Alliance and WEF sign agreement for Food Action Alliance
Business Announcement
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 26-Jul-2025 13:11 ET (26-Jul-2025 17:11 GMT/UTC)
The Alliance and the WEF signed an agreement for five years to operate the Food Action Alliance and its flagships across the globe, especially in Latin America and the Caribbean.
The emergence of rabies in distinct wildlife species is a potential source of human infection and poses life-threatening risks. As the researchers responsible for the discovery warn, anyone who comes into contact with these animals should alert the authorities. A 36-year-old farm worker died in May, only weeks after being bitten by a marmoset.
The endangered coco de mer boasts a seed that is the undisputed world heavyweight, weighing 18 kilograms (40 pounds) or more. A deep genetic dive into its reproduction strategy may hold a crucial lesson for the tree’s survival - and people restoring landscapes everywhere.
The article “Plasma oxylipin profiling by high resolution mass spectrometry reveals signatures of inflammation and hypermetabolism in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis” is at: www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0891584923005993.
An article published in PNAS by Brazilian and Australian researchers describes a hitherto unknown protein with anti-oxidizing properties secreted by Coxiella burnetii, a Gram-negative intracellular bacterium, pointing to possible treatments for auto-immune diseases and even cancer.
Results of trials involving animals, cell cultures and human heart tissue are reported in the European Heart Journal. The study was conducted by researchers at USP in partnership with a biopharmaceutical firm, offering hope to 2 million Brazilians who suffer from the disease.
The test developed by Brazilian researchers accurately identifies the causative agent in less than two hours, so that treatment can be properly targeted. Brazil is seeing a growing number of cases of co-infection by protozoans Leishmania infantum and Crithidia.
Highlighted on the cover of the journal Biochemistry, a study by Brazilian researchers shows that a chemical change called pyroglutamination can occur spontaneously during peptide synthesis. The discovery has implications for laboratory experiments and research on Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and other diseases associated with the formation of amyloid aggregates.