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23 pages, 926 KB  
Review
Acrylamide in Food: From Maillard Reaction to Public Health Concern
by Gréta Törős, Walaa Alibrahem, Nihad Kharrat Helu, Szintia Jevcsák, Aya Ferroudj and József Prokisch
Toxics 2026, 14(2), 110; https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics14020110 (registering DOI) - 23 Jan 2026
Abstract
Acrylamide is a heat-induced food contaminant that can be formed through the Maillard reaction between reducing sugars and asparagine in carbohydrate-rich foods. It is recognized as having carcinogenic, neurotoxic, and reproductive risks, prompting global regulatory and research attention. This review synthesizes recent advances [...] Read more.
Acrylamide is a heat-induced food contaminant that can be formed through the Maillard reaction between reducing sugars and asparagine in carbohydrate-rich foods. It is recognized as having carcinogenic, neurotoxic, and reproductive risks, prompting global regulatory and research attention. This review synthesizes recent advances (2013–2025) in understanding acrylamide’s formation mechanisms, detection methods, mitigation strategies, and health implications. Analytical innovations such as LC–MS/MS have enabled detection at trace levels (≤10 µg/kg), supporting process optimization and compliance monitoring. Effective mitigation strategies combine cooking adjustments, ingredient reformulation, and novel technologies, including vacuum frying, ohmic heating, and predictive modeling, which can achieve up to a 70% reduction in certain food categories. Dietary polyphenols and fibers also hold promise, lowering acrylamide formation and bioavailability through carbonyl trapping and enhanced detoxification. However, significant gaps remain in bioavailability assessment, analysis of metabolic fate (glycidamide conversion), and standardized global monitoring. This review emphasizes that a sustainable reduction in dietary acrylamide requires a multidisciplinary framework integrating mechanistic modeling, green processing, regulatory oversight, and consumer education. Bridging science, industry, and policy is essential to ensure safer food systems and minimize long-term public health risks. Full article
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29 pages, 3504 KB  
Article
Depositional Environments and Carbonaceous Sources of the Cheng-Gang Crystalline Graphite Deposit Revealed by Elemental and Isotopic Evidence
by Feng Liu, Wenbo Rao, Yangyang Zhang, Jianjun Cui and Weijun Yao
Minerals 2026, 16(2), 120; https://doi.org/10.3390/min16020120 (registering DOI) - 23 Jan 2026
Abstract
The Cheng-gang crystalline graphite deposit is a recently discovered medium-to-large-sized deposit within the Tan-Lu Fault Zone (TLFZ), East China. However, the knowledge on this deposit remains limited, resulting in a poor understanding of its genesis. In this study, this deposit is chosen to [...] Read more.
The Cheng-gang crystalline graphite deposit is a recently discovered medium-to-large-sized deposit within the Tan-Lu Fault Zone (TLFZ), East China. However, the knowledge on this deposit remains limited, resulting in a poor understanding of its genesis. In this study, this deposit is chosen to elucidate the degree of graphite mineralization, the nature and depositional environments of the protoliths, and the carbon source of graphite through geochemical and stable isotope investigations, and mineralogical analysis. The fixed carbon contents in the graphite-ore-bearing layers range from 2% to 3%. X-ray diffraction analyses reveal a high degree of graphitization. Analyses of elemental ratios indicate that the protoliths of metamorphic rocks predominantly consist of felsic rocks derived from the upper crust and deposited in brackish-water and reducing environments (anoxic to dysoxic). Stable carbon isotope analyses show that CH4 with lighter carbon isotopes released from the decomposition of pristine organic matter was trapped into adjacent inorganic reservoirs and the residual fraction with heavy carbon isotopes evolved to become graphite under metamorphism. Assuming the existence of isotope exchange between carbonate minerals and graphite, the temperature of peak metamorphism is estimated to be 580–860 °C, corresponding to amphibolite–granulite facies during regional metamorphism. The direct mixing of organic fluids and adjacent inorganic reservoirs may have contributed to graphite ore formation and needs to be further explored in future studies. The findings shed light on the genesis of the TLFZ graphite deposits, providing practical implications for local mineral exploration. Full article
21 pages, 1359 KB  
Article
Settlement Model and State-Induced Demographic Trap: Hybrid Warfare Scenario and Territorial Transmutation in Spain
by Samuel Esteban Rodríguez, Zhaoyang Liu and Júlia Maria Nogueira Silva
Sustainability 2026, 18(3), 1162; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18031162 (registering DOI) - 23 Jan 2026
Abstract
This study investigates the demographic transformation of Spain’s settlement system from 2000 to the present, driven by intersecting forces of rural depopulation, metropolitan concentration, immigration, and welfare-state dynamics. Building on an integrated theoretical framework that combines Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, demographic accounting, territorial [...] Read more.
This study investigates the demographic transformation of Spain’s settlement system from 2000 to the present, driven by intersecting forces of rural depopulation, metropolitan concentration, immigration, and welfare-state dynamics. Building on an integrated theoretical framework that combines Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, demographic accounting, territorial carrying capacity, and spatial centrality, the research aims to (1) identify the mechanisms governing population redistribution across Spanish municipalities, and (2) simulate future demographic trajectories under current policy regimes. Key findings reveal that all net population growth since 2000 stems exclusively from immigration and its demographic sequelae, while the native Spanish cohort has experienced a net decline of 5.5 million due to negative natural change. The analysis further uncovers a self-reinforcing “demographic trap,” wherein welfare eligibility tied to household size incentivizes higher fertility among economically vulnerable immigrant groups, even as native families delay childbearing due to economic precarity. These dynamics are accelerating a process of “territorial transmutation,” projected to culminate in a shift in de facto governance by 2045. The study concludes that immigration alone cannot reverse rural depopulation or ensure fiscal sustainability without structural reforms to welfare design, territorial incentives, and demographic foresight. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Health, Well-Being and Sustainability)
19 pages, 1627 KB  
Review
Reducing Close Encounters with Insect Pests and Vectors: The Past, Present and Future of Insect Repellents
by Luis A. Martinez and Laurence J. Zwiebel
Insects 2026, 17(2), 130; https://doi.org/10.3390/insects17020130 - 23 Jan 2026
Abstract
Insects acting as agricultural pests or disease vectors represent some of the greatest challenges to global health, food security and economics. Diverse technologies to combat insects of economic and medical importance have been and are continually being developed. These include natural and synthetic [...] Read more.
Insects acting as agricultural pests or disease vectors represent some of the greatest challenges to global health, food security and economics. Diverse technologies to combat insects of economic and medical importance have been and are continually being developed. These include natural and synthetic chemical insecticides and repellents, mass-trapping approaches and, more recently, an increasingly wide range of biological as well as genetic manipulations of insect vectors/pests. The increase in biological resistance and cross-resistance to many insecticides and repellents, the rapid expansion of human populations, as well as escalating climate change have extended or shifted the active periods and habitats of many insect species, creating new hurdles for attempts to defend humans from insects. At the same time, environmental, ecological and socio-political concerns continue to impact the utility of both current interventions as well as newly emerging innovative strategies. The near exponential increase in insect-based threats highlights the importance of basic and translational studies to design and develop novel technologies to combat detrimental insect populations. This review outlines the history of these challenges and describes the evolution of chemical insect control technologies, while highlighting existing and contemporary approaches to develop and deploy chemical repellents to address this threat to human health and agriculture. Full article
25 pages, 8403 KB  
Article
A Pore-Scale Experimental Study on the Gas-Trapping Mechanisms of Reservoirs Under Water Encroachment
by Qijun Huang, Junqing Lu, Yuqin Zhao, Xiangyu Zhang, Yinman Ma and Junjian Li
Processes 2026, 14(3), 397; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr14030397 (registering DOI) - 23 Jan 2026
Abstract
Low gas recovery in the Sebei-2 gas field is linked to residual gas trapping under water encroachment. This study investigates the pore-scale trapping behaviour of residual gas in three types of layer: conventional, low-resistivity, and low-acoustic high-resistivity. High-fidelity pore structures were reconstructed by [...] Read more.
Low gas recovery in the Sebei-2 gas field is linked to residual gas trapping under water encroachment. This study investigates the pore-scale trapping behaviour of residual gas in three types of layer: conventional, low-resistivity, and low-acoustic high-resistivity. High-fidelity pore structures were reconstructed by integrating mercury intrusion porosimetry with thin-section data and microfluidic models were designed using the Quartet Structure Generation Set method and fabricated by wet etching. Visualized displacement experiments were performed under different wettability conditions and water invasion rates, and image analysis was used to quantify the distribution of trapped gas. Results show that the low-resistivity gas layer exhibits the highest residual gas saturation (30.57%), followed by the low-acoustic high-resistivity gas layer (20.20%), while the conventional gas layer has the lowest (15.29%). These values correspond to apparent pore-scale gas recoveries of about 48.95%, 65.01%, and 72.14% for the low-resistivity, low-acoustic high-resistivity and conventional gas layers, respectively. In hydrophilic systems, wetting-film thickening and flow diversion are the main trapping processes, whereas in hydrophobic systems, flow diversion dominates and residual gas decreases markedly. Increasing the water invasion rate reduces trapped gas in the conventional and low-resistivity layers, whereas in the strongly heterogeneous low-acoustic high-resistivity layer, higher invasion intensity strengthens preferential channelling/viscous fingering, leading to a non-monotonic residual gas response. These findings clarify the differentiated pore-scale trapping mechanisms of gas under water encroachment and highlight that mitigating water film-controlled trapping in low-resistivity layers and flow diversion trapping in low-acoustic high-resistivity layers is essential for mobilizing trapped gas, improving dynamic reserves, and ultimately enhancing the economic recovery of water-bearing gas reservoirs similar to the Sebei-2 gas field. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Petroleum and Low-Carbon Energy Process Engineering)
16 pages, 5410 KB  
Article
The Number and Habitat Use of Mesopredators Based on the Camera Trapping and Location of Burrows in Hungary
by Zoltán Horváth, András Vajkai and Mihály Márton
Life 2026, 16(2), 187; https://doi.org/10.3390/life16020187 - 23 Jan 2026
Abstract
The increasing population of mesopredators in Central Europe necessitates precise monitoring for effective game management. This study aimed to estimate the minimum population and reproduction of the European badger (Meles meles), red fox (Vulpes vulpes), and golden jackal ( [...] Read more.
The increasing population of mesopredators in Central Europe necessitates precise monitoring for effective game management. This study aimed to estimate the minimum population and reproduction of the European badger (Meles meles), red fox (Vulpes vulpes), and golden jackal (Canis aureus) in two hunting grounds in southwestern Hungary (Drávaszentes and Darány). Methods included a total burrow count conducted in early 2025, followed by the deployment of wildlife cameras at inhabited setts to record adults and cubs. Results indicated an inhabited burrow density of 1.05/100 ha for badgers and 0.38/100 ha for foxes in Drávaszentes, with average litter sizes of 1.13 and 2.33 cubs, respectively. In Darány, badger density was 1.43/100 ha, while jackals were present at 0.2/100 ha. Additionally, habitat composition preference was analysed using QGIS by comparing Corine Land Cover categories within 400 m buffers around burrows against random points. Habitat analysis suggested local preferences for non-irrigated arable land and mixed forests. These findings provide essential baseline data on predator population dynamics to support conscious management decisions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Conservation Ecology and Management of Mammalian Predators)
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21 pages, 1681 KB  
Article
Spatial Associations and Co-Occurrence Networks of Sympatric Species in an Asian Elephant Community
by Jingshan Wang, Xu Li, Yuan Tian, Wenguan Duan, Yuhui Si, Dusu Wen, Weibin Wang and Dehuai Meng
Animals 2026, 16(2), 351; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani16020351 (registering DOI) - 22 Jan 2026
Abstract
Understanding how species share resources (niche dynamics) and associate with each other is crucial for maintaining stable ecological communities. Using infrared camera traps, we constructed spatial association networks for an isolated Asian elephant population. The Asian elephant (Elephas maximus), a keystone [...] Read more.
Understanding how species share resources (niche dynamics) and associate with each other is crucial for maintaining stable ecological communities. Using infrared camera traps, we constructed spatial association networks for an isolated Asian elephant population. The Asian elephant (Elephas maximus), a keystone species in tropical forests, faces significant threats from habitat fragmentation and human disturbances, particularly in the isolated population of Nangunhe National Nature Reserve, Yunnan, China. Using infrared camera trapping, niche analysis, and interspecific association models, we examined the ecological role of Asian elephants and their sympatric species networks in fragmented habitats. We identified 44 species, including 11 species with higher relative abundance showing significant ecological correlations with elephants. Asian elephants exhibited the broadest spatial distribution, consistent with their role as ecological engineers due to high environmental tolerance and diverse resource utilization. Sympatric herbivores exhibited moderate spatial co-occurrence. Wild boars (Sus scrofa), red-bellied squirrels (Callosciurus erythraeus), northern pig-tailed macaques (Macaca leonina), and red junglefowl (Gallus gallus) demonstrated significant spatial associations with elephants. Lambda coefficient analysis revealed asymmetric associations reflecting spatial reliance of red-bellied squirrels and wild boars on elephant activity zones. Temporally, Asian elephants exhibited a stable bimodal activity pattern at dawn and dusk. Despite varying degrees of diel overlap with sympatric species, no significant temporal avoidance was detected, suggesting fine-scale coexistence mechanisms beyond the temporal dimension. We argue that conservation strategies are in urgent need of a transformation from single-species protection to the preservation of ecological interaction networks. This study clarifies the dominant position of Asian elephants in the community by mapping the spatial association networks between Asian elephants and sympatric species, and its findings hold substantial guiding significance for the recovery and protection of isolated Asian elephant populations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ecology and Conservation)
20 pages, 20223 KB  
Article
Integrating Morphological, Molecular, and Climatic Evidence to Distinguish Two Cryptic Rice Leaf Folder Species and Assess Their Potential Distributions
by Qian Gao, Zhiqian Li, Jihong Tang, Jingyun Zhu, Yan Wu, Baoqian Lyu and Gao Hu
Insects 2026, 17(1), 126; https://doi.org/10.3390/insects17010126 - 22 Jan 2026
Abstract
The larvae and damage symptoms of Cnaphalocrocis medinalis and Cnaphalocrocis patnalis exhibit a high degree of similarity, which often leads to confusion between the two species. This has posed challenges for research on their population dynamics and the development of effective control measures. [...] Read more.
The larvae and damage symptoms of Cnaphalocrocis medinalis and Cnaphalocrocis patnalis exhibit a high degree of similarity, which often leads to confusion between the two species. This has posed challenges for research on their population dynamics and the development of effective control measures. To better understand their morphological and damage characteristics, population dynamics, species identification based on COI gene fragments, and potential future distribution, a searchlight trap monitoring program was conducted for C. medinalis and its closely related species C. patnalis across four sites in Longhua, Haitang, and Yazhou districts in Hainan Province from 2021 to 2023. The MaxEnt model was utilized to predict the potential global distribution of both species, incorporating known occurrence points and climate variables. The trapping results revealed that both species reached peak abundance between April and June, with a maximum of 1500 individuals captured in May at Beishan Village, Haitang District. Interannual population fluctuations of both species generally followed a unimodal pattern. Genetic analyses revealed distinct differences in the mitochondrial COI gene fragment, confirming that C. medinalis and C. patnalis are closely related yet distinct species. The population peak of C. patnalis occurred slightly earlier than that of C. medinalis, and its field damage was more severe. Infestations during the booting to heading stages of rice significantly reduced seed-setting rates and overall yield. Model predictions indicated that large areas of southern Eurasia are suitable for the survival of both species, with precipitation during the wettest month identified as the primary environmental factor shaping their potential distributions. At present, moderately and highly suitable habitats for C. medinalis account for 2.50% and 2.27% of the global land area, respectively, whereas those for C. patnalis account for 2.85% and 1.19%. These results highlight that climate change is likely to exacerbate the damage caused by both rice leaf-roller pests, particularly the emerging threat posed by C. patnalis. Overall, this study provides a scientific basis for invasion risk assessment and the development of integrated management strategies targeting the combined impacts of C. medinalis and C. patnalis. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Insect Pest and Vector Management)
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41 pages, 1656 KB  
Article
Bridging or Widening? Configurational Pathways of Digitalization for Income Inequality: A Global Perspective
by Shuigen Hu, Wenkui Wang and Yulong Jie
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 1137; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18021137 - 22 Jan 2026
Abstract
Digitalization is widely heralded as a catalyst for growth, yet its role in achieving the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goal 10 (Reduced Inequalities) remains deeply contested. Moving beyond linear assumptions of “digital dividends,” this study adopts a complex socio-technical systems perspective to unravel [...] Read more.
Digitalization is widely heralded as a catalyst for growth, yet its role in achieving the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goal 10 (Reduced Inequalities) remains deeply contested. Moving beyond linear assumptions of “digital dividends,” this study adopts a complex socio-technical systems perspective to unravel the configurational pathways linking digitalization to national income inequality. We analyze a high-quality balanced panel of 56 major economies from 2012 to 2022. Employing Panel Fuzzy-Set Qualitative Comparative Analysis (Panel fsQCA) and Necessary Condition Analysis (NCA), this study proposes an evidence-based typology of digitalization-inequality pathways. We reveal that the impact of digital transformation is asymmetric and contingent on geo-economic contexts. NCA identifies Digital Infrastructure, Innovation, and Governance as necessary “bottlenecks” for social equity. Sufficiency analysis uncovers three distinct sustainable development modes: an “Open Innovation Mode” in affluent small economies, driven by global integration and technological frontiers; a “Governance-Regulated Industry Mode” in major economies, where strong state capacity regulates digital industrial scale; and an “Open Niche Mode” for transition economies, leveraging openness to bypass domestic structural deficits. Conversely, we identify a critical “Hollow Governance Trap” in the Global South, where digital governance efforts fail to reduce inequality in the absence of real industrial and infrastructural foundations. These findings challenge one-size-fits-all policies, suggesting that bridging the global digital divide requires context-specific strategies—ranging from synergistic integration to asymmetric breakthroughs—that align digital investments with institutional capacity. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Digital Economy and Sustainable Development)
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10 pages, 878 KB  
Article
Low Afterglow Composite Scintillator for Real-Time X-Ray Imaging
by Xiangzhou Zhang, Yeqi Liu, Nianqiao Liu, Zhaolai Chen, Yuhai Zhang and Xiao Cheng
Materials 2026, 19(2), 437; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma19020437 (registering DOI) - 22 Jan 2026
Abstract
Rare-earth fluoride nanocrystals have emerged as promising scintillator materials due to their excellent optical properties, environmental stability, and ease of fabrication into flexible screens. However, their practical application is often hindered by persistent afterglow, a phenomenon caused by deep trap states that capture [...] Read more.
Rare-earth fluoride nanocrystals have emerged as promising scintillator materials due to their excellent optical properties, environmental stability, and ease of fabrication into flexible screens. However, their practical application is often hindered by persistent afterglow, a phenomenon caused by deep trap states that capture and slowly release charge carriers after X-ray excitation, which leads to signal overlap and image artifacts in dynamic imaging scenarios. This study addresses this critical challenge by developing Ce3+/Tb3+ co-doped NaLuF4 nanoscintillators with suppressed afterglow. By introducing Ce3+ions as dopants into the Tb3+-activated NaLuF4 host, we successfully quenched the characteristic long afterglow without compromising the intrinsic radioluminescence efficiency of the Tb3+ centers. The optimized nanocrystals were subsequently incorporated into a poly (vinyl alcohol) matrix to fabricate transparent, high-loading composite scintillator films. The resulting films exhibit negligible afterglow, maintain high spatial resolution, and demonstrate excellent radiation stability. This work presents an effective strategy for suppressing afterglow in rare-earth fluoride scintillators through targeted ion doping, which paves the way for their application in real-time, high-quality X-ray imaging technologies such as medical diagnostics and industrial inspection. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Halide Perovskite Crystal Materials and Optoelectronic Devices)
16 pages, 3467 KB  
Article
Monoxenic Root Organ Culture Enables High-Yield Production of Viable Indigenous Rhizophagus irregularis Inoculum for Arid Oasis Agroecosystems
by Elmostafa Gagou, Hanae El Yeznasni, Wissame Chafai, Khadija Chakroune, Mahmoud Abbas, Touria Lamkami, Mondher El Jaziri and Abdelkader Hakkou
Microbiol. Res. 2026, 17(1), 28; https://doi.org/10.3390/microbiolres17010028 (registering DOI) - 22 Jan 2026
Abstract
Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) play a pivotal role in plant adaptation to arid ecosystems, yet their widespread agricultural use is constrained by the scarcity of high-quality, locally adapted inoculum. This study established a reliable monoxenic culture system for mass-producing an indigenous AMF isolate [...] Read more.
Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) play a pivotal role in plant adaptation to arid ecosystems, yet their widespread agricultural use is constrained by the scarcity of high-quality, locally adapted inoculum. This study established a reliable monoxenic culture system for mass-producing an indigenous AMF isolate from the date palm (Phoenix dactylifera L.) rhizosphere in the Figuig oasis, southeastern Morocco. The isolate was identified as Rhizophagus irregularis based on spore morphology and Large Subunit ribosomal DNA (LSU rDNA) phylogeny. Two propagule types, surface-sterilized spores and mycorrhizal root fragments of Plantago lanceolata L., were compared for initiation of in vitro cultures on Ri T-DNA-transformed carrot (Daucus carota L.) hairy roots. By week 16, cultures initiated from mycorrhizal root fragments produced 1414 ± 65 spores per plate and showed significantly higher performance than spore-derived cultures in terms of propagule viability, root colonization, and hairy root growth. Propagule viability reached 84% and 68%, root colonization frequencies were 95% and 72%, and hairy root lengths averaged 81 and 63 cm in root fragment- and spore-derived cultures, respectively (p < 0.01). In a subsequent whole-plant assay using P. lanceolata, in vitro-produced spores induced markedly higher mycorrhizal colonization frequency (91.0 ± 1.6% compared with 74.8 ± 1.9%) and intensity (70.0 ± 1.6% compared with 55.0 ± 1.6%) than spores obtained from conventional trap cultures (p < 0.001). These results demonstrate that monoxenic root-organ culture using root fragments is a robust, reproducible method for generating abundant, contaminant-free, and functionally superior inoculum of native R. irregularis. This advance provides a solid platform for developing tailored bio-inoculants to enhance crop resilience and sustainability in arid and semi-arid agroecosystems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Plant–Pathogen Interactions)
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19 pages, 8291 KB  
Article
Thermosensitive Hydrogel for Controlled Delivery of PAD4 Inhibitor YJ-2 in Diabetic Wound Healing
by Kai Wang, Ayijiang Taledaohan, Liujia Chan, Yu Lu, Yijiang Jia and Yuji Wang
Pharmaceutics 2026, 18(1), 135; https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics18010135 - 22 Jan 2026
Abstract
Background: Diabetic wound healing is hampered by persistent inflammation and excessive neutrophil extracellular traps (NET) formation. Peptidylarginine deiminase 4 (PAD4) is a key enzyme driving this pathology. This study developed a thermosensitive chitosan/β-glycerophosphate hydrogel for the local delivery of a novel PAD4 [...] Read more.
Background: Diabetic wound healing is hampered by persistent inflammation and excessive neutrophil extracellular traps (NET) formation. Peptidylarginine deiminase 4 (PAD4) is a key enzyme driving this pathology. This study developed a thermosensitive chitosan/β-glycerophosphate hydrogel for the local delivery of a novel PAD4 inhibitor, YJ-2, to promote diabetic wound repair. Methods: A YJ-2-loaded hydrogel (CGY) was synthesized and characterized. In vitro studies used HaCaT cells and macrophages to assess proliferation, migration, NETs (via H3cit), and polarization. Efficacy was evaluated in diabetic C57 mouse wound models. Results: CGY exhibited temperature-sensitive gelation and sustained YJ-2 release. In vitro, YJ-2 inhibited NETs formation, reduced pro-inflammatory markers, promoted HaCaT migration, and induced M2 macrophage polarization. In vivo, CGY treatment significantly accelerated wound closure. Conclusions: Local hydrogel delivery of the PAD4 inhibitor YJ-2 effectively mitigates inflammation and NETs, promoting healing in diabetic wounds. This strategy represents a promising targeted therapy for diabetic wounds. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Drug Delivery and Controlled Release)
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13 pages, 1655 KB  
Article
Impact of Integrated Control Interventions on Sandfly Populations in Human and Canine Visceral Leishmaniasis Control in Araçatuba, State of São Paulo, Brazil
by Keuryn Alessandra Mira Luz-Requena, Tania Mara Tomiko Suto, Osias Rangel, Regina Célia Loverdi de Lima Stringheta, Thais Rabelo Santos-Doni, Lilian Aparecida Colebrusco Rodas and Katia Denise Saraiva Bresciani
Insects 2026, 17(1), 125; https://doi.org/10.3390/insects17010125 - 21 Jan 2026
Abstract
Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is a serious vector-borne disease affecting humans and dogs, posing major public health challenges in endemic regions. Control efforts often target sandfly vectors, whose larvae and pupae develop in soil. Environmental management, such as removing organic matter, reducing moisture, and [...] Read more.
Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is a serious vector-borne disease affecting humans and dogs, posing major public health challenges in endemic regions. Control efforts often target sandfly vectors, whose larvae and pupae develop in soil. Environmental management, such as removing organic matter, reducing moisture, and pruning vegetation, aims to limit breeding sites and reduce sandfly populations. This study evaluated the impact of integrated interventions on sandfly behavior in priority areas for VL control in Araçatuba, São Paulo, Brazil. The control strategy combined environmental management, canine surveys, and educational actions across seven local work areas (LWAs). Between 2019 and 2021, CDC-type light traps were installed in intra- and peridomiciliary settings at twelve properties in LWA 5. Spatial risk analysis for canine transmission was conducted in LWAs 3 and 5 using a Generalized Additive Model, with results presented as spatial odds ratios. Vector prevalence was analyzed using negative binomial regression compared to historical municipal data. Intervention coverage averaged 52.91% of visited properties (n = 15,905), ranging from 48% to 76.8% across LWAs. Adherence to environmental management exceeded 85%. Of the 150 sandflies collected, 98.67% were Lutzomyia longipalpis and 1.33% Nyssomyia neivai. A 6% reduction in vector density was observed compared with historical data, although this difference was not statistically significant. Spatial risk varied among LWAs, indicating heterogeneous transmission levels. These findings suggest that integrated environmental and educational interventions may contribute to reducing vector density and that identifying priority areas tends to support surveillance and the effectiveness of disease control actions. Full article
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24 pages, 1455 KB  
Article
Gluten-Free Steamed Bread Formulated with Rice–Amaranth Flours via Sourdough Fermentation
by Ricardo H. Hernández-Figueroa, Beatriz Mejía-Garibay, Enrique Palou, Aurelio López-Malo and Emma Mani-López
Fermentation 2026, 12(1), 65; https://doi.org/10.3390/fermentation12010065 - 21 Jan 2026
Abstract
The aims of this study were to evaluate the impact of probiotics (added as a starter sourdough and microcapsules) on gluten-free (GF) rice–amaranth steamed bread (SB) regarding physicochemical characteristics, sensory attributes, probiotic viability, and volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Also, probiotic viability, pH, total [...] Read more.
The aims of this study were to evaluate the impact of probiotics (added as a starter sourdough and microcapsules) on gluten-free (GF) rice–amaranth steamed bread (SB) regarding physicochemical characteristics, sensory attributes, probiotic viability, and volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Also, probiotic viability, pH, total titratable acidity (TTA), moisture content, water activity, and texture were determined for 10 days of storage. GF-SB based on rice and amaranth was formulated and cooked at 90 ± 2 °C for 40 min. Three types of GF-SB were studied: control, with 30% sourdough fermented using Lactiplantibacillus plantarum NRRL B-4496 (GF-P), and with sourdough and encapsulated Limosilactobacillus reuteri DSM 17938 (GF-PC). The encapsulation yield was 94.9%. The viability of both probiotics was drastically reduced after steamed cooking, with losses ranging from 6 to 8 log10 CFU/g. Sourdough decreased the pH (from 6.04 to 5.48–5.71) and hardness (control 46 N, sourdough ~25 N) while increasing lactic and acetic acids, moisture content (control 38%, sourdough ~46%), and water activity. Sourdough and probiotic capsules did not affect volume (~1.24 cm3/g), width-to-height ratio (~2.4), color, or sensory attributes. The VOCs revealed higher relative abundances of certain yeast-derived higher alcohols and oxidation-related carbonyl-trapping derivatives in control GF-SB, whereas bread with sourdough showed higher levels of long-chain hydrocarbons and esters, such as heptacosane and decanoic acid decyl ester. During the storage, Lpb. plantarum increased to ~3 log10 CFU/g and Lim. reuteri remained steady. pH and TTA (0.03–0.04%) remained constant during storage. After 10 days of storage, hardness increased significantly (p < 0.05) in all GF-SB, doubling the initial values. Moisture content remained constant, while water activity decreased in GF-P (Δ = 0.025) and the control (Δ = 0.015). The use of sourdough in GF-SB improved texture, moisture content, and VOCs without modifying physical and sensory properties. Full article
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Article
Interference-Induced Bound States in the Continuum in Optical Giant Atoms
by Vassilios Yannopapas
Photonics 2026, 13(1), 96; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics13010096 - 21 Jan 2026
Abstract
The giant atom paradigm, where a single quantum emitter couples to a continuum at multiple discrete points, has enabled unprecedented control over light-matter interactions, including decoherence-free subspaces and chiral emission. However, realizing these non-local effects beyond the microwave regime remains a significant challenge [...] Read more.
The giant atom paradigm, where a single quantum emitter couples to a continuum at multiple discrete points, has enabled unprecedented control over light-matter interactions, including decoherence-free subspaces and chiral emission. However, realizing these non-local effects beyond the microwave regime remains a significant challenge due to the diffraction limit. Here, we theoretically propose a photonic analog of giant atoms operating at optical frequencies, utilizing a quantum emitter resonantly coupled to a pair of spatially separated single-mode cavities interacting with a common 1D photonic continuum. By rigorously deriving the effective non-Hermitian Hamiltonian and integrating out the bath degrees of freedom, we demonstrate that the interference between cavity-mediated emission pathways leads to the formation of robust Bound States in the Continuum (BICs). These interference-induced dark states allow for the infinite trapping of excitation within the emitter-cavity subsystem, effectively shielding it from radiative decay. Our results extend the giant atom toolbox to the optical domain, offering a scalable architecture for integrated quantum photonics and quantum interconnects. Full article
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