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

Presenting a synapse-by-synapse map of an insect’s brain

2023-03-09
(Press-News.org) Researchers have presented the connectome – or synaptic wiring diagram – of an entire Drosophila larva brain. This first-ever insect whole-brain connectome is larger and more complex than previously reported connectomes and represents a valuable resource for future experimental and theoretical studies of neural circuits and brain function. The brain comprises complex networks of interconnected neurons that communicate through synapses. Understanding the brain’s network architecture is critical to understanding brain function. However, due to technological constraints, imaging entire brains with electron microscopy (EM) and reconstructing the full neural architecture of the brain has been challenging and only has been achieved in three organisms that have relatively simple brains containing only several hundred neurons. Here, Michael Winding and colleagues present a synaptic-resolution, three-dimensional EM-based connectome of the larval Drosophila brain, which contains 3016 neurons and 548,000 synapses, and a far more complex organization than what is mapped by previous connectomes. Detailed analysis of the connectome allowed Wingding et al. to characterize diverse neuron and connection types and structural features, revealing extensive multisensory integration and cross-hemisphere interaction. The most recurrent neural architecture was associated with the input and output neurons of the brain’s learning center. According to the authors, some of the identified structural features, including multilayer shortcuts and nested recurrent loops, resembled prominent characteristics of state-of-the-art machine learning networks.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

The “MIDAS” platform detects protein-metabolite interactions

2023-03-09
To help improve the discovery and characterization of elusive interactions between proteins and metabolites, researchers present MIDAS (Mass spectrometry Integrated with equilibrium Dialysis for the discovery of Allostery Systematically). According to the authors, MIDAS represents a powerful new tool to “identify, understand, and exploit previously unknown modes of metabolic regulation across the protein-metabolite interactome.” The interactions between proteins and small-molecule metabolites are among the most common and fundamental types of biological interaction and play vital ...

Insular dwarfs and giants more likely to go extinct

Insular dwarfs and giants more likely to go extinct
2023-03-09
Leipzig/Halle. Islands are “laboratories of evolution” and home to animal species with many unique features, including dwarfs that evolved to very small sizes compared to their mainland relatives, and giants that evolved to large sizes. A team of researchers from the German Centre of Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) and Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (MLU) has now found that species that evolved to more extreme body sizes compared to their mainland relatives have a higher risk of extinction than those that evolved to less extreme sizes. Their study, which was published in Science, also shows that extinction rates of mammals ...

Honey bees use social learning to improve waggle dancing

Honey bees use social learning to improve waggle dancing
2023-03-09
In a study published in Science, researchers from the Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden (XTBG) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the University of California San Diego have shown that honey bees use social signal learning to improve their ability to waggle dance. Social learning shapes honey bee signaling, as it does communication in human infants, birds, and several other vertebrate species, according to the researchers. Social learning occurs when one individual learns by observing or interacting with another. Eusocial insects (i.e., insects with an advanced level of social ...

Scientists call for global push to eliminate space junk

Scientists call for global push to eliminate space junk
2023-03-09
Scientists have called for a legally-binding treaty to ensure Earth’s orbit isn’t irreparably harmed by the future expansion of the global space industry. In the week that nearly 200 countries agreed to a treaty to protect the High Seas after a 20-year process, the experts believe society needs to take the lessons learned from one part of our planet to another.  The number of satellites in orbit is expected to increase from 9,000 today to over 60,000 by 2030, with estimates suggesting there ...

First wiring map of neurons in insect brain complete

2023-03-09
Researchers have built the first ever map showing every single neuron and how they’re wired together in the brain of the fruit fly larva. This huge step forwards in science will ultimately help us understand the basic principles by which signals travel through the brain at the neural level and lead to behaviour and learning.   The map of the 3016 neurons that make up the larva’s brain and the detailed circuitry of neural pathways within it is known as a ‘connectome’. It’s the largest complete brain connectome described yet. Professor Marta Zlatic ...

Large-scale study enables new insights into rare eye disorders

Large-scale study enables new insights into rare eye disorders
2023-03-09
Researchers have analysed image and genomic data from the UK Biobank to find insights into rare diseases of the human eye. These include retinal dystrophies – a group of inherited disorders affecting the retina – which are also the leading cause of blindness certification in working-age adults. The retina is found at the back of the eye. It’s a layered tissue that receives light and converts it into a signal that can be interpreted by the brain. Each retinal layer comprises different cell types that play a unique role in this light conversion process. For this study published in the journal PLOS Genetics, the researchers focused ...

University of Ottawa's Dr. Natasha Kekre wins national recognition for early career success in healthcare research

University of Ottawas Dr. Natasha Kekre wins national recognition for early career success in healthcare research
2023-03-09
Dr. Natasha Kekre is this year’s national winner of a “young investigator award” from the Canadian Society for Clinical Investigation (north_eastexternal linkCSCI), an organization that represents early career healthcare researchers across the country. An exceptionally motivated scientist, Dr. Kekre is an associate professor at the uOttawa Faculty of Medicine, as well as a scientist and hematologist at The Ottawa Hospital. Dr. Kekre says she’s been “very fortunate” to be in Ottawa’s dynamic medical research hub and benefit from having internationally ...

Nirogacestat, a new desmoid tumor treatment, improves outcomes for people with sarcoma

2023-03-09
A phase 3 clinical trial (research study) of a targeted therapy called nirogacestat has found that the drug significantly shrank desmoid tumors in 41% of patients. Desmoid tumors (also known as aggressive fibromatosis) are a rare type of soft tissue tumor, and MSK has a team of doctors who are dedicated to treating them. When Dana Avellino, now 36, first noticed a lump near her groin in the summer of 2018, she thought it was related her recent cesarean section. Her younger daughter was only 2 months old at the time. When a biopsy revealed that the lump was a sarcoma, a type of tumor that ...

Ringing an electronic wave: Elusive massive phason observed in a charge density wave

Ringing an electronic wave: Elusive massive phason observed in a charge density wave
2023-03-09
Researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign have detected the existence of a charge density wave of electrons that acquires mass as it interacts with the background lattice ions of the material over long distances. This new research, led by assistant professor Fahad Mahmood (Physics, Materials Research Laboratory) and postdoc Soyeun Kim (current postdoc at Stanford Institute for Materials and Energy Sciences, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory), is a direct measurement of the Anderson-Higgs mechanism (of mass acquisition) and the first known demonstration of a massive phason in a charge ...

MSK Research Highlights, March 9, 2023

MSK Research Highlights, March 9, 2023
2023-03-09
New research from Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK) and the Sloan Kettering Institute — a hub for basic science and translational research within MSK — offers new proof-of-concept compounds against acute myeloid leukemia; reports results from a phase 1 clinical trial appraising two drugs against low-grade glioma; examines MSK’s first-in-the-nation program integrating herbal medicine into oncology care; and identifies how high-grade histologic patterns ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New guideline standardizes outpatient care for adults recovering from traumatic brain injury

Physician shortage in rural areas of the US worsened since 2017

Clinicians’ lack of adoption knowledge interferes with adoptees’ patient-clinician relationship

Tip sheet and summaries Annals of Family Medicine November/December 2025

General practitioners say trust in patients deepens over time

Older adults who see the same primary care physician have fewer preventable hospitalizations

Young European family doctors show moderate readiness for artificial intelligence but knowledge gaps limit AI use

New report presents recommendations to strengthen primary care for Latino patients with chronic conditions

Study finds nationwide decline in rural family physicians

New public dataset maps Medicare home health use

Innovative strategy trains bilingual clinic staff as dual-role medical interpreters to bridge language gaps in primary care

Higher glycemic index linked to higher lung cancer risk

Metabolism, not just weight, improved when older adults reduced ultra-processed food intake

New study identifies key mechanism driving HIV-associated immune suppression 

Connections with nature in protected areas

Rodriguez and Phadatare selected for SME's 30 Under 30

Nontraditional benefits play key role in retaining the under-35 government health worker

UC Irvine-led study finds global embrace of integrative cancer care

From shiloh shepherds to chihuahuas, study finds that the majority of modern dogs have detectable wolf ancestry

Ancient wolves on remote Baltic Sea island reveal link to prehistoric humans

Scientists detect new climate pattern in the tropics

‘Mental model’ approach shows promise in reducing susceptibility to misconceptions about mRNA vaccination

Want actionable climate knowledge at scale? Consider these three pathways

Blood formation: Two systems with different competencies

Golden retriever and human behaviours are driven by same genes

Calcium-sensitive switch boosts the efficacy of cancer drugs

LSU LCMC Health Cancer Center researchers uncover key immune differences in triple-negative breast cancer

University of Cincinnati study advances understanding of pancreatic cancer treatment resistance

An integrated approach to cybersecurity is key to reducing critical infrastructure vulnerability

Probing new mechanisms of depression and anxiety

[Press-News.org] Presenting a synapse-by-synapse map of an insect’s brain