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Researchers at Penn Engineering have developed PanoRadar, a system that uses radio waves and AI to provide robots with detailed 3D environmental views, even in challenging conditions like smoke and fog. This innovation offers a cost-effective alternative to LiDAR, enhancing robotic navigation and perception capabilities.


In the race to develop robust perception systems for robots, one persistent challenge has been operating in bad weather and harsh conditions. For example, traditional, light-based vision sensors such as cameras or LiDAR (Light Detection And Ranging) fail in heavy smoke and fog.

However, nature has shown that vision doesn’t have to be constrained by light’s limitations—many organisms have evolved ways to perceive their environment without relying on light. Bats navigate using the echoes of sound waves, while sharks hunt by sensing electrical fields from their prey’s movements.

Groundbreaking research presented at UEG Week 2024 reveals a promising new treatment strategy for type 2 diabetes (T2D) that could significantly reduce or even eliminate the need for insulin therapy.

This innovative approach, which combines a novel procedure known as ReCET (Re-Cellularization via Electroporation Therapy) with semaglutide, resulted in the elimination of insulin therapy for 86% of patients.

Globally, T2D affects 422 million people, with obesity recognized as a significant risk factor. While insulin therapy is commonly used to manage blood sugar levels in T2D patients, it can result in side effects such as weight gain and further complicate diabetes management. A need therefore exists for alternative treatment strategies.

While labeled a “robot wolf” by its designers, this platform presents itself as a powerful tactical tool likely aimed at military or security applications, where its design and capabilities stand to offer significant operational value.

The robot’s four-legged design is an immediate indicator of its…


At China’s Zhuhai Air Show, a new robotic quadruped known as robot-wolf stole the spotlight demonstrating its capability to respond to real-time voice commands.

Principal investigator Eric Pierce pointed out that the trial shows that gene therapy for hereditary vision loss is a worthy pursuit for future research. He believes the early research is promising.

“It’s a big deal to hear how thrilled they were to finally be able to see food on their plates,” said Pierce. “These were individuals who couldn’t read a single line on an eye chart. They had no treatment options, which is an unfortunate reality for most people with inherited retinal disorders.”

The goal is to inject CRISPR so that it reaches the retina to restore the ability to produce genes and proteins.

Microbial systems have been synthetically engineered to deploy therapeutic payloads in vivo.


To enable effective cancer vaccination, we developed an engineered bacterial system in probiotic Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) to enhance expression, delivery and immune-targeting of arrays of tumour exonic mutation-derived epitopes highly expressed by tumour cells and predicted to bind major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I and II (Fig. 1a). This system incorporates several key design elements that enhance therapeutic use: optimization of synthetic neoantigen construct form with removal of cryptic plasmids and deletion of Lon and OmpT proteases to increase neoantigen accumulation, increased susceptibility to phagocytosis for enhanced uptake by antigen-presenting cells (APCs) and presentation of MHC class II-restricted antigens, expression of listeriolysin O (LLO) to induce cytosolic entry for presentation of recombinant encoded neoantigens by MHC class I molecules and T helper 1 cell (TH1)-type immunity and improved safety for systemic administration due to reduced survival in the blood and biofilm formation.

To assemble a repertoire of neoantigens, we conducted exome and transcriptome sequencing of subcutaneous CT26 tumours. Neoantigens were predicted from highly expressed tumour-specific mutations using established methods14,15, with selection criteria inclusive of putative neoantigens across a spectrum of MHC affinity16,17. Given the importance of both MHC class I and MHC class II binding epitopes in antitumour immunity15,18,19, we integrated a measure of wild-type-to-mutant MHC affinity ratio—termed agretopicity17,20—for both epitope types derived from a given mutation, to help estimate the ability of adaptive immunity to recognize a neoantigen. Predicted neoantigens were selected from the set of tumour-specific mutations satisfying all criteria, notably encompassing numerous recovered, previously validated CT26 neoantigens15 (Extended Data Fig. 1a).

We then sought to create a microbial system that could accommodate the production and delivery of diverse sets of neoantigens to lymphoid tissue and the tumour microenvironment (TME). For the purpose of assessing neoantigen production capacity, a prototype gene encoding a synthetic neoantigen construct (NeoAgp) was created by concatenating long peptides encompassing linked CD4+ and CD8+ T cell mutant epitopes—previously shown as an optimal form for stimulating cellular immunity21—derived from CT26 neoantigens (Extended Data Fig. 1b and Extended Data Table 1). The construct was cloned into a stabilized plasmid22 under constitutive expression and transformed into EcN; however, both immunoblot and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) assessment showed low production of the prototype construct by EcN across several tested promoters (Extended Data Fig. 1c).

The researchers used electrospinning to produce the patch—a method where high voltage is applied to a polymer solution to produce synthetic nanofibers. The fibers are then used to make a fiber mat that may be attached to the skin like a plaster.

The researchers are still working on the patch. More research, and are needed before the method is ready for use.

According to Andrea Heinz, though, it has great potential that extends beyond psoriasis treatment, “A patch containing active ingredients may be an alternative to creams and ointments in the treatment of other inflammatory skin diseases, for instance atopic eczema. It may also be useful in connection with wound healing.”

Bioluminescence is the natural chemical process of light creation in some living creatures that makes fireflies flicker and some jellyfish glow. Scientists have long been interested in borrowing the secrets of these animals’ light-producing genes to create similar effects in vertebrates, for a variety of biomedical applications.