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

Stem cell study finds source of earliest blood cells during development

Results may be beneficial for creation of purer HSC lines for clinical treatments

2014-03-21
(Press-News.org) Irvine, Calif., March 20, 2014 — Hematopoietic stem cells are now routinely used to treat patients with cancers and other disorders of the blood and immune systems, but researchers knew little about the progenitor cells that give rise to them during embryonic development.

In a study published April 8 in Stem Cell Reports, Matthew Inlay of the Sue & Bill Gross Stem Cell Research Center and Stanford University colleagues created novel cell assays that identified the earliest arising HSC precursors based on their ability to generate all major blood cell types (red blood cells, platelets and immune cells).

This discovery of very early differentiating blood cells, Inlay said, may be very beneficial for the creation of HSC lines for clinical treatments.

"The hope is that by defining a set of markers that will allow us to make purer, cleaner populations of these precursor cells, we'll be able to reveal the key molecular events that lead to the emergence of the first HSCs in development. This could give us a step-by-step guide for creating these cells in a dish from pluripotent stem cell lines" added Inlay, who is an assistant professor of molecular biology & biochemistry at UC Irvine and conducted the study while a postdoctoral researcher in the Irving Weissman lab in the Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine at Stanford University.

INFORMATION: The work was performed in collaboration with Thomas Serwold, now an assistant professor in the Joslin Diabetes Center at Harvard Medical School.

The research reported in this article was supported by the National Institutes of Health (grants 5 T32 AI07290, R01HL058770, R01CA86085 and U01HL09999), the California Institute for Stem Cell Research (grants T1-00001, RT2-02060 to I.L.W.), the Harvard Stem Cell Institute, the Siebel Stem Cell Institute, the Thomas and Stacey Siebel Foundation, and the Virginia and D.K. Ludwig Fund for Cancer Research.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New infrared technique aims to remotely detect dangerous materials

2014-03-21
For most people, infrared technology calls to mind soldiers with night-vision goggles or energy audits that identify where heat escapes from homes during the winter season. But for two Brigham Young University professors, infrared holds the potential to spot from afar whether a site is being used to make nuclear weapons. Statistics professor Candace Berrett developed a model that precisely characterizes the material in each pixel of an image taken from a long-wave infrared camera. The U.S. National Nuclear Security Administration funded the project through a grant ...

The gene family linked to brain evolution is implicated in severity of autism symptoms

2014-03-21
The same gene family that may have helped the human brain become larger and more complex than in any other animal also is linked to the severity of autism, according to new research from the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus. The gene family is made up of over 270 copies of a segment of DNA called DUF1220. DUF1220 codes for a protein domain – a specific functionally important segment within a protein. The more copies of a specific DUF1220 subtype a person with autism has, the more severe the symptoms, according to a paper published in the PLoS Genetics. ...

Stanford professor maps by-catch as unintended consequence of global fisheries

Stanford professor maps by-catch as unintended consequence of global fisheries
2014-03-21
Seabirds, sea turtles and marine mammals such as dolphins may not appear to have much in common, other than an affinity for open water. The sad truth is that they are all unintended victims – by-catch – of intensive global fishing. In fact, accidental entanglement in fishing gear is the single biggest threat to some species in these groups. A new analysis co-authored by Stanford biology Professor Larry Crowder provides an unprecedented global map of this by-catch, starkly illustrating the scope of the problem and the need to expand existing conservation efforts in certain ...

Homeless with TBI more likely to visit ER

Homeless with TBI more likely to visit ER
2014-03-21
TORONTO, March 21, 2014—Homeless and vulnerably housed people who have suffered a traumatic brain injury at some point in their life are more likely to visit an Emergency Department, be arrested or incarcerated, or be victims of physical assault, new research has found. "Given the high costs of Emergency Department visits and the burden of crime on society, these findings have important public health and criminal justice implications," the researchers from St. Michael's Hospital wrote today in the Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation. Traumatic brain injuries, such as ...

Dust in the wind drove iron fertilization during ice age

Dust in the wind drove iron fertilization during ice age
2014-03-21
Researchers from Princeton University and the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich have confirmed that during the last ice age iron fertilization caused plankton to thrive in a region of the Southern Ocean. The study published in Science confirms a longstanding hypothesis that wind-borne dust carried iron to the region of the globe north of Antarctica, driving plankton growth and eventually leading to the removal of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Plankton remove the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere during growth and transfer it ...

Obesity and depression linked in teen girls says new Rutgers-Camden study

2014-03-21
Depression and obesity have long been associated, but how they relate over time is less clear. New research from a Rutgers University–Camden professor shows that adolescent females who experience one of the disorders are at a greater risk for the other as they get older. "Adolescence is a key developmental period for both obesity and depression, so we thought it significant to look at the onset of these disorders at an early age," says Naomi Marmorstein, an associate professor of psychology at Rutgers–Camden. By assessing a statewide sample of more than 1,500 males ...

UV exposure found to lower folate levels in young women

2014-03-21
Women who are pregnant or trying to fall pregnant and taking a folic acid supplement may be at risk of reducing their folate benefit through sun exposure, a new QUT study has warned. In a paper titled Exposure to solar ultraviolet radiation is associated with decreased folate status in women of childbearing age, published in the Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B:Biology, QUT researchers found UV exposure significantly depleted folate levels. Professor Michael Kimlin and Dr David Borradale, from QUT's AusSun Research Lab, said the study of 45 young healthy ...

The MIS 3 glacial advances in the Nyainqentanglha and possible linkage to the North Atlantic cooling

2014-03-21
Chronologies of glacial advances during the last glacial period are not contemporaneous throughout the Tibetan Plateau. Professor YI Chaolu and his research group from the Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, dated glacial boulders on moraines from the last glacial period in the Nyainqentanglha Mountains, Tibet. They suggested that glacial advances that occurred during a relatively warm period (MIS 3) between two cold stages of the last glacial episode in the Nyainqentanglha may correlate with millennial-scale climate change (Heinrich) events. ...

Now even more likely that there are particles smaller than Higgs out there

Now even more likely that there are particles smaller than Higgs out there
2014-03-21
Nobody has seen them yet; particles that are smaller than the Higgs particle. However theories predict their existence, and now the most important of these theories have been critically tested. The result: The existence of the yet unseen particles is now more likely than ever. "I gave them a very critical review", says Thomas Ryttov, particle physicist and associate professor at the Center for Cosmology and Particle Physics Phenomenology (CP ³ - Origins), University of Southern Denmark. He refers to the theories, that over the last app. five years have been put forward ...

Cholesterol transporter structure decoded

2014-03-21
This news release is available in German. The word "cholesterol" is directly linked in most people's minds with high-fat foods, worrying blood test results, and cardiovascular diseases. However, despite its bad reputation, cholesterol is essential to our wellbeing: It stabilizes cell membranes and is a raw material for the production of different hormones in the cell's power plants – the mitochondria. Now, for the first time, scientists in Göttingen have solved the high-resolution structure of the molecular transporter TSPO, which introduces cholesterol into mitochondria. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Neuroticism may be linked with more frequent sexual fantasies

The ideal scent detection dog is confident, persistent and resilient, without insecurities or neuroticism, according to a study featuring Dutch police dog handlers

Elusive beaked whales off the Louisiana coast may sometimes be diving right to the seafloor, finds new 3D acoustic technology which accurately pinpoints their locations using their echolocation clicks

The vulnerable Amazonian manatee is most often found where human activity is low, with a new eDNA-based method most commonly detecting the freshwater mammal in the remote western Amazon

Dog behavioral traits are linked with salivary hormone cortisol and neurotransmitter serotonin

Breakthrough in human norovirus research: Researchers overcome major obstacle to grow and study the virus

Call for papers: 10th anniversary special issue of Big Earth Data

Embargoed: DNA marker in malaria mosquitoes may be pivotal in tackling insecticide resistance

Large increases in PM2.5 exposure from wildfires have exaggerated progress in reducing inequities in traditional sources of PM2.5 in California

Janus meta-imager enables asymmetric image transmission and transformation in opposite directions

Unlocking “hidden” modes: A new physics-driven approach to label-free cancer cell phenotyping

More isn’t always better: Texas A&M research links high-dose antioxidants to offspring birth defects

Study: Synthetic protein potentially improves outcomes for certain subgroups following intracerebral hemorrhage

Sub-shot-noise optical readout achieved in a Rydberg atomic medium

Unlocking dual-spin achromatic meta-optics with hybrid-phase dispersion engineering

On-chip dual microcombs drive nanomaterial-enhanced fiber sensors for high-selectivity multi-gas mapping

New transgenic zebrafish models decades of muscle atrophy in weeks

A double-edged sword: Chronic cellular stress promotes liver cancer—but also makes tumors vulnerable to immunotherapy

Ancient rocks reveal evidence of the first continents and crust recycling processes on Earth

Scientists build a "Rosetta Stone" to decode chronic pain neurons

Equity, diversity, and inclusion programs in health care institutions

Cost-effectiveness of semaglutide for secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease in US adults

A ketogenic diet for treatment-resistant depression

Terahertz microscope reveals the motion of superconducting electrons

Brain network responsible for Parkinson’s disease identified

In a study, AI model OpenScholar synthesizes scientific research and cites sources as accurately as human experts

New study reveals a minimalist bacterial defense that disrupts viral assembly

Scientists crack the rules of gene regulation with experimental elegance and AI

Scientists ID potential treatment for deadliest brain cancer

If you want to feel gratitude in your life, embrace nostalgia, VCU research finds

[Press-News.org] Stem cell study finds source of earliest blood cells during development
Results may be beneficial for creation of purer HSC lines for clinical treatments