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University researcher helps to recover first meteorite found in UK for 30 years


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University researcher helps to recover first meteorite found in UK for 30 years
A team of UK scientists, including a researcher from the University of Plymouth, has recovered pieces of an extremely rare meteorite, the like of which has never fallen anywhere in the UK before.
Dr Natasha Stephen, Lecturer in Advanced Analysis (Earth & Planetary Sciences), was part of a collaborative effort to locate and analyse fragments of the meteorite that lit up the sky over the UK and Northern Europe on Sunday 28 February.
Hundreds of pieces of the rare meteorite, known as a carbonaceous chondrite, survived its passage through the Earth’s atmosphere and landed in and around the town of Winchcombe, Gloucestershire. ....

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New research may be key to making safe, durable COVID-19 vaccines


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New research may be key to making safe, durable COVID-19 vaccines
Representative microscopy image of SARS-CoV-2 infected cells stained with antibodies in convalescent plasma. Image credit: Dr Michael Joyce, University of Alberta.
Using convalescent plasma, Griffith University researchers have identified how it may be possible to make a future vaccine that will provide protection against all major strains of COVID-19.
Vaccines work by inducing antibodies that block the interaction between the receptor binding domain (RBD) of SARS-CoV-2’s Spike protein and its receptor, angiotensin converting enzyme 2 (ACE2), which is present on human lungs.
To understand how antibodies block infection, the researchers from the Institute for Glycomics, with colleagues from the Gold Coast University Hospital, the University of Queensland, the University of Alberta, Canada, and Olymvax Pharmaceuticals, Chengdu, identified the minimal sequences of the RBD recognised by ....

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