and 4.5 percent black participants. The age range was broad, from 50 to 90 years old, and inclusion criteria were intentionally liberal, allowing people with common conditions such as hypertension, diabetes, obesity, hyperlipidemia, and heart disease to join. Selkoe noted that about one-fourth of AD patients in the general population would meet the Clarity inclusion criteria, suggesting many could qualify for lecanemab treatment.

Still, clinicians are cautious. “If I were to start using this in my clinic, I would target it at healthier patients with positive biomarkers but milder symptoms, less atrophy on MRI, no microhemorrhages, and no anticoagulation,” Musiek wrote. “Patients will need to be motivated, reliable, and have good access and support (as well as insurance) to successfully receive this therapy and keep up with the MRI monitoring.”

The Alzheimer’s Association in 2021 announced a registry study, dubbed ALZ-NET, to track the long-term risks and benefits of disease-modifying AD therapies (Nov 2021 conference news; Aug 2022 conference news). In San Francisco, Carrillo noted that ALZ-NET enrolled its first patient November 1. So far, all participating clinics are on the east coast of the U.S.; the association invites additional institutions to join.

The FDA already has a mechanism to ensure that risky drugs are safely administered. The Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy (REMS) educates physicians on how best to use drugs with potential deleterious effects, and maintains a central database to track outcomes. Jason Karlawish of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, suggested the FDA require lecanemab use REMS. “The risk/benefit assessment is an ethically challenging Gordian knot. FDA and CMS should collaborate to assure this complicated drug’s transition from research into practice is net beneficial,” he wrote (full comment below).

In anticipation of approval and, potentially, insurance coverage, changes are already being set in motion across the research field. For example, leaders of longstanding observational cohorts that never disclosed amyloid status to their participants, such as AIBL and others, anticipate contacting them to inform them they can now find out their status and go on lecanemab if appropriate. Down’s syndrome researchers are considering running trials in the readiness cohorts they have been building among this population. Scientists at drug companies across the field are starting to prepare for testing their investigational drugs against lecanemab as background medication. And aducanumab researchers are hinting that—just you wait—this antibody is going to come off the sidelines in 2023, as well.

All researchers Alzforum spoke with stressed that lecanemab and other amyloid immunotherapies represent the beginning of disease-modifying therapies. Many estimate a 30 percent slowing may be the most that can be achieved with amyloid removal alone in a symptomatic population, especially in the presence of mixed pathology. They emphasized the need to explore anti-amyloid drugs in presymptomatic populations with biomarker evidence of only amyloid pathology, or amyloid and tau pathology. All eventually want active vaccines to reduce cost and open treatment to large populations across nations. Finally, they urge combination trials of different therapeutic approaches to build on this first signal. At CTAD, Lefkos Middleton of Imperial College London said, “We need to celebrate what we have, but keep investigating AD biology to find treatments that make a big difference.”—Madolyn Bowman Rogers & Gabrielle Strobel

Therapeutics Citations

  1. Lecanemab
  2. Aduhelm
  3. Donanemab

News Citations

  1. ApoE4 and Tau in Alzheimer’s: Worse Than We Thought? Especially in Women
  2. Aducanumab Still Needs to Prove Itself, Researchers Say
  3. Aduhelm Phase 3 Data: ARIA Is Common, Sometimes Serious
  4. Lecanemab: FDA Set Accelerated Approval Decision for January 2023
  5. Aduhelm Lowers Tau; Registry to Track Real-World Performance
  6. Bringing Aduhelm—and Antibodies to Come—Into Practice

Paper Citations

  1. .
    Thrombolysis induces cerebral hemorrhage in a mouse model of cerebral amyloid angiopathy.
    Ann Neurol. 2002 Jun;51(6):790-3.
    PubMed.
  2. .
    Cerebral hemorrhage after passive anti-Abeta immunotherapy.
    Science. 2002 Nov 15;298(5597):1379.
    PubMed.

Other Citations

  1. Sep 2022 news

External Citations

  1. Science
  2. Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy

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Fluorescence achieved in light-driven molecular motors

Two photofunctions, Photoluminescence (PL) and unidirectional rotation are combined by hybridizing a PL dye and a molecular motor. The molecular design provides photoregulation of these functions as well as additional synergistic effects. Credit: Ryojun Toyoda

Rotary molecular motors were first created in 1999, in the laboratory of Ben Feringa, Professor of Organic Chemistry at the University of Groningen. These motors are driven by light. For many reasons, it would be good to be able to make these motor molecules visible. The best way to do this is to make them fluoresce. However, combining two light-mediated functions in a single molecule is quite challenging. The Feringa laboratory has now succeeded in doing just that, in two different ways. These two types of fluorescing light-driven rotary motors were described in Nature Communications (September 30) and Science Advances (November 4).

“After the successful design of molecular motors in the past decades, an important next goal was to control various functions and properties using such motors,” explains Feringa, who shared in the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2016. “As these are light-powered rotary motors, it is particularly challenging to design a system that would have another function that is controlled by light energy, in addition to the rotary motion.”

Feringa and his team were particularly interested in fluorescence since this is a prime technique that is widely used for detection, for example in biomedical imaging. Usually, two such photochemical events are incompatible in the same molecule; either the light-driven motor operates and there is no fluorescence or there is fluorescence and the motor does not operate. Feringa says, “We have now demonstrated that both functions can exist in parallel in the same molecular system, which is rather unique.”

Ryojun Toyoda, a postdoctoral researcher in the Feringa group, who now holds a professor position at Tohoku University in Japan, added a fluorescent dye to a classic Feringa rotary motor. “The trick was to prevent these two functionalities from blocking each other,” says Toyoda. He managed to quench the direct interactions between the dye and the motor. This was done by positioning the dye perpendicular to the upper part of the motor to which it was attached. “This limits the interaction,” Toyoda explains.

Different colors

In this way, the fluorescence and the rotary function of the motor can coexist. Furthermore, it turned out that changing the solvent allows him to tune the system: “By varying the solvent polarity, the balance between both functions can be changed.” This means that the motor has become sensitive to its environment, which could point the way for future applications.

Co-author Shirin Faraji, professor of Theoretical Chemistry at the university of Groningen, helped to explain how this happens. Kiana Moghaddam, a postdoc in her group, performed extensive quantum mechanical calculations and demonstrated how the key energetics governing the photo-excited dynamics strongly depend on the solvent polarity.

Another useful property of this fluorescing motor molecule is that different dyes could be attached to it as long as they have a similar structure. “So, it is relatively easy to create motors that are glowing in different colors,” says Toyoda.

The dual-function motor was prepared by chemically attaching an antenna to a molecular motor. Rotation and photoluminescence (PL) can be controlled using light of different wavelengths. Credit: Lukas Pfeifer

Antenna

A second fluorescent motor was constructed by Lukas Pfeifer, also while working as a postdoctoral researcher in the Feringa group. He has since joined the École Polytechnique Fédérale in Lausanne, Switzerland: “My solution was based on a motor molecule that I had already made, which is driven by two low-energy near-infrared photons.” Motors that are powered by near-infrared light are useful in biological systems, as this light penetrates deeper into tissue than visible light and is less harmful to the tissue than UV light.

“I added an antenna to the motor molecule that collects the energy of two infrared photons and transfers it to the motor. While working on this, we discovered that with some modifications, the antenna could also cause fluorescence,” says Pfeifer. It turned out that the molecule can have two different excited states: in one state, the energy is transferred to the motor part and drives rotation, while the other state causes the molecule to fluoresce.

Power

“In the case of this second motor, the entire molecule fluoresces,” explains Professor Maxim Pshenichnikov, who performed spectroscopic analysis of both types of fluorescent motor and who is a co-author of both papers. “This motor is one chemical entity on which the wave function is not localized and, depending on the energy level, can have two different effects. By altering the wavelength of the light, and thus the energy that the molecule receives, you get either rotation or fluorescence.” Faraji adds, “Our synergized in-principle and in-practice approach highlights the interplay between theoretical and experimental studies, and it illustrates the power of such combined efforts.”

Now that the team has combined both motion and fluorescence in the same molecule, a next step would be to show motility and detect the molecule’s location simultaneously by tracing the fluorescence. Feringa says, “This is very powerful and we might apply it to show how these motors might traverse a cell membrane or move inside a cell, as fluorescence is a widely used technique to show where molecules are in cells. We could also use it to trace the movement that is induced by the light-powered motor, for instance on a nanoscale trajectory or perhaps trace motor-induced transport on the nanoscale. This is all part of follow-up research.”

More information:
Ryojun Toyoda et al, Synergistic interplay between photoisomerization and photoluminescence in a light-driven rotary molecular motor, Nature Communications (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-33177-0

Lukas Pfeifer et al, Dual Function Artificial Molecular Motors Performing Rotation and Photoluminescence, Science Advances (2022). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.add0410. www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.add0410

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Fluorescence achieved in light-driven molecular motors (2022, November 4)
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Scientists make massive breakthrough in nuclear fusion as ‘ignition’ is finally achieved

Scientists have confirmed that on 8 August 2021, they were able to ignite the same chemical reaction that powers the Sun by pumping more power than the entire US electric grid into a small gold capsule.

For a sliver of a second, the force of 192 laser beams meant the same thermonuclear fire that powers the Sun was ignited, which really is mind-blowing stuff. 

The breakthrough in fusion power means we’re now closer than ever to being able to harness chemical reactions with enough oomph to power the Sun, which generates energy by hurling together hydrogen atoms, in turn producing helium.

It’s also worth noting that the fusion reaction created by scientists was self-perpetuating, which means it didn’t immediately fizzle out. 

Scientists were able to ignite the same chemical reaction that powers the Sun. Credit: Dennis Hallinan / Alamy Stock Photo

Nuclear fusion takes place when two atoms combine, creating a heavier atom and releasing an enormous energy burst. The process is common in nature, but really hard to replicate in laboratories – mainly because an incredibly high-energy environment is needed to ensure the reaction continues. 

The experiment was conducted by the National Ignition Facility at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California and has been detailed in three newly published papers – one in Physical Review Letters and two in Physical Review E.

While the papers argue that researchers achieved ‘ignition’ – which suggests nuclear fusion is possible – a practical fusion reactor is still far off. 

If scientists were able to develop fully functioning fusion power plants, the sites would produce scores of energy using hydrogen from water as fuel. 

This means the only waste produced would be helium and the risk of radiation would be eradicated. 

In comparison, contemporary nuclear power plants use nuclear fission to create power, which is done by splitting the nuclei of heavy elements such as uranium.

Last year’s experiment used more than a quadrillion watts of power, a colossal amount of energy that was only released for a fraction of a second. 

Scientists pumped more power than the entire US electric grid into a small gold capsule. Credit: GiroScience / Alamy Stock Photo

Of the ground-breaking experiment, Omar Hurricane – chief scientist for Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory’s inertial confinement fusion program – said: “The record shot was a major scientific advance in fusion research, which establishes that fusion ignition in the lab is possible at NIF.”

He added: “Achieving the conditions needed for ignition has been a long-standing goal for all inertial confinement fusion research and opens access to a new experimental regime where alpha-particle self-heating outstrips all the cooling mechanisms in the fusion plasma.”

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Scientists Achieved Self-Sustaining Nuclear Fusion… But Now They Can’t Replicate It : ScienceAlert

Scientists have confirmed that last year, for the first time in the lab, they achieved a fusion reaction that self-perpetuates (instead of fizzling out) – bringing us closer to replicating the chemical reaction that powers the Sun.

However, they aren’t exactly sure how to recreate the experiment.

Nuclear fusion occurs when two atoms combine to create a heavier atom, releasing a huge burst of energy in the process.

It’s a process often found in nature, but it’s very difficult to replicate in the lab because it needs a high-energy environment to keep the reaction going.

The Sun generates energy using nuclear fusion – by smashing hydrogen atoms together to create helium.

Supernovae – exploding suns – also leverage nuclear fusion for their cosmic firework displays. The power of these reactions is what creates heavier molecules like iron.

In artificial settings here on Earth, however, heat and energy tend to escape through cooling mechanisms such as x-ray radiation and heat conduction.

To make nuclear fusion a viable energy source for humans, scientists first have to achieve something called ‘ignition’, where the self-heating mechanisms overpower all the energy loss.

Once ignition is achieved, the fusion reaction powers itself.

In 1955, physicist John Lawson created the set of criteria, now known as the ‘Lawson-like ignition criteria’, to help recognize when this ignition took place.

Ignition of nuclear reactions usually happens inside extremely intense environments, such as supernova, or nuclear weapons.

Researchers at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory’s National Ignition Facility in California have spent over a decade perfecting their technique and have now confirmed that the landmark experiment conducted on 8 August 2021 did, in fact, produce the first-ever successful ignition of a nuclear fusion reaction.

In a recent analysis, the 2021 experiment was judged against nine different versions of Lawson’s criterion.

“This is the first time we have crossed Lawson’s criterion in the lab,” nuclear physicist Annie Kritcher at the National Ignition Facility told New Scientist.

To achieve this effect, the team placed a capsule of tritium and deuterium fuel in the center of a gold-lined depleted uranium chamber and fired 192 high-energy lasers at it to create a bath of intense x-rays.

The intense environment generated by the inwardly directed shock waves created a self-sustaining fusion reaction.

Under these conditions, hydrogen atoms underwent fusion, releasing 1.3 megajoules of energy for 100 trillionths of a second, which is 10 quadrillion watts of power.

Over the past year, the researchers tried to replicate the result in four similar experiments, but only managed to produce half of the energy yield produced in the record-breaking initial experiment.

Ignition is highly sensitive to small changes that are barely perceptible, like the differences in the structure of each capsule and the intensity of the lasers, Kritcher explains.

“If you start from a microscopically worse starting point, it’s reflected in a much larger difference in the final energy yield,” says plasma physicist Jeremy Chittenden at Imperial College London. “The 8 August experiment was the best-case scenario.”

The team now wants to determine what exactly is required to achieve ignition and how to make the experiment more resilient to small errors. Without that knowledge, the process cannot be scaled up to create fusion reactors that could power cities, which is the ultimate goal of this kind of research.

“You don’t want to be in a position where you’ve got to get absolutely everything just right in order to get ignition,” says Chittenden.

This article was published in Physical Review Letters.

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Nuclear Fusion Breakthrough Confirmed: California Team Achieved Ignition. Research Continues

“A major breakthrough in nuclear fusion has been confirmed a year after it was achieved at a laboratory in California,” reports Newsweek:

Researchers at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory’s National Ignition Facility (NIF) recorded the first case of ignition on August 8, 2021, the results of which have now been published in three peer-reviewed papers….

Ignition during a fusion reaction essentially means that the reaction itself produced enough energy to be self-sustaining, which would be necessary in the use of fusion to generate electricity. If we could harness this reaction to generate electricity, it would be one of the most efficient and least polluting sources of energy possible. No fossil fuels would be required as the only fuel would be hydrogen, and the only by-product would be helium, which we use in industry and are actually in short supply of….

This landmark result comes after years of research and thousands of man hours dedicated to improving and perfecting the process: over 1,000 authors are included in the Physical Review Letters paper.
This week the laboratory said that breakthrough now puts researchers “at the threshold of fusion gain and achieving scientific ignition,” with the program’s chief scientist calling it “a major scientific advance in fusion research, which establishes that fusion ignition in the lab is possible at the National Ignition Facility.”

More news from this week’s announcement by the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory:
Since the experiment last August, the team has been executing a series of experiments to attempt to repeat the performance and to understand the experimental sensitivities in this new regime. “Many variables can impact each experiment,” Kritcher said. “The 192 laser beams do not perform exactly the same from shot to shot, the quality of targets varies and the ice layer grows at differing roughness on each target….”

While the repeat attempts have not reached the same level of fusion yield as the August 2021 experiment, all of them demonstrated capsule gain greater than unity with yields in the 430-700 kJ range, significantly higher than the previous highest yield of 170 kJ from February 2021. The data gained from these and other experiments are providing crucial clues as to what went right and what changes are needed in order to repeat that experiment and exceed its performance in the future. The team also is utilizing the experimental data to further understanding of the fundamental processes of fusion ignition and burn and to enhance simulation tools in support of stockpile stewardship.

Looking ahead, the team is working to leverage the accumulated experimental data and simulations to move toward a more robust regime — further beyond the ignition cliff — where general trends found in this new experimental regime can be better separated from variability in targets and laser performance. Efforts to increase fusion performance and robustness are underway via improvements to the laser, improvements to the targets and modifications to the design that further improve energy delivery to the hotspot while maintaining or even increasing the hot-spot pressure. This includes improving the compression of the fusion fuel, increasing the amount of fuel and other avenues.

“It is extremely exciting to have an ‘existence proof’ of ignition in the lab,” said Omar Hurricane, chief scientist for the lab’s inertial confinement fusion program. “We’re operating in a regime that no researchers have accessed since the end of nuclear testing, and it’s an incredible opportunity to expand our knowledge as we continue to make progress.”
Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader hesdeadjim99 for sharing the news.

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Nuclear Fusion Breakthrough Confirmed: California Team Achieved Ignition

A major breakthrough in nuclear fusion has been confirmed a year after it was achieved at a laboratory in California.

Researchers at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory’s (LLNL’s) National Ignition Facility (NIF) recorded the first case of ignition on August 8, 2021, the results of which have now been published in three peer-reviewed papers.

Nuclear fusion is the process that powers the Sun and other stars: heavy hydrogen atoms collide with enough force that they fuse together to form a helium atom, releasing large amounts of energy as a by-product. Once the hydrogen plasma “ignites”, the fusion reaction becomes self-sustaining, with the fusions themselves producing enough power to maintain the temperature without external heating.

Ignition during a fusion reaction essentially means that the reaction itself produced enough energy to be self-sustaining, which would be necessary in the use of fusion to generate electricity.

If we could harness this reaction to generate electricity, it would be one of the most efficient and least polluting sources of energy possible. No fossil fuels would be required as the only fuel would be hydrogen, and the only by-product would be helium, which we use in industry and are actually in short supply of.

Stock image of an atom. Results of nuclear fusion experiments that achieved ignition last year have no been confirmed in peer reviewed papers.
iStock / Getty Images Plus

The problem with fusion energy at the moment is that we do not have the technical capabilities to harness this power. Scientists from across the world are currently working to solve these issues.

In this latest milestone at the LLNL, researchers recorded an energy yield of more than 1.3 megajoules (MJ) during only a few nanoseconds. For reference, one MJ is the kinetic energy of a one tonne mass moving at 100mph.

“The record shot was a major scientific advance in fusion research, which establishes that fusion ignition in the lab is possible at NIF,” said Omar Hurricane, chief scientist for LLNL’s inertial confinement fusion program, in a statement.

“Achieving the conditions needed for ignition has been a long-standing goal for all inertial confinement fusion research and opens access to a new experimental regime where alpha-particle self-heating outstrips all the cooling mechanisms in the fusion plasma.”

In the experiments performed to reach this ignition result, researchers heat and compress a central “hot spot” of deuterium-tritium (hydrogen atoms with one and two neutrons, respectively) fuel using a surrounding dense piston also made from deuterium-tritium, creating a super hot, super pressurized hydrogen plasma.

“Ignition occurs when the heating from absorption of α particles [two protons and two neutrons tightly bound together] created in the fusion process overcomes the loss mechanisms in the system for a duration of time,” said the authors in a paper publishing the results in the journal Physical Review E.

This landmark result comes after years of research and thousands of man hours dedicated to improving and perfecting the process: over 1,000 authors are included in the Physical Review Letters paper.

Despite repeated attempts having not been able to achieve the same energy yield as the August 2021 experiment, all of them reached higher energies than previous experiments. Data from these follow-ups will aid the researchers to further streamline the fusion process and further explore nuclear fusion as a real option for electricity generation in the future.

“It is extremely exciting to have an ‘existence proof’ of ignition in the lab,” Hurricane said in a statement. “We’re operating in a regime that no researchers have accessed since the end of nuclear testing, and it’s an incredible opportunity to expand our knowledge as we continue to make progress.”

Correction: 08/13/22 at 1:20 a.m. ET: Corrects numbers of neutrons in deuterium and tritium atoms

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