Aggregator
This common amino acid helped mice survive deadly inflammation
A Salk Institute study found that a simple dietary amino acid, methionine, dramatically improved survival in mice facing severe infections and inflammatory conditions. Rather than directly targeting the immune system, methionine boosted kidney filtration, helping the body flush out excess inflammatory molecules that can cause tissue damage, brain dysfunction, wasting, and death.
This drug delayed rheumatoid arthritis for years after treatment ended
A promising new study suggests rheumatoid arthritis may not be as inevitable as once thought for people at high risk. Researchers found that just one year of treatment with the immune-targeting drug abatacept delayed the onset of rheumatoid arthritis by up to four years, with benefits lasting long after treatment ended.
The forgotten organ that could predict how long you live
A long-overlooked organ may hold surprising clues to healthy aging and cancer survival. Researchers at Mass General Brigham used AI to analyze CT scans from tens of thousands of adults and found that people with healthier thymuses—a small immune-system organ once thought to become largely irrelevant after childhood—lived longer and had substantially lower risks of heart disease, cancer, and death.
Ancient oaks reveal rewilding of Mediterranean forests after the Black Death
In Italy, evergreen holm oaks (Quercus ilex) and deciduous sessile oaks (Quercus petraea) experienced a synchronized establishment pulse starting at the beginning of 1400s CE, consistent with a release from anthropogenic pressure following demographic collapse associated with the Black Death outbreak (1347 CE) and its following waves until the 17th century. Radiocarbon dating of the oldest-looking individuals of each species revealed similar tree-age distributions across sites located at the...
Bilingualism predicts executive function resilience after COVID-19 in aging
Bilingualism has been associated with enhanced executive functions (EFs), particularly attentional control, and may confer protection against cognitive decline in older age. At the same time, the COVID-19 pandemic has emerged as a factor negatively affecting EF in older adults. Bilingualism might offer resilience against these COVID-related cognitive declines, especially in late adulthood, by bolstering cognitive reserve. The present study collected data from 312 community-dwelling individuals...
Interplay between cohesin and TORC1 links chromosome segregation and gene expression to environmental changes
Cohesin is a DNA tethering complex essential for chromosome structure and function. In fission yeast, defects in the cohesin loader Mis4 result in chromosome segregation defects and dysregulated expression of genes near chromosome ends. A genetic screen for suppressors of the thermosensitive growth defect of mis4-G1487D identified several hypomorphic mutants of the Target of Rapamycin Complex 1 (TORC1), a conserved kinase that integrates cellular signals to regulate growth and metabolism through...
Landmark cancer trial shows success against ‘undruggable’ cancer — raising hopes for future treatments
Feynmann's solved ‘restaurant dilemma’ 50 years ago — now a study confirms his mathematics
Smartphone camera takes users’ pulse passively during device use
Passive heart-rate monitoring during smartphone use in everyday life
Enantioselective hydrogen atom relay via non-covalent catalyst assembly
Obesity doesn’t equate to ill health: why the ‘disease’ label doesn’t always fit
Poor supervision is pushing young researchers out of academia
Robust projections of risks to the Amazon rainforest
Why it’s time to bin recommendation letters in science job applications
Science fiction: nine lab-life novels for your holiday reading
How long can humans live? We simply don’t know
Can Polymarket predict the progress of science, or are subject-experts better?
Desperate to fight Ebola outbreak, Congo weighs using longshot vaccine options
Existing vaccines may offer some protection against the rare strain now circulating—but the evidence is scant
Court blocks NSF’s transfer of climate lab’s supercomputing facility
Proposed switch in management caused irreparable harm to NCAR, judge finds