Biology
Aliens sent strange devices to Earth in order to plant life here says Nobel Prize winner

Are aliens already among us? More than a few UFO enthusiasts out there wholeheartedly believe that the answer to that question is a definitive yes. While that’s all fine and dandy, eyewitness accounts and blurry pictures are not exactly solid proof, which means that there’s no real evidence to back up that claim… or is there? Well, it seems like you don’t have to travel all the way to Roswell or Area 51 (actually, you couldn’t go here even if you wanted to) in order to aimlessly search for aliens because apparently E.T. is already safely tucked away in a British lab and it is being studied by researchers from the University of Buckingham and the University of Sheffield as we speak.
Now I know what you’re thinking: “what?! Aliens in the UK? That can’t be true, intelligent aliens will definitely visit the good ol’ U.S. of A first.” That may be so, imaginary interlocutor, but the extraterrestrial I’m talking about is not likely to travel anywhere on its own given that it’s only a microscopic organism. I know, full-sized aliens piloting UFOs would have been preferable, but we’ll just have to take what we can get. The organism in question comes in a form of a tiny metallic sphere composed of titanium and vanadium, which seems to contain biological material. Or, as Nobel Prize winner Professor Milton Wainwright scientifically puts it, the alien metal ball has “a gooey biological material oozing from its centre.”
Wainwright says that he and his team found the orb attached to a high-altitude balloon that had been sent to collect dust particles from the Earth’s stratosphere. Apparently, it also managed to collect the alien device in the process. Actually, collect might not be the right word here because the sphere reportedly hit the balloon and left a very small crater upon impact. I keed you not. “On hitting the stratosphere sampler the sphere made an impact crater, a minute version of the huge impact crater on earth caused by the asteroid said to have killed off the dinosaurs,” Professor Wainwright told The Daily Express. He also added that “This seems never before to have been found on Earth.” So, what are we looking at here, and more importantly, when are the intelligent aliens coming to visit us? Interestingly enough (and frightening at the same time), the alien ball seems to be spewing biological material, which may or may not have been sent here by – *queue X-Files theme* – an advanced alien civilization.
One of the official theories is, in fact, that aliens sent genetic material via said metal sphere in order to plant life on Earth. On the other hand, it’s also possible that the orb just happened to be in the vicinity of our planet by accident. Needless to say, that still means that it was sent by someone and given that the evidence seems to suggest that it wasn’t sent from Earth, we can only conclude that it came from outer space. This theory sounds pretty “out there”, but it was actually proposed some time ago by another Nobel Prize winner called Sir Francis Crick and was supported by a few renowned astrophysicists, including the late Carl Sagan. The theory even has a name – directed panspermia.
However, considering that the researchers haven’t found any trace of the civilization that allegedly sent the sphere into space, there’s no real way of confirming this theory. At the moment, Wainwright and his colleagues seem happy with just saying that the orb “came from space, possibly from a comet” and just leaving it at that. But based on his previous statements, it’s pretty obvious that he’s thinking that aliens were involved.
Coincidentally, this isn’t Wainwright’s first rodeo, as the Nobel Prize winner was heard making similarly bold claims a while back. Earlier this year, the professor talked about another microscopic organism of possibly alien origin which he affectionately went on to call “ghost particle.” This particle was also found in the stratosphere and, wouldn’t you know it, looks like yet another vehicle specifically designed to ferry aliens from one place to another. Unlike the more recently discovered metallic sphere, this particular item looks like some sort of a deflated balloon. Wainwright speculates that the ghost particle is likely inflated in its natural state and can guarantee that it’s “definitely biological.”
I won’t blame you for thinking that some of these claims sound a bit far fetched and somewhat ridiculous, but apparently the folks over at NASA seem to believe that there’something to this story and they are reportedly sending their own balloon into the stratosphere in the hopes of finding microscopic aliens. I don’t know about you, but I’m just dying to learn about their findings. Whether these organisms were sent by aliens or not remains to be seen, however, the fact that certain life forms can survive the harsh conditions of outer space has already been proven. Last year, Russian cosmonauts were baffled to find living microscopic organisms on the exterior of the International Space Station, of all places. Granted, these organisms were a species of sea plankton that originated from Earth, so definitely not aliens. It’s unclear how the organisms ended up on the ISS, but if Earth’s life forms can survive in those extreme conditions, perhaps microscopic aliens can do it, too.
Until recently it was believed that the truth was out there, but now it looks like it might be down here as well. Hopefully, Wainwright and his colleagues will be able to give us some answers soon because if intelligent aliens are also inbound for Earth, then we might want to hurry up and start building that artificial intelligence robot army that people keep talking about, you know, just in case the aliens aren’t friendly.
Biology
The First 3D-Printed Vegan Salmon Is In Stores

Revo Foods’ “THE FILET – Inspired By Salmon” salmon fillet may be the first 3D-printed food to hit store shelves. said that firm CEO Robin Simsa remarked, “With the milestone of industrial-scale 3D food printing, we are entering a creative food revolution, an era where food is being crafted exactly according to customer needs.”
Mycoprotein from filamentous fungi is used to make the salmon alternative and other meat substitutes. Vitamins and omega-3 fatty acids are in the product, like in animals. Is high in protein, at 9.5 grams per 100 grams, although less than conventional salmon.
Revo Foods and Mycorena developed 3D-printable mycoprotein. Years of research have led to laser-cooked cheesecakes and stacked lab-grown meats.
One reason for this push is because printed food alternatives may make food production more sustainable, which worries the fishing sector. Overfishing reduces fish populations in 34% of worldwide fish stocks.
Over 25% of worldwide greenhouse gas emissions come from food production, with 31% from livestock and fish farms and 18% from supply chain components including processing and shipping. According to Revo Foods’ website, vegan salmon fillet production consumes 77 to 86% less carbon dioxide and 95% less freshwater than conventional salmon harvesting and processing.
The salmon alternative’s sales potential is unknown. In order to succeed, Revo Foods believes that such goods must “recreate an authentic taste that appeals to the flexitarian market.”
The commercial distribution of 3D-printed food could change food production.
Artificial Intelligence
Open-source Microsoft Novel protein-generating AI EvoDiff

All diseases are based on proteins, natural molecules that perform vital cellular functions. Characterizing proteins can reveal disease mechanisms and ways to slow or reverse them, while creating proteins can lead to new drug classes.
The lab’s protein design process is computationally and human resource-intensive. It involves creating a protein structure that could perform a specific function in the body and then finding a protein sequence that could “fold” into that structure. To function, proteins must fold correctly into three-dimensional shapes.
Not everything has to be complicated.
Microsoft introduced EvoDiff, a general-purpose framework that generates “high-fidelity,” “diverse” proteins from protein sequences, this week. Unlike other protein-generating frameworks, EvoDiff doesn’t need target protein structure, eliminating the most laborious step.
Microsoft senior researcher Kevin Yang says EvoDiff, which is open source, could be used to create enzymes for new therapeutics, drug delivery, and industrial chemical reactions.
Yang, one of EvoDiff’s co-creators, told n an email interview that the platform will advance protein engineering beyond structure-function to sequence-first design. EvoDiff shows that ‘protein sequence is all you need’ to controllably design new proteins.
A 640-million-parameter model trained on data from all protein species and functional classes underpins EvoDiff. “Parameters” are the parts of an AI model learned from training data that define its skill at a problem, in this case protein generation. The model was trained using OpenFold sequence alignment data and UniRef50, a subset of UniProt, the UniProt consortium’s protein sequence and functional information database.
Modern image-generating models like Stable Diffusion and DALL-E 2 are diffusion models like EvoDiff. EvoDiff slowly subtracts noise from a protein made almost entirely of noise to move it closer to a protein sequence.
Beyond image generation, diffusion models are being used to design novel proteins like EvoDiff, create music, and synthesize speech.
“If there’s one thing to take away [from EvoDiff], I think it’s this idea that we can — and should — do protein generation over sequence because of the generality, scale, and modularity we can achieve,” Microsoft senior researcher Ava Amini, another co-contributor, said via email. “Our diffusion framework lets us do that and control how we design these proteins to meet functional goals.”
EvoDiff can create new proteins and fill protein design “gaps,” as Amini noted. A protein amino acid sequence that meets criteria can be generated by the model from a part that binds to another protein.
EvoDiff can synthesize “disordered proteins” that don’t fold into a three-dimensional structure because it designs proteins in “sequence space” rather than structure. Disordered proteins enhance or decrease protein activity in biology and disease, like normal proteins.
EvoDiff research isn’t peer-reviewed yet. Microsoft data scientist Sarah Alamdari says the framework needs “a lot more scaling work” before it can be used commercially.
“This is just a 640-million-parameter model, and we may see improved generation quality if we scale up to billions,” Alamdari emailed. WeAI emonstrated some coarse-grained strategies, but to achieve even finer control, we would want to condition EvoDiff on text, chemical information, or other ways to specify the desired function.”
Next, the EvoDiff team will test the model’s lab-generated proteins for viability. Those who are will start work on the next framework.
Biology
Chinese Dinosaur Might Have Been as Iridescent as a Hummingbird

Earlier this month, I wrote an article on a toy line of scientifically accurate Velociraptor action figures with plumage inspired by modern birds. I mused how impressive it would be if prehistoric raptors had been covered by feather patterns not unlike those in the toy line. Little did I know that two weeks later, researchers would reveal that some theropods had iridescent feathers that outshine David Silva’s velocifigures.
The Caihong juji, Mandarin for “rainbow with a big crest” (or just Caihong for short), was a “paravian theropod,” a clade commonly known for its winged forelimbs (even though many weren’t capable of flight) and enlarged sickle foot claws. In 2014, a farmer in the Qinlong County in the Hebei Province of Northeastern China gave a nearly complete Caihong fossil, feathers included, to The Paleontological Museum of Liaoning. Finding a complete skeleton is rare in paleontology and proved very helpful to the researchers. However, you might wonder just how scientists were able to determine the iridescent nature of the Caihong’s plumage. Two words: fossilized melanosomes.
Melanosomes are organelles that create, store, and transport melanin, which determines the pigments/colors of animal hair, fur, skin, scales, and feathers. Upon examining the Caihong’s head, crest, and tail feathers with an electron microscope, scientists discovered platelet-shaped structures similar in shape to the melanosomes that give hummingbirds their iridescent coloring. The rest of the body feathers had melanosome structures similar to those in the grey and black feathers of penguins, which would have made for an odd sight: a duck-sized dinosaur with body feathers as drab as a raven’s and head and neck feathers more colorful than a peacock’s.
The inferred feather coloration of the Caihong is not its only unusual feature, though. The dinosaur had longer arm and leg feathers than its relatives, and its tail feathers created a “tail surface area” that was larger than the famous proto-bird the Archaeopteryx. Furthermore, the Caihong had bony crests, which while common among most dinosaurs, are almost unheard of among paravian theropods. But, more importantly, it had proportionally long forearms, which is a feature of flight-capable theropods, even though scientists believe the Caihong didn’t fly. While this dinosaur apparently has the earliest examples of proportionally long forearms in the theropod fossil records, it still falls in line with the belief that the evolution of flight-capable feathers outpaced the evolution of flight-capable skeletons. The melanosomes, however, are the more intriguing discovery, since they are the earliest examples of “organized platlet-shaped nanostructures…in dinosaurian feathers.”
While paleontologists are confident the Caihong’s platelet structures are melanosomes, the researchers understand that their discovery is based partially on inference and could potentially be incorrect. If the structures aren’t melanosomes, well, that invalidates this entire article. But that’s what paleontology is all about: examining the evidence, creating inferences supported by that evidence, and changing those inferences when new information becomes available. Still, the concept of dinosaurs with iridescent feathers is pretty cool. If you want to learn more about the Caihong juji, you can read the original article on Nature.
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