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Scientists uncover cancer-causing chemicals hidden in everyday foods

4 hours 21 minutes ago
Scientists have identified potentially cancer-causing chemicals hiding in many everyday foods, especially those exposed to high heat cooking methods like grilling, roasting, smoking, and frying. The compounds, known as PAHs, can form during cooking or enter foods through contamination, raising concerns about long-term health risks.

Surprising study finds beef doesn’t worsen blood sugar or diabetes risk

4 hours 28 minutes ago
A new clinical trial suggests that eating beef every day may not be as risky for people with prediabetes as many assume. Researchers found that adults who ate 6–7 ounces of beef daily for a month showed no worsening in blood sugar control, insulin function, inflammation, or other key markers linked to type 2 diabetes when compared to people eating poultry instead.

Scientists warn that current vitamin B12 guidelines may be putting your brain at risk

6 hours 34 minutes ago
Getting enough vitamin B12 to meet current health guidelines may not actually be enough to protect the aging brain. Researchers at UC San Francisco found that older adults with “normal” but lower levels of active B12 showed signs of slower thinking, delayed visual processing, and more damage to the brain’s white matter — the communication highways that help different brain regions work together.

Spermidine Mitigates Immune Cell Senescence and Boosts Vaccine Responses in Healthy Older Adults-A Pilot Study

9 hours 8 minutes ago
Older adults are highly vulnerable to infectious diseases, and vaccines are often less effective in this population because of diminished B and T cell memory responses driven by impaired autophagy, immunosenescence, and chronic low-grade inflammation. Spermidine has been shown to counteract immunosenescence and induce autophagy in preclinical models, and its levels decline with age in humans. We conducted a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled pilot study in 40 adults over 65 years of...
Ghada Alsaleh

Immunosenescence and Vaccine Efficacy in Aging: Dynamic Interplay of Gut Microbiota and mTOR Signaling Pathways

9 hours 8 minutes ago
Aging significantly impairs vaccine efficacy in older adults, driven by immunosenescence, inflammaging, and disruptions in the gut microbiota-mTOR-immune axis. This review synthesizes current evidence on how aging alters vaccine-induced immune responses through the interplay of gut microbiota dysbiosis and dysregulated mTOR signaling. Age-related microbial diversity declines and reduced short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) production exacerbate inflammation, while heightened mTOR activity suppresses...
Jiaxuan Li

Popular weight loss drugs like Wegovy may also target arthritis inflammation

12 hours 55 minutes ago
Researchers have discovered that the GLP-1 hormone targeted by drugs like Wegovy is present in very low amounts inside the joints of arthritis patients. That finding suggests high-dose GLP-1 medications could potentially reach the joints and influence inflammation directly, not just help through weight loss. Scientists say this could open the door to a completely new approach to arthritis treatment.

Scientists discover a two-stage aging process that may cause cancer and arthritis

18 hours 7 minutes ago
A new theory suggests many age-related diseases may actually start decades before symptoms appear. Researchers say early-life damage — from infections, injuries, or genetic mutations — can remain hidden until aging weakens the body’s ability to keep it under control. This could explain why conditions like cancer, osteoarthritis, and shingles suddenly emerge later in life.

Think you’re bad at languages? Experts say these 5 myths are to blame

18 hours 53 minutes ago
Many people avoid learning a new language because they remember stressful grammar lessons or fear making mistakes. But language experts say communication, culture, and connection matter far more than perfection. Modern apps, entertainment, travel, and online communities have made learning easier, more social, and surprisingly fun.

Childhood junk food may rewire the brain for life

1 day 5 hours ago
Eating too much junk food early in life may rewire the brain in ways that last into adulthood, even after switching to a healthier diet. Scientists found that high-fat, high-sugar diets changed feeding behavior and disrupted appetite-control regions in the brain. Excitingly, certain gut-friendly bacteria and prebiotic fibers appeared to help undo some of the damage.

Common pesticide linked to hidden brain damage, scientists warn

1 day 6 hours ago
Scientists have uncovered alarming new evidence that a common insecticide may leave lasting marks on the developing brain before a child is even born. Researchers studying New York City children found that prenatal exposure to chlorpyrifos — a pesticide once widely used indoors and still used in agriculture — was linked to widespread brain abnormalities and weaker motor skills years later.

Scientists discover hidden weakness shared by hundreds of cancer mutations

1 day 7 hours ago
Scientists have unveiled a powerful new tool called PerturbFate that could change how researchers tackle diseases driven by huge numbers of genetic mutations, including cancer and Alzheimer’s. Instead of trying to target every faulty gene individually, the system tracks how different mutations reshape cells over time and identifies the hidden “control hubs” where those pathways converge.

Nitric oxide drives proteomic diversity through alternative splicing

1 day 9 hours ago
Redox signaling by nitric oxide (NO) is estimated to control a large part of the global proteome via S-nitrosylation (SNO-modification). Here, we report that RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) represent the most significantly enriched class of S-nitrosylation targets, with broad coverage of spliceosomal factors. We demonstrate that NO regulates alternative splicing (AS) and that S-nitrosylation of PTBP1, a central regulator of AS, can massively shift and contextually alter gene expression while further...
Joseph C Schindler

DTI-ALPS index and its association with neuroinflammatory and neurodegenerative biomarkers and tau-PET in Alzheimer's continuum

1 day 9 hours ago
Glymphatic dysfunction may contribute to abnormal protein accumulation in Alzheimer's disease (AD). This study investigates associations between an indirect proxy of glymphatic function, plasma neurodegenerative and neuroinflammatory biomarkers, and tau-PET burden across the AD continuum. Data from 407 ADNI participants were utilized. Diffusion Tensor Image Analysis Along the Perivascular Space (DTI-ALPS) is used as a noninvasive proxy of glymphatic activity. Multivariable linear regression...
Rasa Zafari

A hybrid CNN-GCN framework for interpretable Alzheimer's disease diagnosis from MRI scans

1 day 9 hours ago
Medical image analysis for Alzheimer's Disease (AD) diagnosis faces two key challenges: capturing spatial dependencies between anatomically connected brain regions and providing clinically interpretable explanations. While Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) excel at local feature extraction and Vision Transformers handle long-range dependencies, neither explicitly models the relational structure between brain regions-critical for understanding disease progression. We propose a hybrid CNN-GCN...
Junaidul Islam

TDP-43: a critical amplifier of Alzheimer's disease beyond amyloid and tau

1 day 9 hours ago
TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43) proteinopathy has recently emerged as a pivotal, yet underrecognized, contributor to the multifaceted neuropathology of Alzheimer's disease (AD). While amyloid-β and tau have long been established as cardinal pathological hallmarks, growing evidence delineates TDP-43 as a critical participant of neurodegeneration, intricately interwoven with amyloid and tau pathologies. TDP-43 mislocalization, post-translational modifications, and aggregation potentiate...
Abhideep Roy