ISAJ Newsletter - Volume 10, Issue 2 (September 2025)
Features research on aquatic bacterial disease prevention using affinity silk filters, IgM-specific antibodies in Medaka for vaccine development, and ISAJ 16th Symposium announcement
The second issue of ISAJ Newsletter presents cutting-edge research from our community members, including climate prediction and application studies at JAMSTEC, breakthrough innovations in genomic medicine with ultra-small siRNA delivery systems, and genetic engineering approaches for developing sheath blight resistance in rice.
Key Insights
Important takeaways and highlights from this issue
Below you'll find condensed summaries from our newsletter articles. To explore complete research details, figures, and references, view the full newsletter.
Greetings and a warm welcome to the Second Issue of ISAJ Newsletter!
We sincerely apologize for the delay in coming up with the present issue after successfully launching the first issue in March 2016. We wish to thank you all our esteemed readers for your generous support and valuable feedback on the inaugural issue. Your appreciation means a lot to us, and it will go a long way toward motivating us to move forward and do our best.
In this issue, you will get three technical contributions by our community members under the section titles: “Research Updates”, “Research Spotlights”, and “From the Pen of Young Mind”.
By Dr. Satyaban B. Ratna, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC)
Weather and climate forecasts on timescales of days to seasons are very important to reduce vulnerability to extreme floods and droughts. Our research group in Application Laboratory of JAMSTEC has been involved with research on seasonal climate forecasts for the last few decades.
Tropical air-sea coupled climate phenomena such as El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO), ENSO Modoki, Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD), subtropical Indian Ocean dipole, Ningaloo Niño, California Niño and Dakar Niño have significant impacts on our society. We are trying to predict such climate modes because accurate predictions and dissemination of predicted information are important to mitigate influences of extreme weather and climate events.
We have been investigating oceanic and atmospheric processes responsible for climate and ocean variations, mostly using a high-resolution coupled model (SINTEX-F) and other available observations. The SINTEX-F model has been known to predict IOD, ENSO and other climate modes on long lead-times. Our seasonal predictions are generated every month and made available on the JAMSTEC website.
Recently we have started to use seasonal forecasts for societal applications in different socioeconomic sectors:
By Dr. PK Hashim, The University of Tokyo
Disaster diseases such as cancer affect millions of people worldwide, accounting for 8.2 million deaths in 2012. Traditional chemotherapy has limitations including undesired side effects. Genomic medicine using gene fragments (e.g., siRNA) as pharmaceutical agents offers an excellent alternative with 100% efficiency while avoiding undesired targets.
We present the construction of a siRNA/carrier conjugate smaller than 10 nm using a polymer chemistry approach. A water-soluble Gu+ monomer bearing two thiol termini undergoes disulfide polymerization upon oxidation in the presence of a siRNA-template to form polymer-siRNA complexes (siRNA-nanocaplet).
By Ambika K. Dudhate, The University of Tokyo
Sheath blight is a fungal disease of intensive rice production caused by R. solani, reducing crop yield by 5-8%. Only partial genetic resistance has been reported so far, and traditional breeding is laborious and complicated by cross-ability barriers.
This study analyzed the role of two transcription factors:
This genetic engineering approach offers a promising alternative to traditional breeding and fungicide use, addressing both environmental and health concerns while improving crop yields.
The Science and Engineering Research Board (SERB), India announces various funding schemes:
For more details: http://serbonline.in/SERB/HomePage.do
Access the full newsletter with detailed research, figures, and references.
View Full Newsletter
Newsletter Details
Volume 1, Issue 2
September 2016
Dr. Mahendra Kumar Pal
National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Resilience (NIED)
Features research on aquatic bacterial disease prevention using affinity silk filters, IgM-specific antibodies in Medaka for vaccine development, and ISAJ 16th Symposium announcement
Features India-Japan STI Exchange Year, nonlinear optical phenomena in quantum materials, Inconel 718 fatigue modeling, and ISAJ Hokkaido Symposium 2024
Features discovery of SMS inhibitors for fatty liver disease, HAMR magnetic storage technology, and 15th ISAJ Annual Symposium report
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