Feed aggregator

Studies explore links between stress, choline deficiency, preterm births, and mental health

Eurekalert - Jul 07 2021 - 00:07
In two recent articles published in Schizophrenia Bulletin, Sharon Hunter, PhD, an associate professor in the CU School of Medicine Department of Psychiatry, and M. Camille Hoffman, MD, MSc, an associate professor in the CU School of Medicine Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, have uncovered a potential link between choline deficiency in Black pregnant women in the United States and increased risk of developmental issues that can evolve into mental illness later in children's lives.
Categories: Content

Engineered protein inspired by nature may help plastic plague

Eurekalert - Jul 07 2021 - 00:07
Cheap to produce and long to degrade, plastic was once a manufacturing miracle. Now, plastic is an environmental plague, clogging landfills and choking waterways. A Japan-based research team has turned back to nature to develop an approach to degrading the stubborn substance.
Categories: Content

Small amount of lithium production in classical nova

Eurekalert - Jul 07 2021 - 00:07
A new study of lithium production in a classical nova found a production rate of only a couple of percent that seen in other examples. This shows that there is a large diversity within classical novae and implies that nova explosions alone cannot explain the amount of lithium seen in the current Universe. This is an important result for understanding both the explosion mechanism of classical novae and the overall chemical evolution of the Universe.
Categories: Content

Anti-coagulant drug could treat COVID-19's emerging variants

Eurekalert - Jul 07 2021 - 00:07
Molecules from the same family as the anti-coagulant drug heparin may interfere with the ability of the COVID-19 virus's spikes to bind to human cells. This could be used to treat people with severe effects of the virus and any emerging variants.
Categories: Content

Mount Sinai research reveals how Ebola virus manages to evade the body's immune defenses

Eurekalert - Jul 07 2021 - 00:07
Mount Sinai researchers have uncovered the complex cellular mechanisms of Ebola virus, which could help explain its severe toll on humans and identify potential pathways to treatment and prevention.
Categories: Content

The shape of nanoparticles in body fluids may help identify the type of cancer

Eurekalert - Jul 07 2021 - 00:07
A recent study has shown that the shape of cell-derived nanoparticles, known as "extracellular vesicles" (EVs), in body fluids could be a biomarker for identifying types of cancer. In the study, scientists successfully measured the shape distributions of EVs derived from liver, breast, and colorectal cancer cells, showing that the shape distributions differ from one another.
Categories: Content

Anti-androgen therapy can fuel spread of bone tumours in advanced prostate cancer

Eurekalert - Jul 07 2021 - 00:07
Anti-androgen therapy is commonly used to treat patients with advanced prostate cancer at stages where the disease has spread to the bones. However, new research has found that anti-androgen treatment can actually facilitate prostate cancer cells to adapt and grow in the bone tumour microenvironment model, which has been developed by QUT biomedical scientists led by Dr Nathalie Bock.
Categories: Content

Researchers identify ultrastable single atom magnet

Eurekalert - Jul 07 2021 - 00:07
Researchers at the IBS Center for Quantum Nanoscience at Ewha Womans University (QNS) have shown that dysprosium atoms resting on a thin insulating layer of magnesium oxide have magnetic stability over days. In a study published in Nature Communications they have proven that these tiny magnets have extreme robustness against fluctuations in magnetic field and temperature and will flip only when they are bombarded with high energy electrons through the STM-tip.
Categories: Content

Harnessing AI to discover new drugs

Eurekalert - Jul 07 2021 - 00:07
Artificial intelligence (AI) is able to recognise the biological activity of natural products in a targeted manner, as researchers at ETH Zurich have demonstrated. Moreover, AI helps to find molecules that have the same effect as a natural substance but are easier to manufacture. This opens up huge possibilities for drug discovery, which also have potential to rewrite the rulebook for pharmaceutical research.
Categories: Content

Cutting through noise for better solar cells

Eurekalert - Jul 07 2021 - 00:07
Physicists used cross-correlation noise spectroscopy to measure miniscule fluctuations in electrical current flowing between materials inside silicon solar cells. The researchers identified crucial electrical noise signals that are completely invisible to conventional noise-measuring methods. They were also able to pinpoint the likely physical processes causing the noise, which often results in a loss of energy and lower efficiency. The technique is an important new tool to improve material interfaces for a better solar cell.
Categories: Content

Not only humans got talent, dogs got it too!

Eurekalert - Jul 07 2021 - 00:07
Some exceptionally gifted people have marked human history and culture. Leonardo, Mozart, and Einstein are some famous examples of this phenomenon.Is talent in a given field a uniquely human phenomenon? We do not know whether gifted bees or elephants exist, just to name a few species, but now there is evidence that talent in a specific field exists, in at least one non-human species: the dog.
Categories: Content

New generation anti-cancer drug shows promise for children with brain tumours

Eurekalert - Jul 07 2021 - 00:07
A genetic map of an aggressive childhood brain tumour called medulloblastoma has helped researchers identify a new generation anti-cancer drug that can be repurposed as an effective treatment for the disease.
Categories: Content

McMaster researchers identify how VITT happens

Eurekalert - Jul 07 2021 - 00:07
A McMaster University team of researchers recently discovered how, exactly, the COVID-19 vaccines that use adenovirus vectors trigger a rare but sometimes fatal blood clotting reaction called vaccine-induced immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia or VITT
Categories: Content

Gene therapy in early stages of Huntington's disease may slow down symptom progression

Eurekalert - Jul 07 2021 - 00:07
In a new study on mice, Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers report that using MRI scans to measure blood volume in the brain can serve as a noninvasive way to potentially track the progress of gene editing therapies for early-stage Huntington's disease, a neurodegenerative disorder that attacks brain cells.
Categories: Content

The Obesity Society issues new position statement:

Eurekalert - Jul 07 2021 - 00:07
Vaccines such as Pfizer, Moderna, Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca are designed to prevent severe Coronavirus-19 Disease (COVID-19) due to acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and are highly efficacious. The efficacy is not different in people with and without obesity except for AstraZeneca which is not known, according to a new position statement from The Obesity Society (TOS), the leading scientific membership organization advancing the science-based understanding of the causes, consequences, prevention and treatment of obesity.
Categories: Content

Viruses are the most common cause of myocarditis in children, experts offer guidance

Eurekalert - Jul 07 2021 - 00:07
Viral infection is the most common cause of inflammation in the heart muscle, called myocarditis, in children; however, there remains a diverse array of infectious and non-infectious causes of myocarditis that should be considered in diagnosis.Myocarditis caused by a virus is more often seen in children than in adults, and children are more likely to have acute myocarditis (sudden onset) rather than chronic myocarditis, which is more typically seen in adults.
Categories: Content

Rare genetic variants confer largest increase in type 2 diabetes risk seen to date

Eurekalert - Jul 07 2021 - 00:07
Scientists at the University of Cambridge have identified rare genetic variants - carried by one in 3,000 people - that have a larger impact on the risk of developing type 2 diabetes than any previously identified genetic effect.
Categories: Content

New approach will help identify drugs that can 'glue' proteins together

Eurekalert - Jul 07 2021 - 00:07
A new screening method that can test the effectiveness of therapeutic molecules designed to 'glue' proteins together in the body has been developed by researchers at the University of Birmingham and the University of Leicester.
Categories: Content

Understanding frailty will lead to better care for older adults

Eurekalert - Jul 07 2021 - 00:07
A team led by researchers from the University of Waterloo, which analyzed data from more than 24,000 community-dwelling older adults receiving home care in Ontario who were subsequently admitted into an intensive-care unit, have found that frailty is a better predictor than factors such as age when determining how older adults fare one year after receiving critical care.
Categories: Content

Brain functional connectivity in Tourette syndrome

Eurekalert - Jul 07 2021 - 00:07
Tourette syndrome, a neurodevelopmental disorder, causes motor and phonic "tics," or uncontrollable repeated behaviors and vocalizations. People affected by Tourette syndrome can often suppress these tics for some time before the urges become overwhelming, and researchers have long wondered at the neural underpinnings of the suppression effort. In a new study, researchers at Yale School of Medicine have assessed the impact of tic suppression on functional connectivity between brain regions.
Categories: Content