PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study makes important step-forward in mission to tackle parasitic worm infections

Researchers from The Manchester Collaborative Centre for Inflammation Research, University of Manchester have made an important step forward in finding a potential treatment for an infection that affects over a billion people worldwide

2013-10-04
(Press-News.org) Researchers from The Manchester Collaborative Centre for Inflammation Research (MCCIR), University of Manchester have made an important step forward in finding a potential treatment for an infection that affects over a billion people worldwide.

Gastrointestinal parasitic infections, which are worm infections in the intestine, affect nearly one quarter of the world population and have been heavily linked with poverty in poorer regions.

They normally result in a chronic, long-lived infection associated with poor quality of life and health problems. A team led by Dr Mark Travis, MCCIR and the Wellcome Trust Centre for Cell-Matrix Research, has identified a pathway which seems to be important in driving the chronic infection and that could now potentially be targeted for therapy.

Dr Travis, from The University of Manchester's Faculty of Life Sciences, said: "Current treatments involve the use of drugs that expel parasitic worms from the body by killing them. But this does not prevent rapid re-infection with worms and sufferers often encounter problems with drug resistance.

"As these infections are usually chronic they are likely to influence the way the body's immune system behaves. We wanted to look in more detail at the pathways via cells and molecules in the body that regulate the immune response during infections.

"We believe this is crucial for identify new ways to treat these poorly managed infections." Researchers examined the behaviour of a key molecule which plays a multi-functional role in controlling the body's immune response, known as TGFβ.

The study, published in the latest edition of the Open Access journal PLOS Pathogens, found when this key molecule was blocked early during an infection it significantly protected from infection in mouse models.

Dr Travis said: "We have therefore identified a new pathway that regulates immune responses in the gut and can protect against infection. There now needs to be further research to see whether this could be used to create a protective immune response during a parasite infestation."



INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Facebook and Twitter may yield clues to preventing the spread of disease

2013-10-04
WATERLOO, Ont. (Thursday, October 3, 2013) -- Facebook and Twitter could provide vital clues to control infectious diseases by using mathematical models to understand how we respond socially to biological contagions. Cold and flu season prompts society to find ways to prevent the spread of disease though measures like vaccination all the way through to covering our mouths when we cough and staying in bed. These social responses are much more difficult to predict than the way biological contagion will evolve, but new methods are being developed to do just that. Published ...

BMC pediatricians warn that cuts to SNAP program will harm children

2013-10-04
(Boston)--In a commentary in this week's issue of Lancet, pediatricians from Boston Medical Center (BMC) call the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly the Food Stamp Program), one of America's most cost-effective and successful public health programs in the country. According to the authors, not only does it make life much better for children and families, it also saves society money. Unfortunately they also point out that despite convincing evidence of the beneficial effects of SNAP on child health, legislators have targeted SNAP for cuts as they struggle ...

Neglect of 'science communication environment' puts vaccine acceptance at risk

2013-10-04
The biggest threat to the contribution that childhood vaccines make to societal well-being doesn't come from deficits in public comprehension, distrust of science, or misinformation campaigns, but rather from the failure of governmental and other institutions to use evidence-based strategies to anticipate and avoid recurring threats to the science communication environment—the myriad everyday channels through which the public becomes apprised of decision-relevant science. This is the thesis of an article published this week in Science magazine by Dan M. Kahan, Elizabeth ...

New technique identifies novel class of cancer's drivers

2013-10-04
Researchers can now identify DNA regions within non-coding DNA, the major part of the genome that is not translated into a protein, where mutations can cause diseases such as cancer. Their approach reveals many potential genetic variants within non-coding DNA that drive the development of a variety of different cancers. This approach has great potential to find other disease-causing variants. Unlike the coding region of the genome where our 23,000 protein-coding genes lie, the non-coding region - which makes up 98% of our genome – is poorly understood. Recent studies ...

Silencing sudden death

2013-10-04
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), a disease in which cardiac muscle thickens, weakening the heart, can be prevented from developing for several months in mice by reducing production of a mutant protein, according to a new study by researchers at Harvard Medical School. The work takes a first step toward being able to treat or prevent the leading cause of sudden death in athletes and sudden heart-related death inpeople under 30 in the United States. "There's really no treatment for HCM right now. You can treat symptoms like chest pain or an arrhythmia, but that's not ...

Chemistry with sorted molecules

2013-10-04
To gain complete control over chemical reactions is one of the main goals of chemists around the world. Scientists at the University of Basel and the Center of Free-Electron Laser Science in Hamburg were able to for the first time successfully sort out single forms of molecules with electric fields and have them react specifically. Analysis of the reaction rates showed a relation between the spatial structure of the sorted molecules and their chemical reactivity. The results have been published in the renowned magazine Science. The reactivity of a chemical compound, ...

Stowers team links dampened mTOR signaling with the developmental disorder Roberts syndrome

2013-10-04
VIDEO: Watch as Stowers Investigator Jennifer Gerton, Ph.D. describes her most recent research discovery. Click here for more information. KANSAS CITY, MO—Children born with developmental disorders called cohesinopathies can suffer severe consequences, including intellectual disabilities, limb shortening, craniofacial anomalies, and slowed growth. Researchers know which mutations underlie some cohesinopathies, but have developed little understanding of the downstream signals ...

Possible culprits in congenital heart defects identified

2013-10-04
Mitochondria are the power plants of cells, manufacturing chemical fuel so a cell can perform its many tasks. These cellular power plants also are well known for their role in ridding the body of old or damaged cells. Now, researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and the University of Padua-Dulbecco Telethon Institute in Italy have shown that mitochondria remarkably also orchestrate events that determine a cell's future, at least in the embryonic mouse heart. The new study identifies new potential genetic culprits in the origins of some congenital ...

Brain stimulation affects compliance with social norms

2013-10-04
How does the human brain control compliance with social norms? The biological mechanisms that underlie norm compliance are still poorly understood. In a new study, Christian Ruff, Giuseppe Ugazio, and Ernst Fehr from the University of Zurich show that the lateral prefrontal cortex plays a central role in norm compliance. Prefrontal cortex controls norm behavior For the study, 63 participants took part in an experiment in which they received money and were asked to decide how much of it they wanted to share with an anonymous partner. A prevalent fairness norm in Western ...

Genetic study of river herring populations identifies conservation priorities

2013-10-04
A genetic and demographic analysis of river herring populations along the U.S. east coast, published October 2 in Evolutionary Applications, has identified distinct genetic stocks, providing crucial guidance for efforts to manage their declining populations. River herring include two related species, alewife and blueback herring, which migrate between freshwater spawning grounds and the ocean, where they spend most of their lives. The species are important for both ecological and economic reasons, according to Eric Palkovacs, assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Mechanical heart valve replacements have better long-term survival, study finds

Sandra Diaz and Eduardo Brondízio, scholars of human-nature interconnection, win the 2025 Tyler Prize with call for policies, business models and individuals to recognize humanity’s 'entanglement' wit

Kessler Foundation in partnership with Overlook Medical Center is first in NJ to implant novel spinal stimulator

Study reveals how physical activity impacts sleep quality in older adults during COVID-19 pandemic

ADHD symptoms and later e-cigarette and tobacco use in youths

Prepandemic prevalence of dietary supplement use for immune benefits

Born to heal: Why babies recover, but adults scar, after heart damage

SNU researchers develop soft robot that crawls, climbs, and shape-shifts to move in new directions

Mystery solved: New study reveals how DNA repair genes play a major role in Huntington's disease

Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute announces launch of Center for Sepsis Epidemiology and Prevention Studies (SEPSIS)

New perspectives for personalized therapy of brain tumors

IEEE researchers provide mathematical solutions to study 2D light interaction in photonic crystal lasers

New joint project to investigate quantum repeaters designed to provide for secure quantum communication networks of the future

PhRMA Foundation welcomes two board members

Microbiome as a potential key to better treatment: Clinical study on new therapy for Crohn's disease

AI predicts the precursor materials needed for material synthesis

International Shark Attack File Report: Unprovoked shark bites plummeted in 2024

Ketamine for mental health should only be provided by trained professionals

Study takes a ‘bite’ out of shark depredation using citizen science

A gender gap in using AI for research

Human-caused fires growing faster than lightning fires in the Western US

Barbeque and grandma’s cookies: New study looks at nostalgia, comfort in food preparation for older adults

The political consequences of undocumented residents in the census

Purity and environmental concern

Branch patterns in trees and art

Researcher develops method to measure blood-brain barrier permeability accurately

SynGAP Research Fund dba cure SYNGAP1 (SRF) announces the release of their SYNGAP1 impact report for 2024

Breakthrough in click chemistry: innovative method revolutionizes drug development

Digital Science announces Catalyst Grant winners, rewarding innovations to safeguard research integrity

How cancer cells trick the immune system by altering mitochondria

[Press-News.org] Study makes important step-forward in mission to tackle parasitic worm infections
Researchers from The Manchester Collaborative Centre for Inflammation Research, University of Manchester have made an important step forward in finding a potential treatment for an infection that affects over a billion people worldwide