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  • New Deadlock patch notes reduce lethality across the board

    New Deadlock patch notes reduce lethality across the board

    Valve has released the latest Deadlock patch notes, as it continues on the road to the full launch. The Half-Life and Team Fortress 2 studio has made a plethora of changes with this update, as a global reduction to gun and ability damage take centre stage. So whether you’re still active or fancy diving back in, these changes to Deadlock make now the ideal time to get playing.

    The first change Valve makes to Deadlock in this newest patch is to bullet cycle time, which has been increased by 5% for every single hero. Developer ‘Yoshi’ explains that this will effectively reduce all gun damage per second by 5%. This should put more weight into how and when you use skills, changing the flow of battle ever so slightly and impacting the fight for minion kills.

    Yoshi also says “Ability base damage and AP bonus damage [are] reduced by ~8% (spirit power growth unaffected),” which means everyone should also find their abilities to be slightly weaker moving forward. Combined with the changes to DPS, it looks like Valve wants to reduce lethality across the board in the game, which should give you more chance to turn fights around. While Deadlock is already one of our picks for the best MOBAs on PC right now, it’s worth noting that Valve is still deep in development, so a lot of this could change again.

    Your overall Spirit gains from leveling have also been reduced from 1.25 to 1.1, while your Spirit bonus based on souls spent in the tree is increased by a whopping 25%, changing the way we power up throughout a match. Speaking of which, the team is also increasing Ultimate cooldowns by 10%, which it says “affects base and upgrades, so the total CD with AP is 10% longer.”

    While we don’t know when the next Deadlock patch could be, I’d expect some big stuff on the horizon. Earlier this year the studio completely reworked the shop, introduced new items, and made some major visual changes, all of which almost made Deadlock feel like an entirely new game. With the Deadlock release date still on the horizon, I can’t wait to see what comes next.

    Valve has now released the Friday July 4 Deadlock update. You can go through all the changes right here.

    As you dive into all of these changes, make sure you check out our tier list of all the Deadlock characters. We’ve also got a very useful look at Deadlock crosshairs, which will help your shooting.

    You can follow us on Google News for daily PC games news, reviews, and guides. We’ve also got a vibrant community Discord server, where you can chat about this story with members of the team and fellow readers.

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  • Inside Scarlett Johansson’s ‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ star studded dinner party

    Inside Scarlett Johansson’s ‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ star studded dinner party

    Scarlett Johansson organized dinner for ‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ cast and crew

    Scarlett Johansson had a joyful get-together with the Jurassic World Rebirth cast and crew while filming in Malta.

    Scarlett’s co-star Jonathan Bailey recalled a dinner she organized for the cast and crew members and their families.

    “Everyone’s family was there at the same time. We were in a square in Valletta, and it was just really special,” he told People.

    The latest installment of the Jurassic World franchise also stars Mahershala Ali, Rupert Friend, and Manuel Garcia-Rulfo in key roles.

    The Lucy star, who shares daughter Rose, 10, with ex-husband Romain Dauriac and son Cosmo, 3, with husband Colin Jost, also gushed about the dinner.

    She told the publication, “It was beautiful, and it was so nice to see everybody’s children playing in the square. All the partners were there, and it was a wonderful celebration of what we were accomplishing, how much work we’d done. It was kind of the halfway point. It was so nice.”

    Wicked star Bailey went on to praise Scarlett for the way she led the film.

    He hailed her for leading the “film with such incredible energy, and that’s on and off camera.”

    “It was so apparent very quickly that it was going to be a knockout summer,” he added.

    Jurassic World Rebirth is in cinemas and has already made $100 million globally. 


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  • LEAs fully alert to maintain law and order during Muharram processions – RADIO PAKISTAN

    1. LEAs fully alert to maintain law and order during Muharram processions  RADIO PAKISTAN
    2. Muharram 9 central procession underway in Karachi amid tight security  Dawn
    3. Strict security measures in place for Muharram processions: DC Memon  Ptv.com.pk
    4. Over 900 personnel to manage Ashura processions in Pindi  The Express Tribune
    5. 147,000 policemen to keep guard over Ashura gatherings across Punjab  Pakistan Today

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  • British and Irish Lions 21-10 New South Wales Waratahs Error-prone tourists stutter to victory in Sydney

    British and Irish Lions 21-10 New South Wales Waratahs Error-prone tourists stutter to victory in Sydney

    The British & Irish Lions stuttered to an unconvincing 21-10 victory over a dogged New South Wales Waratahs side on Saturday, taking a step backwards with an error-prone performance on the third leg of their tour of Australia.

    Centre Huw Jones crossed twice in the first half and Alex Mitchell added another try early in the second but the Lions were held scoreless for the final 26 minutes of the match.

    The Waratahs, roared on by the majority of a crowd of 40,568, scored tries through Darby Lancaster and Ethan Dobbins and trailed by only four points early in the second half.

    The Super Rugby side showed the Wallabies the way for the three-test series in late July and August with an uncompromising physicality all over the park that knocked the Lions off their stride.

    As it happened: Lions run rampant after Reds fade early on
    – Kinghorn ready to roar for Lions after Top 14 triumph

    – Lions banter is fun but also an utter embarrassment for Australian rugby
    – Tomos Williams ruled out of Lions tour

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  • Rescheduling of India’s white-ball Tour of Bangladesh

    Rescheduling of India’s white-ball Tour of Bangladesh

    MEDIA ADVISORY

    July 05, 2025

    Rescheduling of India’s white-ball Tour of Bangladesh

    The Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) and the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) have mutually agreed to defer the white-ball series, three ODIs and three Twenty20 Internationals, between Bangladesh and India in August 2025 to September 2026.

    This decision has been reached following discussions between the two Boards, taking into account the international cricketing commitments and scheduling convenience of both teams. 

    The BCB looks forward to welcoming India in September 2026 for this eagerly anticipated series. Revised dates and fixtures for the tour will be announced in due course.

    BCCI

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  • Stress disrupts gut and brain barriers by reducing key microbial metabolites, study finds

    Stress disrupts gut and brain barriers by reducing key microbial metabolites, study finds

    A new study reports that a single, brief exposure to stress is associated with a rapid reduction of beneficial compounds produced by gut bacteria. The research, published in the journal Brain, Behavior, & Immunity – Health, also found that these same compounds, when tested in a laboratory setting, appear to protect the cellular barriers of both the gut and the brain from damage. The findings offer new insight into the immediate biological responses to stress, highlighting a potential mechanism through which even short-term stressors might influence our physiology.

    Scientists are increasingly interested in the gut-brain axis, the complex network of communication between the gastrointestinal system and the brain. This system includes not only nerves and hormones, but also immune signals and microbial products. One of the key components in this system is a group of substances called short-chain fatty acids, which are produced when gut bacteria digest dietary fiber.

    These fatty acids—mainly butyrate, acetate, and propionate—can influence gut health, inflammation, brain function, and even mood. While much attention has been paid to how stress affects the body over time, less is known about how the gut and brain respond to short bursts of stress. The current study set out to examine whether acute stress changes short-chain fatty acid production, and how those changes might influence the function of protective barriers in the body.

    “We have long been interested in the impact of stress on signalling in the gut-brain axis. This is a two-way street in that while gut microbes can tune the host stress response, stress exposures can also change the composition and function of the gut microbiota. Much less is known in this context about how acute stress, the building blocks of chronic stress, modify the gut. Essentially, we wanted to know what was going on in the stressed gut,” explained study author Gerard Clarke, a professor of neurobehavioral science at the University College Cork and co-author of Microbiota Brain Axis: A Neuroscience Primer.

    To explore this, the researchers exposed mice to a 15-minute period of restraint stress. They used both conventional mice, germ-free mice raised without any gut microbes, and germ-free mice that had been re-colonized with gut bacteria. After the stress exposure, the team measured the levels of various short-chain fatty acids and other related compounds in the animals’ lower intestines. The researchers also tested the effects of these compounds on cellular models that mimic the gut and blood-brain barriers, which are crucial in preventing harmful substances from entering sensitive tissues.

    In the animals exposed to stress, levels of butyrate and acetate dropped significantly in the lower intestinal contents, especially in conventional and colonized germ-free mice. These changes appeared quickly, within 45 minutes of the stress exposure. The researchers also found that stress reduced levels of dietary sugar breakdown products and other microbial metabolites. These findings suggest that acute stress disrupts the fermentation processes that gut bacteria use to produce beneficial compounds, which could have downstream effects on host health.

    “One of the intriguing findings here is that the consequences of an acute stress exposure is visible in the gut very quickly as alterations in microbial metabolites,” Clarke told PsyPost. “These results build on earlier work from our lab to potentially explain how an acute psychosocial stressor can impact intestinal permeability.”

    To understand whether these stress-induced reductions had functional consequences, the researchers turned to laboratory cell models. They applied varying concentrations of butyrate, acetate, and propionate to layers of gut and brain cells grown in the lab. The goal was to see whether these compounds could protect against barrier disruption triggered by lipopolysaccharide, a bacterial molecule known to increase permeability and inflammation.

    The results showed that certain concentrations of butyrate and acetate helped maintain barrier function, both in intestinal and brain cell models. For example, pretreatment with butyrate at 1 and 10 millimoles significantly prevented gut barrier damage, while acetate at 10 millimoles also had protective effects. Some concentrations of acetate, however, appeared to worsen permeability, indicating that its effects may vary depending on dose and context.

    The protective effects were linked to changes in tight junction proteins, which help hold the barrier cells together. One of these proteins, ZO-1, was reduced by the bacterial challenge, but this reduction was partially reversed by treatment with the short-chain fatty acids. Microscopy showed that butyrate and propionate increased both the abundance and structural complexity of ZO-1 proteins at the junctions between cells, forming wavy “ruffles” that may represent a more active or flexible barrier. In contrast, acetate did not increase ruffling but still helped restore overall protein levels.

    The researchers also looked at how these fatty acids influenced the activity of receptors known to respond to them. Specifically, butyrate increased the expression of FFAR2 and FFAR3, two receptors involved in immune and barrier regulation. These receptors are believed to play a role in maintaining the health of the gut lining, and mice lacking them show higher permeability and more inflammation. The current results suggest that short-chain fatty acids may help stabilize the gut barrier partly by activating these protective signaling pathways.

    In addition to looking at how fatty acids protect barrier function, the researchers also tried to understand why stress reduces their levels in the first place. By analyzing the breakdown products of dietary sugars in the intestines, they found that stress reduced the availability of key substrates that bacteria use to make short-chain fatty acids.

    The data also suggested that stress might shift microbial activity toward producing other compounds, such as polyols, or increase host absorption of fatty acids before they accumulate in the lower intestine. Some changes in microbial energy metabolism were also observed, depending on whether the animals had gut microbes or not. These findings point to a broad disturbance in the gut environment after stress, which could influence both microbial activity and the availability of beneficial compounds to the host.

    “Our gut microbes are like little factories, with production lines pumping out microbial metabolites,” Clarke said. “One of the key messages is that the experience of stress can also be felt by our gut microbes and one of the consequences of this is alterations in the production of these microbial metabolites, in this case a reduction in short-chain fatty acids. Our results using in vitro models show that these microbial metabolites, like butyrate, are important to maintain gut and blood-brain barrier function.”

    The findings offer new insight into how even short-term stress can alter gut-brain signaling, but the researchers acknowledge some limitations. The experiments used cell culture models to test barrier integrity, which cannot fully capture the complexity of living organisms.

    “We used in vitro studies to understand if short-chain fatty acids could be effectors of intestinal permeability alterations in the gut and the brain, but these are a very simple approximations of what is happening at these sites in the whole organism within the context of microbiota-gut-brain axis signalling,” Clarke explained. “We have recently noted that more sophisticated options like human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) offer a more innovative model to advance these studies in the future.”

    The researchers emphasized that understanding how acute stress affects microbial metabolites like short-chain fatty acids may help explain how the gut-brain axis contributes to stress-related health problems. Since these metabolites are influenced by diet and microbial composition, they could become targets for new therapies aimed at supporting gut and brain barrier function during stress. For example, interventions that boost butyrate production or mimic its protective effects might help buffer against stress-induced damage.

    “We still need to understand what happens in the stressed gut when these acute stress exposures are experienced repeatedly and chronically, and if adaptive or maladaptive consequences emerge that will be important for stress-related disorders,” Clarke said.

    “This is all down to the great work of a really talented postdoctoral researcher, Dr. Cristina Rosell-Cardona,” he added. “Cristina is now an INSPIRE fellow at APC Microbiome Ireland and is going on to look at the impact of microbial metabolites in depression, a stress-related disorder with alterations in microbiota-gut-brain axis signalling.”

    The study, “Acute stress-induced alterations in short-chain fatty acids: Implications for the intestinal and blood brain barriers,” was authored by Cristina Rosell-Cardona, Sarah-Jane Leigh, Emily Knox, Emanuela Tirelli, Joshua M. Lyte, Michael S. Goodson, Nancy Kelley-Loughnane, Maria R. Aburto, John F. Cryan, and Gerard Clarke.

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  • 100 years ago, scientists predicted we’d live to 1,000 years old

    100 years ago, scientists predicted we’d live to 1,000 years old

    When Frederick Grant Banting discovered how to isolate insulin from animals in 1921, the young Canadian doctor—a WWI veteran and former farm boy—changed the calculus of diabetes forever. Prior to the 1920s, the disease killed more than 80 percent of preteen diabetic children. Banting’s breakthrough replaced the sometimes toxic remedy goat’s rue, or Galega officinalis, a flowering plant with glucose-lowering properties derived from guanidine. His discovery came during a wave of medical optimism fueled by new scientific tools and knowledge that were rapidly unlocking the mysteries of human anatomy, disease, and aging.

    The foundations for this optimism had been building for decades. Germs were first discovered in the 1880s, ushering in the golden age of bacteriology and numerous life-saving vaccines. Vitamins got their name in the early 1900s when London-based Polish biochemist Casimir Funk—one of many scientists seeking cures for common diseases by linking them to vital nutrient deficiencies—combined “vital” and “amines.” Rickets led to the discovery of vitamin D, scurvy to vitamin C, and vitamin B was tied to beriberi, a disease that causes weakness, weight loss, confusion, and, in extreme cases, death. Meanwhile, anesthesia transformed surgery from a grisly performing art with low survival rates to more precise procedures conducted in germ-free operating rooms. Bit by bit, medicine appeared to be conquering many of humanity’s most pernicious plagues and thereby extending our average lifespan.

    By July 1925, Popular Science writer John E. Lodge even suggested that humans might soon be able to extend their life expectancy to 1,000 years. “Thanks to the efforts of science in combatting the ravages of disease, the average span of life is increasing every year,” Lodge wrote. “Are we to expect, then, that in time science will succeed in prolonging the average life until, like Methuselah, we measure our lives by centuries instead of by years.” Lodge envisioned a world where aging could be halted by replacing worn-out enzymes, transplanting organs, or manipulating an elusive “vital spark.” Scientists, he claimed, might be on the verge of conquering death itself.

    The June 1925 issue of Popular Science questioned death. Image: Popular Science

    A hundred years later, we’re still not there, but we continue to chase immortality with the same zest. Just as a century ago, today that quest is fueled not by glamorous breakthroughs—even if history makes it seem so—but by painstaking, collaborative scientific research, yielding fresh medical insights. In place of insulin, vaccines, and vitamins, today we’re captivated by gene-editing, cellular reprogramming, and immunotherapy. From biohackers injecting stem cells in search of cellular youth to billionaires like Bryan Johnson leaning on wearable tech for preventative health, blood plasma exchanges, and caloric restriction, the goal of outsmarting death hasn’t diminished—the elixirs are just more sophisticated.

    And yet, we’ve come a long way in a century. In 1925, the average American lifespan was 58 years; today, it’s 78.4 years, according to the US Centers for Disease Control. Such progress might seem meager compared to our grandiose early 20th century expectations, but the trend suggests that by the next century the average American would live to be a centenarian. There’s even reason to believe—as there was in 1925—that current promising research might yield treatments as soon as the next few decades that significantly extend our lifespans while improving disease resistance.

    vintage graphic showing average lifespans in 1600, 1750, and 1925

    Longevity increased greatly over 300 years. Image: Popular Science

    Consider how researchers in Singapore have extended the lives of mice 25 percent by blocking the protein interleukin-11. Scientists at the University of Rochester have successfully transferred a longevity gene to mice from naked mole rats, which live ten times longer than similar rodents. The gene, known for producing high molecular weight hyaluronic acid, or HMW-HA, extended mouse lives by 4.4% and improved their overall health. The researchers now aim to transfer these benefits to humans.

    In an ironic twist, a century after Banting’s insulin discovery displaced goat’s rue, a derivative of the pink-and-white flowering plant is back in favor. Metformin, a biguanide medication, has become one of the leading drugs for managing type 2 diabetes. Like its medieval predecessor, which was used for everything from increasing milk flow in livestock to alleviating plague symptoms, metformin has been similarly used or tested in myriad applications: as an antimalarial drug,  influenza treatment, lactation enhancer, arthritis remedy, and cardiovascular medicine. Now, scientists have begun to piece together the mystery of metformin’s versatility by mapping how it works at a cellular level. Recent research has shown that it may slow or inhibit cellular changes leading to inflammation and age-related diseases, extending lifespan.

    The cellular aging story stretches back to the late 19th century. As scientists were discovering germs, developing vaccines, uncovering the link between vital nutrients and common diseases, and improving surgery, evolutionary biologist August Weismann theorized that human cells had replication limits, which explained why the ability to heal diminished with age. By the 1960s, scientists had proven Weismann correct. Today, researchers are learning to halt and reverse cellular aging through reprogramming, an idea first attempted in the 1980s and advanced by Nobel Prize recipient Shinya Yamanaka, who discovered how to revert mature, specialized cells back to their embryonic, or pluripotent state, enabling them to regenerate into new tissue like liver cells or teeth.

    Read more ‘What a Difference a Century Makes—Or Not’ series

    But none of this means we’re approaching thousand-year lifespans. Most longevity interventions work only in tightly controlled laboratory settings or short-lived animals. Translating them into humans presents entirely different—and enormously complex—challenges. Even if we managed to double or triple the human lifespan, equally complex social challenges would follow: Who would get access to life-extending therapies? How do we support a society where most people live into their third or fourth century? What psychological toll does such extreme longevity take?

    The optimism of 1925 wasn’t misplaced; it was simply premature. It still might be, but today’s longevity researchers are armed with more sophisticated tools and a deeper understanding of biological processes. Whether today’s tools and knowledge will finally enable us to defy death remains to be seen. If there’s a lesson to draw from the past hundred years, however, it’s that life extension is incremental, fragile, and often humbling. We’ve added decades to average life expectancy, transformed once-fatal diseases into manageable conditions, and dramatically improved the quality of life in later years. That’s no small feat—but it’s not immortality.

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  • Composer Ellie Wilson’s new music is inspired by ecological data on moth movements

    SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

    And now a moment for the moths…

    (SOUNDBITE OF ELLIE WILSON’S “MOTH X HUMAN”)

    SIMON: …The insects that tap on your window at night or munch on clothes in the closet. Moths are now stars of a new music piece composed by Ellie Wilson. She’s been working closely with the mostly nocturnal creatures and says their contributions to our lives are largely underappreciated. Her latest project, “Moth X Human.”

    ELLIE WILSON: I really wanted to make something that was partly created by the insects themselves. That was really important to me.

    SIMON: Ellie Wilson turned to scientists at the U.K. Centre for Ecology & Hydrology. They set up machines at a nature reserve that could record the movements of the moths. Over just four hours on one August night, they identified 80 different moth species. The scientists shared their data with the composer, who then assigned each species its own distinct musical sound.

    WILSON: So the elephant hawk-moth, for example, is a beautiful pink and brown moth. I gave that a nice big kind of synth-y sound that’s very prominent in the piece.

    (SOUNDBITE OF LOUD MUSICAL NOTE)

    WILSON: And then there’s lots of these micro moths, which are very, very small brown moths. I gave them quite subtle kind of soft piano pedal sounds.

    (SOUNDBITE OF SOFT MUSICAL NOTES)

    SIMON: The moth symphony takes the spotlight for the first few minutes of the piece. Then it’s the turn of humans, including two violinists, a cellist and a pianist.

    (SOUNDBITE OF ELLIE WILSON’S “MOTH X HUMAN”)

    WILSON: So it ends up being a kind of interspecies dialogue to a certain degree, where we’re actually sort of batting these little melodies back and forth between what the moths have created and what the humans have created as well. And there’s little kind of fun little bits in it as well. I get the cellist to tap on the body of her cello to kind of imitate the sound of a moth being trapped in a lamp, and also the violins also have kind of very, very fluttery sounds kind of imitating the wings of the moth.

    (SOUNDBITE OF ELLIE WILSON’S “MOTH X HUMAN”)

    SIMON: Moths may seem plentiful when they surround the streetlights and too plentiful as they eat their way through your pantry, but their numbers are declining around the world.

    WILSON: Moths get a bit overlooked, but they’re just as important as bees and butterflies for pollination. And just like those other insects, they’re in significant decline across the world because of habitat loss, pesticides, climate change. And, you know, this has a massive knock-on effect because moths are important food source for bats and owls and birds. And it was really important to create a piece that shows what the issues are of our declining biodiversity.

    (SOUNDBITE OF ELLIE WILSON’S “MOTH X HUMAN”)

    WILSON: At the end of the piece, I use data from a different location which has poor biodiversity. It’s a farmland in Cambridgeshire, and they have a monoculture. They also use pesticides. You can hear it audibly the difference between the two bits. It’s at the end, very, very sparse. There’s hardly any moth activity throughout that evening, whereas at the beginning of the piece, it’s full of activity.

    SIMON: Ellie Wilson speaking about her latest work, “Moth X Human.” She performs the piece this weekend in London at the New Music Biennial festival, and it will be released later this month on NMC Recordings and available to stream.

    (SOUNDBITE OF ELLIE WILSON’S “MOTH X HUMAN”)

    SIMON: But B. J. Leiderman, another mostly nocturnal creature, does our theme music.

    (SOUNDBITE OF ELLIE WILSON’S “MOTH X HUMAN”)

    SIMON: This is WEEKEND EDITION from NPR News. I’m Scott Simon. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

    NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.


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  • Air Pollution ‘Strongly Associated’ With DNA Mutations Tied to Lung Cancer : ScienceAlert

    Air Pollution ‘Strongly Associated’ With DNA Mutations Tied to Lung Cancer : ScienceAlert

    Lung cancer cases are on the rise in non-smokers around the world, and air pollution could be an insidious, contributing factor.

    A genome study has now found that outdoor smog and soot are strongly associated with DNA mutations related to lung cancer – including known drivers seen in smokers, and new ones unique to non-smokers.

    The more pollution someone was exposed to, the more mutations scientists found in their lung tumors.

    The findings don’t mean that air pollution is directly causing lung cancer, but they do contribute to evidence suggesting that possibility.

    Related: Geneticists Just Got Closer to The Sources of Lung Cancer in People Who Never Smoked

    “We’re seeing this problematic trend that never-smokers are increasingly getting lung cancer, but we haven’t understood why,” explains biomolecular scientist Ludmil Alexandrov from the University of California San Diego (UCSD).

    “Our research shows that air pollution is strongly associated with the same types of DNA mutations we typically associate with smoking.”

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    The extensive international analysis examined the cancer genomes of 871 individuals from four continents, all of whom had lung cancer despite never having smoked and who had not yet received cancer treatment.

    Those who lived in regions with high levels of air pollution were significantly more likely to have TP53 mutations, EGFR mutations, and shorter telomeres.

    Abnormal TP53 and EGFR genes are hallmarks of lung cancers, especially those driven by the SBS4 DNA mutation, and shorter telomeres are linked to accelerated aging.

    In the current study, non-smokers who lived in areas with higher air pollution were nearly four times more likely to exhibit SBS4 signatures as those who lived in regions with cleaner air.

    By contrast, exposure to secondhand smoke, which is a known cancer risk, showed only a slight increase in genetic mutations.

    “If there is a mutagenic effect of secondhand smoke, it may be too weak for our current tools to detect,” says geneticist Tongwu Zhang from the US National Cancer Institute (NCI).

    Not so for air pollution or tobacco smoking: both were strongly linked to DNA mutations.

    Today in the United States, people who have never smoked or who have smoked fewer than 100 cigarettes in their lives make up about 10 to 20 percent of lung cancer cases.

    Scientists have long suspected that air pollution could be a contributing factor, but exactly how fine particulate matter in the air compares to tobacco smoking or secondhand smoke exposure remains unclear.

    Some studies suggest that breathing polluted air is on par with smoking a pack a day, and yet these conclusions are mostly based on observational analyses.

    The current study digs further by looking at some of the molecular mechanisms that may be at play. It compared the lung cancer genomes of the 871 non-smokers with tumors from 345 smokers, to find similarities and differences.

    The majority of non-smokers with lung cancer had adenocarcinomas (the most common type of lung cancer), and nearly 5 percent of those tumors showed the SBS4 mutational signature.

    In addition, 28 percent of non-smokers showed a new signature called SBS40a, which wasn’t found in tobacco smokers. Strangely, the cause of this particular mutational driver was unknown, but doesn’t seem to be environmental in nature.

    “We see it in a majority of cases in this study, but we don’t yet know what’s driving it,” says Alexandrov. “This is something entirely different, and it opens up a whole new area of investigation.”

    The current research relied only on regional air pollution levels, which means it can’t say how much any one individual was directly exposed to fine particulate matter in the air. Participants who said they had never smoked may have also smoked more than reported.

    These limitations notwithstanding, the overall findings align with other evidence indicating that soot or smog may trigger tumor growth in a similar way to cigarette chemicals.

    “This is an urgent and growing global problem that we are working to understand regarding never-smokers,” says epidemiologist Maria Teresa Landi from the NCI.

    The team now hopes to expand their study to include cancer genomes from a more diverse, global cohort.

    The study was published in Nature.

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