Aggregator
Scientists find hidden brain nutrient deficit that may fuel anxiety
A major analysis of brain scans found that people with anxiety disorders have noticeably lower levels of choline, a nutrient crucial for healthy brain function. The strongest evidence appeared in the prefrontal cortex, the region tied to emotional control and decision-making. Researchers say the discovery is the first clear chemical brain pattern linked to anxiety and could eventually lead to new nutrition-based treatments.
Major outbreak of rare Ebola virus species in northern Congo alarms scientists
No vaccines exist for Ebola Bundibugyo, which has caused 80 suspected deaths in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and one in Uganda
Scientists discover tiny gut particles that may drive aging and chronic disease
A new study suggests microscopic particles from the gut may actively drive inflammation and chronic diseases associated with aging. Remarkably, gut particles from young animals appeared to counter some aging-related damage in older animals, hinting at new possibilities for future treatments.
This silent tooth infection could be hurting your whole body
Scientists are uncovering a surprising link between hidden tooth infections and blood sugar problems. Deep infections around tooth roots can create chronic inflammation that spreads through the body and may interfere with insulin function. Studies found that people who underwent root canal treatment often experienced better blood sugar control and reduced inflammation afterward. The research suggests that treating an infected tooth could have benefits far beyond the mouth.
Scientists say just 30 minutes of exercise a week could transform your health
You may not need hours at the gym to boost your health after all. Researchers say just 30 minutes of high-intensity exercise per week — broken into tiny bursts of effort that leave you out of breath — can dramatically improve cardiovascular fitness, lower the risk of dozens of diseases, and even help protect the brain as we age. The key isn’t how long you exercise, but how hard you push yourself.
Murder, monsters, occupational hazards: Why movie geologists die so often
Cinematic geologists are usually good guys—sometimes gals—but they have a one in three fatality rate, a film analysis show
Rare seals spotted snoozing in an underwater ‘bubble cave’
Hidden chambers may provide Mediterranean monk seals refuge from tourists
Is cannabis safe after 65? Stanford experts reveal 5 risks older adults should know
Cannabis use among older adults is rising fast, but today’s marijuana is far more potent than many people realize — and experts warn the risks may be underestimated. Stanford Medicine specialists say modern cannabis can increase the chances of heart problems, falls, memory issues, dangerous drug interactions, and even addiction, especially for people over 65.
Scientists discover vitamin B2 may help cancer cells survive
Scientists have uncovered a surprising dark side to vitamin B2: it may help cancer cells stay alive. The vitamin supports a cellular shield that protects tumors from ferroptosis, a form of programmed cell death linked to cancer suppression. In lab tests, researchers used a vitamin B2-like compound called roseoflavin to break down that protection and trigger cancer cell death.
The brain’s “feel good” chemical may be secretly fueling tinnitus
Scientists have uncovered evidence that serotonin — the same brain chemical boosted by many antidepressants — may actually worsen tinnitus. Using advanced light-based brain stimulation in mice, researchers identified a serotonin-driven circuit linked directly to tinnitus-like behavior. The findings may explain why some people experience louder ringing in their ears while taking SSRIs.
Making eyes ‘photosynthetic’ could treat common vision problem
Relocating plants’ light-capturing structures to the eye may fight damage from dry eye
One in five people may carry this hidden cholesterol risk without knowing it
Researchers analyzing over 20,000 patients found that very high levels of the inherited cholesterol particle Lp(a) dramatically raise the risk of stroke, cardiovascular death, and major heart complications. Because most people with elevated Lp(a) have no symptoms, experts say a simple blood test could uncover a dangerous hidden risk factor.
Chinese-European mission to reveal shape of Earth’s magnetic shield
SMILE orbiter will use x-rays to map how the solar wind batters the magnetosphere
Cell-type-specific APOE4 cascade across the Alzheimer's disease continuum
Apolipoprotein E4 (APOE4) is the leading genetic risk factor and an increasingly recognized causal contributor to Alzheimer's disease (AD). AD progresses along a temporal, pathological, and clinical continuum spanning preclinical, prodromal, and dementia stages. Across this continuum, APOE4 exerts detrimental effects at distinct times and in different cell types, underscoring the need for a model defining not only how but also when and in which cells these effects occur. In this review, we...
Transplantation of encapsulated mitochondria alleviates dysfunction in mitochondrial and Parkinson's disease models
No abstract
Extracellular Vesicles as Paradigm Shifters: Transformative Roles in Diagnosis and Therapy for Brain Disorders
Extracellular Vesicles (EVs), the nano-sized extracellular membrane-bound vesicles, facilitate cell-to-cell communication by transporting bioactive molecules like proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids. Their unique cargo, determined by the cell of origin, makes them valuable tools for studying disease pathogenesis and potential drug delivery systems. Research suggests that EVs play a role in the pathogenesis of various diseases, including neurodegenerative and neurodevelopmental disorders. They...
Interpretable modality-aware mapping of gene regulation in single-cell multiomics with scMAGCA
Single-cell multi-omics technologies profile multiple molecular layers in individual cells, but existing methods often struggle to integrate transcriptomic, proteomic, and epigenomic measurements into an interpretable representation while preserving relationships among cells. Here, we present the single-cell multi-omics adversarial graph convolutional autoencoder (scMAGCA), which constructs cell graphs and uses adversarial alignment to learn interpretable shared embeddings that capture cellular...
Proteomic signatures of the APOE epsilon4 and APOE epsilon2 genetic variants and Alzheimer's disease
The APOE locus is the strongest genetic factor for Alzheimer's disease, with ε4 increasing and ε2 decreasing risk, yet the basis of these opposing effects remains unclear. Here we performed a multicohort proteomic analysis across plasma and cerebrospinal fluid in GNPC, BioFINDER-2, ADNI, UK BioBank, and PPMI. APOE-associated protein alterations are detectable before amyloid pathology and remain stable across age and disease progression. APOE2-associated proteins were enriched in pathways related...
Relation of blood-based inflammation conditional networks to key immune health status and Alzheimer's biomarkers in aging adults
Blood inflammatory marker studies in aging and Alzheimer's disease (AD) research have faced numerous interpretative and methodological challenges that have hindered the field's understanding of the relationship between immune network regulation/dysregulation and aging health factors. We examined how blood inflammation markers directly relate to each other in typical aging, cognitively unimpaired adults using a conditional network analytic modeling approach. We further evaluated how blood...
Aged circulating CD8<sup>+</sup> T cells and their secreted factors drive cognitive decline
Changes in peripheral CD8^(+) T cells are a hallmark of immune aging. However, the role of aged non-infiltrating CD8^(+) T cells in brain aging remains to be fully defined. Here, we showed that aged circulating CD8^(+) T cells and their secreted factors drove hippocampal-dependent cognitive decline. Using heterochronic parabiosis and transcriptomics analysis, we observed that peripheral CD8^(+) T cells maintained properties intrinsic to their age. Systemic exposure of young mice to aged CD8^(+)...