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19 pages, 4189 KB  
Article
A Precision Operational Amplifier with eTrim-Based Offset Calibration and Two-Point Temperature Drift Trim
by Yongji Wu and Weiqi Liu
Electronics 2026, 15(7), 1529; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15071529 - 6 Apr 2026
Viewed by 73
Abstract
This work introduces a trimming technique based on eTrim technology to minimize both the input-referred offset voltage and its temperature drift in the operational amplifiers. The proposed low-voltage op-amp utilizes the body effect to maintain a constant bandwidth across the rail-to-rail input common-mode [...] Read more.
This work introduces a trimming technique based on eTrim technology to minimize both the input-referred offset voltage and its temperature drift in the operational amplifiers. The proposed low-voltage op-amp utilizes the body effect to maintain a constant bandwidth across the rail-to-rail input common-mode range under low supply voltages. During input common-mode transitions, the current in the folded cascode stage remains stable, ensuring a robust output stage. Furthermore, a specialized gain-boosting structure enhances the low-frequency gain while preventing occasional latch-up during low-voltage power-up. A pin-multiplexing scheme is employed for trimming data input, thereby eliminating the need for dedicated trimming pins and mitigating post-package parameter variations. At room temperature, a constant-current injection mechanism reduces the DC offset to microvolt levels. At high temperature, temperature-compensated current injection cancels the first-order drift component. Implemented in a low-voltage operational amplifier, post-layout simulation results demonstrate that with a 100-pF capacitive load, the amplifier achieves a gain–bandwidth product exceeding 10 MHz, a low-frequency gain greater than 140 dB, and an input-referred noise of 2.54 µVp-p for the P-channel input and 3.95 µVp-p for the N-channel input. The trimming process reduces the residual offset to the microvolt range and effectively suppresses offset drift, ensuring accurate offset compensation across the specified temperature range. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Microelectronics)
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16 pages, 1581 KB  
Article
Computational Molecular Docking and Molecular Dynamics Simulations of Potential Inhibitors from Cistus incanus (Cistaceae) Against Ebola Virus
by Wafa Hourani, Balakumar Chandrasekaran, Sankar Muthumanickam and Pandi Boomi
Biophysica 2026, 6(2), 29; https://doi.org/10.3390/biophysica6020029 - 6 Apr 2026
Viewed by 118
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Until now, there have been no suitable medicines to treat infections caused by the Ebola virus. Cistus incanus, a traditional medicinal plant, contains several phytocompounds exhibiting antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties. Methods: In this research, the molecular level interactions of the phytocompounds [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Until now, there have been no suitable medicines to treat infections caused by the Ebola virus. Cistus incanus, a traditional medicinal plant, contains several phytocompounds exhibiting antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties. Methods: In this research, the molecular level interactions of the phytocompounds of Cistus incanus were investigated for their antiviral potential against the active site of VP40 protein of Ebola virus using in silico molecular docking. Further, the potential compounds were assessed for their stability in the protein using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Results: Methyl gallate, catechin, and quercetin showed excellent docking scores of −9.8, −8.8, and −7.7 kcal/mol, respectively, and favorable interactions with the target protein. These complexes showed good stability over the 100 ns MD simulation time. In addition, the phytocompounds displayed favorable pharmacokinetics and drug-like properties. Conclusions: Our study offers the antiviral potential of phytocompounds (methyl gallate, catechin, and quercetin) of Cistus incanus, suggesting their suitability as lead candidates for the treatment of Ebola viral infection. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Biophysical Insights into Small Molecule Inhibitors)
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21 pages, 2518 KB  
Article
Energy-Resolved CNR Performance in Dense-Breast and Implant X-Ray Mammography Using a CdTe Photon-Counting Detector: A Monte Carlo Study
by Gerardo Roque, Maria Laura Pérez-Lara, Steven Cely, Juan Sebastián Useche Parra, Jesús David Bermúdez, Michael K. Schütz, Michael Fiederle, Carlos Ávila and Simon Procz
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(7), 3550; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16073550 - 5 Apr 2026
Viewed by 184
Abstract
X-ray imaging of dense breasts and breast implants often suffers from reduced lesion visibility because strong attenuation lowers contrast, while conventional rhodium (Rh) K-edge filtering suppresses part of the high-energy spectral tail. This study presents a Monte Carlo framework for spectroscopic mammography using [...] Read more.
X-ray imaging of dense breasts and breast implants often suffers from reduced lesion visibility because strong attenuation lowers contrast, while conventional rhodium (Rh) K-edge filtering suppresses part of the high-energy spectral tail. This study presents a Monte Carlo framework for spectroscopic mammography using a voxelated 1 mm thick cadmium telluride (CdTe) sensor and a first-order detector interaction model to evaluate energy-dependent image quality. The model reproduces fluorescence and inter-voxel energy redistribution in CdTe, but not the full detector chain, and remains idealized with respect to charge transport, carrier collection, threshold dispersion, and pile-up. Energy-resolved simulations in the 10–50 keV range were used to compute spectroscopic contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) curves and to form integrated-spectrum (IS) images for four tested spectra. For the dense-breast calcium hydroxyapatite (HA) speck detection task considered here, and under the present simulation assumptions, replacing the standard 28 kVp + 50 μm Rh spectrum with 28 kVp + 1 mm Al increased the simulated IS image CNR by 23.11%, with an approximately 5% increase in estimated primary-incident air kerma at the phantom entrance plane. Preliminary experimental implant-phantom images were included as a qualitative feasibility check, showing a trend consistent with simulations. Within the limits of this task-specific simulation, the results suggest that preserving the transmitted high-energy tail can improve HA speck visibility for the present 1 mm CdTe photon-counting detector, with the 28 kVp + 1 mm Al spectrum outperforming the other tested cases. Full article
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23 pages, 1017 KB  
Article
Interval-Based Tropical Cyclone Intensity Forecasting with Spatiotemporal Transformers
by Tao Guo, Hua Zhang, Tao Song and Shiqiu Peng
Remote Sens. 2026, 18(7), 1069; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs18071069 - 2 Apr 2026
Viewed by 207
Abstract
Accurate tropical cyclone (TC) intensity forecasting remains challenging due to the strong nonlinearity of intensity evolution and the rapid structural changes associated with storm development. In this work, we propose TC-QFormer, an interval-based probabilistic framework for 24 h TC intensity forecasting that combines [...] Read more.
Accurate tropical cyclone (TC) intensity forecasting remains challenging due to the strong nonlinearity of intensity evolution and the rapid structural changes associated with storm development. In this work, we propose TC-QFormer, an interval-based probabilistic framework for 24 h TC intensity forecasting that combines transformer-based spatiotemporal modeling with scalar conditioning. Specifically, we adapt the PredFormer video prediction model for multi-horizon scalar regression and introduce a lightweight Scalar–Image Fusion Block to incorporate historical intensity information into the visual representations. A two-stage training strategy is adopted, in which the model is first pretrained for deterministic median prediction and subsequently fine-tuned to directly predict multiple conditional quantiles using the pinball loss. Experiments are conducted on the TCIR dataset using geostationary infrared and water vapor satellite imagery together with aligned historical intensity records. The proposed method is evaluated against representative recurrent and non-recurrent baselines, including ConvLSTM, PredRNN, and SimVP. Results indicate that the proposed framework achieves improved deterministic accuracy and produces well-calibrated 80% prediction intervals, particularly at longer forecast lead times and during rapidly evolving intensity regimes. These findings suggest that combining transformer-based spatiotemporal modeling with scalar–image conditioning provides an effective and interpretable approach for probabilistic TC intensity forecasting. Full article
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15 pages, 1708 KB  
Article
Inactivation of Surface-Associated Viruses in Real Indoor Environments by a Humidification System Generating Vaporized Free Chlorine Components
by Saki Kawahata, Mayumi Kondo, Atsushi Yamada, Naoya Shimazaki, Makoto Saito, Hiroyuki Tsukagoshi, Takayoshi Takano, Tetsuyoshi Yamada, Toshihiro Takei, Takashi Nakagawa, Miu Takada, Nobuhiro Saruki and Hirokazu Kimura
Microorganisms 2026, 14(4), 814; https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms14040814 - 2 Apr 2026
Viewed by 216
Abstract
Vaporized free chlorine, primarily present as hypochlorous acid (HOCl), is increasingly used for indoor microbial control; however, virus-dependent susceptibility and its molecular determinants remain unclear. We evaluated virucidal effects under controlled indoor conditions (0–9 ppb) against echovirus 30 (E30), influenza A/H1N1, and human [...] Read more.
Vaporized free chlorine, primarily present as hypochlorous acid (HOCl), is increasingly used for indoor microbial control; however, virus-dependent susceptibility and its molecular determinants remain unclear. We evaluated virucidal effects under controlled indoor conditions (0–9 ppb) against echovirus 30 (E30), influenza A/H1N1, and human adenovirus type 3 (HAdV3). Infectious titers were quantified by TCID50 assays. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations and gas-sensor measurements assessed spatial dispersion, and structural analyses examined oxidation-sensitive amino acid residues. Significant reductions in infectivity were observed for E30 (99.0%, p = 0.00727) and influenza A/H1N1 (99.9%, p = 0.000597), whereas no significant reduction was detected for HAdV3 (p = 0.142). Analyses including all data points without outlier exclusion confirmed the robustness of these findings. CFD indicated uniform dispersion, although spatial heterogeneity within the indoor environment cannot be excluded. These findings suggest that viral susceptibility to vaporized HOCl is associated with residue-level composition and structural context; however, this relationship should be interpreted as correlative rather than causal. Moreover, integration of molecular and structural analyses provides a plausible mechanistic framework, although direct biochemical validation remains necessary. Structural analyses showed lower proportions of oxidation-sensitive residues in adenoviral proteins compared with influenza A hemagglutinin (OR = 0.34–0.40, adjusted p < 0.001) and the E30 VP1 intermediate. Residues were clustered in surface-exposed functional domains in susceptible viruses. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Novel Disinfectants and Antiviral Agents)
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22 pages, 1984 KB  
Review
VPS34 in Autophagy, Cancer, and Cancer Therapy
by Elisabetta Bartolini, Bassam Janji and Ruize Gao
Cells 2026, 15(7), 636; https://doi.org/10.3390/cells15070636 - 1 Apr 2026
Viewed by 253
Abstract
Autophagy is a fundamental lysosome-dependent degradation process that maintains cellular homeostasis in response to stress. VSP34 (Vacuolar Protein Sorting 34, PIK3C3) is the only class-III phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and generates phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate (PI3P) for auto-phagosome nucleation and maturation. Thus, it provides a critical adaptive [...] Read more.
Autophagy is a fundamental lysosome-dependent degradation process that maintains cellular homeostasis in response to stress. VSP34 (Vacuolar Protein Sorting 34, PIK3C3) is the only class-III phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and generates phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate (PI3P) for auto-phagosome nucleation and maturation. Thus, it provides a critical adaptive survival pathway for cells that are experiencing metabolic stress. The VPS34–autophagy axis plays dual roles in cancer, which depend on the context: it can restrain early tumorigenesis, but in established tumors, it can promote survival in conditions of hypoxia, nutrient deprivation, and therapeutic pressure. Moreover, VPS34 shapes the tumor microenvironment (TME) through its influence on both immune and cancer cells by modulating autophagy, cGAS-STING (cyclic GMP-AMP synthase Stimulator of Interferon Genes), and STAT1 pathways. VPS34 inhibition has been reported to induce an interferon response that increases CD8+ T and natural killer (NK) cell infiltration and converts cold tumors into hot ones. This behavior suggests that combining VPS34 inhibitors with cancer immunotherapies could be beneficial. In this review, we summarize the molecular functions and regulations of VPS34 in autophagy and discuss recent advances linking VPS34 to tumor and cancer immunotherapy. Full article
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19 pages, 1477 KB  
Article
Circular Approach to Biomanufacturing: Enhancing Therapeutic Protein Production Using Chum Salmon Head Peptone
by Svini Dileepa Marasinghe, Minthari Sakethanika Bandara, Somyong Lee, Young Hwa Kim, Su-Jin Lee, Dong Soo Hwang, Youngdeuk Lee, Eunyoung Jo, Tae-Yang Eom, Gun-Hoo Park and Chulhong Oh
Bioengineering 2026, 13(4), 409; https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering13040409 - 31 Mar 2026
Viewed by 180
Abstract
Fish waste disposal poses significant environmental and economic challenges, limiting sustainability in the marine food industry. Hence, sustainable valorization strategies are needed to enhance resource recovery while minimizing waste. As an approach, this study aimed to evaluate the potential of converting chum salmon [...] Read more.
Fish waste disposal poses significant environmental and economic challenges, limiting sustainability in the marine food industry. Hence, sustainable valorization strategies are needed to enhance resource recovery while minimizing waste. As an approach, this study aimed to evaluate the potential of converting chum salmon (Oncorhynchus keta) head (CSH) waste into a high-value peptone for microbiological applications. Various proteolytic enzymes were screened for CSH hydrolysis, among which Protamex achieved the highest hydrolysis and recovery rates. The resulting chum salmon head peptone (CSHP) exhibited favorable characteristics, including a low average molecular mass (557 Da) and a high amino nitrogen content (4.9%), outperforming commercial animal (AP) and vegetable (VP) peptones. To assess its biotechnological potential, CSHP was evaluated as a nitrogen source for recombinant protein production and supported higher expression of human superoxide dismutase (hSOD) and human growth hormone (hGH) in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3), compared with AP, VP, and Luria–Bertani (LB) media. Furthermore, life cycle assessment revealed a substantially lower carbon footprint for CSHP production than that of conventional peptone sources. These findings suggest that CSHP is a reliable and sustainable alternative to traditional peptones, offering both therapeutic and industrial applications while contributing to marine waste reduction and circular bioeconomy strategies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Biochemical Engineering)
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14 pages, 1447 KB  
Article
Optimizing In Vivo Perfusion Assessment by Laser Doppler Flowmetry—Effects of Probe Geometry and Signal Normalization
by Elisabete Silva, Marisa Nicolai and Luís Monteiro Rodrigues
Diagnostics 2026, 16(7), 1025; https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics16071025 - 29 Mar 2026
Viewed by 227
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Laser Doppler flowmetry enables rapid and simple measurement of microcirculation. However, variations in probe configuration can influence signal acquisition, making it essential to understand each probe’s characteristics when selecting equipment for specific physiological assessments. Therefore, this study aimed to compare perfusion [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Laser Doppler flowmetry enables rapid and simple measurement of microcirculation. However, variations in probe configuration can influence signal acquisition, making it essential to understand each probe’s characteristics when selecting equipment for specific physiological assessments. Therefore, this study aimed to compare perfusion measurements obtained with single-fiber (VP1T) and multi-fiber (VP1T/7) probes and to evaluate the effects of normalization strategies. Methods: Nine healthy female volunteers were recruited. Probes were positioned on the palmar aspects of the index and middle fingers of both hands while participants underwent a standardized brachial artery occlusion protocol. Data are presented as mean ± standard error of the mean. Correlations were assessed using Pearson’s correlation coefficient. Coefficients of variation (CV) and intraclass correlation coefficients were calculated. Baseline normalization was applied to measurements. Statistical analyses were performed using Student’s t-test, with significance set at p < 0.05. Results: Analysis of the full protocol revealed significant positive correlations between probes, indicating consistent temporal perfusion patterns. The VP1T/7 probe yielded significantly higher perfusion values than the VP1T probe, although both exhibited similar CVs. Inter-probe reliability was good, and intra-probe reproducibility ranged from good to excellent, particularly for the VP1T/7 probe. During the reperfusion phase, significant differences were observed only for ipsilateral measurements obtained with the VP1T probe. Normalization effectively reduced variability, and significant differences during reperfusion were detected with both probes. Conclusions: Although the multi-fiber probe consistently recorded higher perfusion values, normalization was essential to reduce variability and to enhance the detection of microvascular reactivity parameters. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Biomedical Optics)
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22 pages, 3370 KB  
Article
Phylogenetic Analyses of RdRp Region and VP1 Gene in Human Norovirus Genotype GII.17[P17] Variants
by Fuminori Mizukoshi, Yen Hai Doan, Asumi Hirata-Saito, Hiroyuki Tsukagoshi, Takumi Motoya, Ryusuke Kimura, Tomoko Takahashi, Yuriko Hayashi, Yuki Matsushima, Kei Miyakawa, Naomi Sakon, Kenji Sadamasu, Kazuhisa Yoshimura, Nobuhiro Saruki, Yoshiyuki Suzuki, Masashi Uema, Kosuke Murakami, Kazuhiko Katayama, Akihide Ryo, Tsutomu Kageyama and Hirokazu Kimuraadd Show full author list remove Hide full author list
Microorganisms 2026, 14(4), 770; https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms14040770 - 28 Mar 2026
Viewed by 364
Abstract
In this study, we investigated the long-term evolutionary dynamics of human norovirus GII.17[P17] using the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) region and the VP1 capsid gene, integrating phylogenetics, time-scaled inference, phylodynamics, and structure-based analyses. Maximum-likelihood phylogenies of both genomic regions consistently resolved [...] Read more.
In this study, we investigated the long-term evolutionary dynamics of human norovirus GII.17[P17] using the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) region and the VP1 capsid gene, integrating phylogenetics, time-scaled inference, phylodynamics, and structure-based analyses. Maximum-likelihood phylogenies of both genomic regions consistently resolved four major clades (Clades 1–4). VP1 patristic-distance distributions indicated higher within-clade diversity in the phylogenetically basal Clades 1 and 3, whereas Clades 2 and 4 showed lower diversity, consistent with recent demographic expansion. Similarity-plot analysis identified pronounced variability in the VP1 P2 domain, while the S and P1 domains remained comparatively conserved, supporting P2 as the primary hotspot of diversification. Bayesian time-scaled analyses estimated the most recent common ancestor around 1993 (VP1) and 2000 (RdRp) and revealed two major lineages (Clade 1/2 and Clade 3/4), with the split between Clades 3 and 4 occurring around 2016–2017. Bayesian skyline plots showed a marked increase in effective population size after 2013, and substitution-rate estimates indicated faster evolution in VP1 than in RdRp, with higher VP1 rates in the Clade 3/4 lineage than in Clade 1/2. Capsid dimer modeling further mapped high-confidence conformational B-cell epitopes and positively selected residues predominantly to the distal surface of P2, with broadly conserved spatial patterns across clades. Compared with the Clade 1 reference (Kawasaki323), Clade 2 accumulated numerous P2 substitutions, whereas Clades 3 and 4 retained fewer changes and remained closer to Clade 1 at the amino-acid level. Together, these results suggest lineage turnover within GII.17[P17] driven by constrained diversification at the P2 surface, potentially contributing to the recent predominance of the Clade 3/4 lineage. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Molecular Epidemiology and Bioinformatics in Pathogen Surveillance)
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20 pages, 633 KB  
Article
Autophagy-Mitophagy Pathway-Linked Genetic Variants Associate with Systemic Inflammation and Interact with Dietary Factors in Asian and European Cohorts
by Youngjin Choi and Sunmin Park
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2026, 27(7), 3062; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27073062 - 27 Mar 2026
Viewed by 211
Abstract
Autophagy-mitophagy pathways are essential for regulating immune homeostasis. However, their contribution to population-level chronic low-grade systemic inflammation (SI) remains unclear. The objective was to investigate the association between variation in the genes related to the autophagy-mitophagy pathways and SI, and to examine whether [...] Read more.
Autophagy-mitophagy pathways are essential for regulating immune homeostasis. However, their contribution to population-level chronic low-grade systemic inflammation (SI) remains unclear. The objective was to investigate the association between variation in the genes related to the autophagy-mitophagy pathways and SI, and to examine whether lifestyle factors modify this relationship. We conducted genome-wide association studies and gene-set enrichment analyses using data from the Korean Genome and Epidemiology Study (KoGES, n = 28,102) and UK Biobank (UKBB, n = 343,892). SI was defined as an elevated white blood cell count or high-sensitivity C-reactive protein. Using Core Longevity State Vectors (CLSVs)—gene sets representing immune-longevity pathways derived from comparative transcriptomic analysis—we tested six pathways and constructed a weighted genetic risk score (GRS) from significant variants. Gene–lifestyle interactions were examined with respect to major dietary and lifestyle factors. Among six CLSVs, only CLSV-2 (mitophagy and autophagy) showed a significant association with SI (β = 0.425, p = 0.008). Six single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in autophagy-mitophagy genes (INPP5D, ATG16L1, ATG7, AP3S1, OPTN, and VPS33A) were associated with SI in KoGES (p < 5 × 10−5), and ten SNPs (genes selected in KoGES plus RAB7A, ATG12, VPS33A, BECN1) reached genome-wide significance in UKBB (p < 5 × 10−8). A higher GRS was associated with increased SI in both cohorts and was strongly associated with metabolic syndrome (MetS, OR = 1.91 in KoGES; OR = 1.62 in UKBB). SI was characterized by neutrophilia with relative lymphopenia. In UKBB, significant gene–lifestyle interactions were observed for diet, physical activity, smoking, and alcohol (p < 0.01). Favorable lifestyle factors reduced SI most effectively in individuals with protective genotypes. Among individuals with a high vegetable/fruit intake, SI prevalence was 35%, 36%, and 38% in the negative-, zero-, and positive-GRS groups, respectively, compared with 36%, 45%, and 48% in the low-intake groups. In conclusion, genetic variations in autophagy-mitophagy pathways specifically influence SI. Genetic predisposition substantially modifies the benefits of lifestyle, underscoring the importance of integrating genetic and lifestyle factors in understanding SI susceptibility. Full article
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17 pages, 1774 KB  
Article
Molecular Characteristics and Genetic Diversity of Canine Parvovirus in Shanghai, China, from 2016 to 2025
by Qiqi Xia, Jian Liu, Yaping Gui, Luming Xia, Chuangui Cao, Beijuan Chen, Xiangqian Yu, Weifeng Chen, Feng Xu, Jian Wang and Hongjin Zhao
Microorganisms 2026, 14(4), 761; https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms14040761 - 27 Mar 2026
Viewed by 325
Abstract
Canine parvovirus (CPV) is a major pathogen causing severe gastroenteritis in dogs. Since its emergence, CPV has undergone continuous evolution, leading to the predominance of variants such as CPV-2a, CPV-2b, and CPV-2c. To characterize the genetic features and evolutionary trends of CPV-2 at [...] Read more.
Canine parvovirus (CPV) is a major pathogen causing severe gastroenteritis in dogs. Since its emergence, CPV has undergone continuous evolution, leading to the predominance of variants such as CPV-2a, CPV-2b, and CPV-2c. To characterize the genetic features and evolutionary trends of CPV-2 at a regional level, 775 fecal samples were collected from domestic and stray dogs with suspected CPV-2 infection in Shanghai between 2016 and 2025. The overall positivity rate was 23.2% (180/775); incidence was substantially higher in stray dogs (30.2%) than in domestic dogs (15.9%). Thirty-one CPV-2 strains were successfully isolated. Temporal analysis revealed a pronounced genotype shift: isolates from 2016 to 2020 were predominantly New CPV-2a, whereas CPV-2c became the dominant genotype from 2021 through 2025. Sequence analysis identified the polymorphism of VP2 gene and characteristic mutations F267Y, Y324I, N426E, Q370R and A440T in CPV-2c strains. A novel I447M mutation was detected in several isolates. Phylogenetic analysis showed that Shanghai isolates formed distinct clusters; CPV-2c strains were closely related to the Asian lineage. Structural modeling indicated that mutations at residues L87M, T101I, Y267F, A297S, G300A, Y305D, I324Y, Q370R, N426E, A440T, and I447M may alter the tertiary structure of the VP2 protein, potentially affecting antigenicity and receptor recognition. Collectively, these results demonstrate the complete genotype replacement of CPV-2 in Shanghai; CPV-2c is now predominant. Identification of the novel I447M mutation and structural analysis of key amino acid substitutions provide insight into CPV molecular evolution. These findings suggest that vaccines primarily based on older CPV-2 or CPV-2b genotypes offer suboptimal protection, highlighting the need for updated vaccine strategies targeting prevalent CPV-2c variants. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Advances in Infectious and Parasitic Diseases of Animals)
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19 pages, 3690 KB  
Article
Low-Profile Piezoelectric Inertial Linear Actuator for High-Power Applications
by Dalius Mažeika, Regimantas Bareikis and Andrius Čeponis
Micromachines 2026, 17(4), 405; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi17040405 - 26 Mar 2026
Viewed by 301
Abstract
The paper presents the results of numerical and experimental investigations of a novel low-profile piezoelectric inertial linear actuator designed for a high-payload application. The actuator structure is based on a rectangular piezoelectric bimorph plate with centrally located trapezoidal toothed rings. The actuator operates [...] Read more.
The paper presents the results of numerical and experimental investigations of a novel low-profile piezoelectric inertial linear actuator designed for a high-payload application. The actuator structure is based on a rectangular piezoelectric bimorph plate with centrally located trapezoidal toothed rings. The actuator operates in the second longitudinal vibration mode of the plate, which is excited by a sawtooth electric signal. Trapezoidal teeth are used to transfer longitudinal vibrations of the plate to the slider and, this way, generate linear motion. The use of trapezoidal teeth reduces the stumbling effect at high preload forces and as a result increases the actuator’s ability to operate under high preload forces and drive higher payloads. Numerical simulations indicated that the actuator exhibits a resonance frequency of 68.49 kHz, with the trapezoidal tooth achieving a maximum displacement amplitude of 188.25 µm at a voltage of 200 Vp-p. Furthermore, numerical analysis revealed that the trapezoidal tooth deflection in the out-of-plane direction under an axial load of 25 N reached 2.07 nm/N, demonstrating structural stability under high preload conditions. The results of experimental investigations have shown that the actuator can provide up to 75.16 mm/s at a linear motion speed of 200 Vp-p and an output force of 18.88 N at the same excitation signal amplitude. In addition, the 15 N load actuator was indicated to achieve a linear motion accuracy of 11.5 µm per step. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Advance in Piezoelectric Actuators and Motors, 3rd Edition)
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12 pages, 1827 KB  
Article
Development of RT-RAA-CRISPR/Cas12a-Based Rapid Visual Detection Assay for Pigeon Rotavirus A
by Cuiteng Chen, Yijing Hong, Zhongjun Tian, Mengyan Zhang, Zhen Chen, Chunhua Zhu, Lin Lin, Chunhe Wan and Yijian Wu
Microorganisms 2026, 14(4), 732; https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms14040732 - 25 Mar 2026
Viewed by 287
Abstract
In recent years, pigeon rotavirus A (PiRVA) infection, an important emerging disease, has posed a major threat to the healthy development of the pigeon industry and public health. Therefore, developing an accurate, rapid and convenient detection method for this virus is vital for [...] Read more.
In recent years, pigeon rotavirus A (PiRVA) infection, an important emerging disease, has posed a major threat to the healthy development of the pigeon industry and public health. Therefore, developing an accurate, rapid and convenient detection method for this virus is vital for monitoring and early diagnosis of the disease. In this study, on the basis of the ORF sequence characteristics of the PiRVA VP6 gene, crRNA and reverse transcription recombinase-aided amplification (RT-RAA) primers were designed. On the basis of the CRISPR/Cas12a system, for the first time, the RT-RAA-CRISPR/Cas12a rapid detection method of PiRVA was established by combining RT-RAA and lateral flow strips. This method could specifically detect PiRVA, and there was no cross-reaction with other common viruses originating from pigeons. The minimum detection limit was 16.8 copies/μL, and the results of the intrabatch and interbatch repeated tests were consistent. Moreover, the method established in this study and the previously established common PCR method were used to analyse 56 clinical tissue samples from racing pigeons and domestic pigeons collected in 2025. The positive rates of racing pigeon and domestic pigeon samples detected by PCR were 17.6% and 12.8%, respectively, and the positive rates of racing pigeon and meat pigeon samples detected by the RT-RAA-CRISPR/Cas12a method were 23.5% and 17.9%, respectively, indicating that PiRVA infection occurs in both racing pigeon and domestic pigeon populations in China. In summary, the PiRVA RT-RAA-CRISPR/Cas12a detection method established in this study has good specificity, sensitivity, and reproducibility, and allows visualization of the results, which can be used for field applications. This study provides technical support for epidemiological surveillance and etiological research on PiRVA. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Virology)
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16 pages, 3138 KB  
Article
Clinical Evaluation of Accuracy and Speed Across Three Intraoral Scanners
by Andrei-Bogdan Faur, Anca-Elena Anghel-Lorinți and Anca Jivănescu
Medicina 2026, 62(4), 622; https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina62040622 - 25 Mar 2026
Viewed by 241
Abstract
Background and Objectives: To evaluate and compare the accuracy (trueness and precision) and scanning speed of three intraoral scanners: Medit i700, Primescan 1, and COXO DL-300P, under standardized clinical conditions, using a digitized high-precision analog impression as the reference. Materials and Methods [...] Read more.
Background and Objectives: To evaluate and compare the accuracy (trueness and precision) and scanning speed of three intraoral scanners: Medit i700, Primescan 1, and COXO DL-300P, under standardized clinical conditions, using a digitized high-precision analog impression as the reference. Materials and Methods: A patient requiring fixed prosthetic treatment on natural abutments (2.5, 2.7, 3.5, 3.8) was selected. Ten sequential full-arch scans were performed with each scanner in rotating order. Scanning time was recorded for each full-arch acquisition. Accuracy analysis focused on regions of interest: the upper jaw included abutments with adjacent mucosa, the lower jaw included only abutment surfaces. A VPS impression was taken, poured in type IV stone, and digitized with a high-accuracy desktop scanner to serve as the reference. All datasets were analyzed in Geomagic Control X, and statistics were performed using MedCalc (α = 0.05). Results: Upper Jaw (Abutments and Mucosa): The Medit i700 achieved the highest trueness (100.3 ± 6.6 µm), outperforming Primescan and COXO (p = 0.008). COXO showed the best precision, while Primescan demonstrated the greatest variability (p < 0.0001). Primescan produced the fastest scans (72.5 ± 3.8 s) (p = 0.001). Lower Jaw: (Abutment Surface Only): Medit yielded superior trueness (193.1 ± 63.4 µm) compared with Primescan and COXO (p = 0.005). Precision varied significantly among devices, with COXO presenting the greatest inconsistency (p = 0.0004). Scan times did not differ significantly (p = 0.068). Conclusions: Medit i700 demonstrated the highest trueness, Primescan delivered the fastest scans but variable results, and COXO showed acceptable but inconsistent precision. Full article
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Article
A Recombinant Subunit Vaccine Against Chicken Infectious Anemia Virus Elicits Protective Immunity via VP2-Assisted VP1 Refolding
by Shihao Li, Mingxue Hu, Yanping Zhang, Yulu Duan, Ru Guo, Huijing Sun, Wenzhuo Ma, Xiaole Qi, Hongyu Cui, Suyan Wang, Yuntong Chen, Yongzhen Liu and Yulong Gao
Vaccines 2026, 14(4), 292; https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines14040292 - 25 Mar 2026
Viewed by 370
Abstract
Background: Chicken infectious anemia virus (CIAV) is a globally significant immunosuppressive pathogen that causes substantial economic losses to the poultry industry, with particularly severe outbreaks in China in recent years. Given the limitations of existing vaccines, especially the residual virulence associated with live [...] Read more.
Background: Chicken infectious anemia virus (CIAV) is a globally significant immunosuppressive pathogen that causes substantial economic losses to the poultry industry, with particularly severe outbreaks in China in recent years. Given the limitations of existing vaccines, especially the residual virulence associated with live attenuated vaccines, there is an urgent need to develop novel, safer, and more effective vaccine strategies. Methods: In this study, the VP1 and VP2 genes of CIAV were cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli to develop a cost-effective subunit vaccine. Since VP1 primarily formed inclusion bodies, a “VP2-assisted co-refolding” strategy was employed. This involved denaturing VP1 and refolding it via gradient dialysis in the presence of soluble VP2, thereby leveraging VP2’s natural chaperone-like function to restore conformational epitopes. The refolded VP1/VP2 protein complexes, emulsified at different ratios, were used to immunize 3-day-old specific pathogen-free (SPF) chickens, followed by challenge with a virulent CIAV strain. Results: The vaccine formulation with a VP1:VP2 ratio of 1:1 provided the best protection, achieving 71.4% (5/7) protective efficacy, as evidenced by significantly reduced thymic atrophy and a higher thymus index. Conclusions: These findings validate the feasibility of using an economical prokaryotic expression system combined with a rational protein refolding strategy to produce a protective subunit vaccine candidate against CIAV, offering a promising alternative for disease control. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Vaccines and Animal Health: 2nd Edition)
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