(Press-News.org) Creatine is popularly known as a muscle-building supplement, but its influence on human muscle function can be a matter of life or death.
“Creatine is very crucial for energy-consuming cells in skeletal muscle throughout the body, but also in the brain and in the heart,” said Chin-Yi Chen, a research scientist at Virginia Tech’s Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at VTC.
Chen is part of a research team working to develop a technique that uses focused ultrasound to deliver creatine directly to the brain. The work, being conducted in the lab of Fralin Biomedical Research Institute Assistant Professor Cheng-Chia “Fred” Wu, will be supported by a $30,000 grant from the Association for Creatine Deficiencies.
Creatine plays a vital role in the brain, where it interacts with phosphoric acid to help create adenosine triphosphate, a molecule essential for energy production in living cells. In addition to its role in energy production, creatine also influences neurotransmitter systems.
For example, creatine influences the brain’s major inhibitory pathways that use the neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid, which limits neuronal excitability in the central nervous system. It may play a role in a variety of functions, including seizure control, learning, memory, and brain development.
A growing body of research suggests that creatine may itself function as neurotransmitter, as it is delivered to neurons from glial cells in the brain and can influence signaling processes between other neurons. While creatine deficiency disorders can weaken the skeletal muscle and the heart, they can also severely affect the brain. Many patients see increased muscle mass and body weight with creatine supplements, but they often continue to face neurodevelopmental challenges that can hinder their ability to speak, read, or write.
This is largely caused by the brain’s protective blood-brain barrier. This selective shield blocks harmful substances like toxins and pathogens from entering brain tissue, but it can also prevent beneficial compounds like creatine from reaching the brain when levels are low.
Wu studies therapeutic focused ultrasound, which precisely directs sound waves to areas of the brain to which access has been opened temporarily. The process allows drugs to reach diseased tissue without harming surrounding healthy cells. While Wu is investigating this method as a potential treatment for pediatric brain cancer, he also sees potential in applying it to creatine deficiency.
“Through the partnership between Virginia Tech and Children’s National Hospital, I was able to present our work in focused ultrasound at the Children’s National Research & Innovation Campus,” Wu said. “There, I met Dr. Seth Berger, a medical geneticist, who introduced me to creatine transporter deficiency. Together, we saw the promise that focused ultrasound had to offer.”
The Focused Ultrasound Foundation has recognized Virginia Tech and Children’s National as Centers of Excellence. Wu said the two organizations bring together clinical specialists, trial experts, and research scientists who can design experiments that could inform future clinical trials.
“It was a moment that made me really excited — that I had found a lab where I could move from basic research to something that could help patients,” Chen said. “When Fred asked me, ‘Are you interested in this project?’ I said, ‘Yes, of course.’”
Because creatine deficiencies can impair brain development, the early stages of Chen’s project will concentrate on using focused ultrasound to deliver creatine across the blood-brain barrier. Chen hopes the technique will restore normal brain mass in models of creatine deficiency.
END
Creatine may help the brain, not just muscles
Fralin Biomedical Research Institute team is working to get creatine past the blood-brain barrier using focused ultrasound.
2025-07-09
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Teams develop CO₂ capture-conversion tandem system adaptable to a wide range of CO₂ concentrations
2025-07-09
CO2 concentrations vary widely depending on the source, ranging, for example, from about 0.04% in the atmosphere to about 10% in flue gases. Moreover, these gas streams contain a significant amount of O2 (about 10%), a potent oxidizing agent. To achieve carbon neutrality, it is necessary to develop a robust process that can convert CO2 over a wide concentration range, even in the presence of O2. However, current technology does not offer a single unified approach that can efficiently handle CO2 conversion from trace to high concentrations. To meet this challenge, researchers at Hokkaido University and collaborators ...
Endocrine Society proposes research efforts to improve treatment options for people with type 1 diabetes
2025-07-09
WASHINGTON—A new Scientific Statement released today by the Endocrine Society highlights potential research directions related to the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes (T1D) that should help with the development of new and improved treatment options.
Type 1 diabetes is a chronic disease where the body's immune system attacks and destroys insulin-producing cells in the pancreatic islet. Type 1 diabetes requires lifelong insulin administration and may result in complications such as eye, kidney, nerve, and heart disease. ...
In menopause, sleep is vitally important for women’s long-term heart health, study finds
2025-07-09
PITTSBURGH, July 9, 2025 — During the menopause transition, only 1 in 5 women have optimal scores using the American Heart Association’s health-assessment tool, known as Life’s Essential 8 (LE8). Among the tool’s eight components, four of them — blood glucose, blood pressure, sleep quality and nicotine use — are key in driving future cardiovascular risks, with sleep being particularly crucial for long-term cardiovascular health.
The findings – published today in Menopause – were made by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh, Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Baylor University.
“Previously ...
Why do some brain regions resist Alzheimer’s?
2025-07-09
It’s been recognized for some time that Alzheimer’s disease affects brain regions differently and that tau — a protein known to misbehave — plays an important role in the disease. Normally, tau helps stabilize neurons, but in Alzheimer’s disease, it begins to misfold and tangle inside neurons. It spreads across the brain forming toxic clumps that impair neuronal function and ultimately lead to cell death.
Brain areas like the entorhinal cortex and hippocampus succumb early to tau tangles, while other areas, like the primary sensory cortices, remain resilient to the disease. In the quest to better understand this selective ...
Like humans, monkeys are attracted to videos showing conflict
2025-07-09
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Have you ever wondered what kind of video content would most grab the attention of monkeys?
A new study of long-tailed macaques suggests the monkeys seem to like some of the same kind of content that humans do: videos featuring aggression and individuals they know.
“Humans and macaques are both social animals who have a fundamental need to belong,” said Brad Bushman, co-author of the study and professor of communication at The Ohio State University.
“It’s not surprising that they both would be most interested in the video content that may help ...
Dr. Richard M. Peterson elected 39th president of American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery
2025-07-09
Newberry, FL – July 9, 2025 – Richard M. Peterson, MD, MPH, FACS, FASMBS, DABS-FPMBS, Professor and Chief of Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery at UT Health San Antonio, TX, has been elected the new president of the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery (ASMBS), the nation’s largest professional organization of metabolic and bariatric surgeons and integrated health professionals focused on the treatment of obesity.
Dr. Peterson has been a member of the ASMBS for nearly 20 years and a board member since 2019. He has chaired the society’s ...
Addressing “spay-neuter syndrome" with testosterone restoration for neutered male dogs
2025-07-09
The Parsemus Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to advancing pet health, today announced the publication of groundbreaking research on the safety and dosing of testosterone therapy for neutered male dogs. Published in BMC Veterinary Research, this pivotal study provides crucial data for veterinarians to treat "spay-neuter syndrome” - a collection of health and behavioral problems associated with hormone loss following sterilization. Results show that injectable testosterone can safely restore physiological hormone levels in neutered dogs, offering ...
The ACMG releases 2025 update to secondary findings gene list; SF v3.3
2025-07-09
BETHESDA, MD – July 9, 2025 | The American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) has released its highly anticipated 2025 update to the recommended minimum gene list for the reporting of secondary findings (SF) in clinical exome and genome sequencing: “ACMG SF v3.3 List for Reporting of Secondary Findings in Clinical Exome and Genome Sequencing: A Policy Statement of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics.”
As part of its ongoing commitment to annual updates, ...
More rural, minoritized people get amputations – AI gets closer to why
2025-07-09
Why do rural adults and racial and ethnic minorities with vascular disease get major leg amputations more often? A new study out today in Epidemiology uses AI to solve the mystery, finding an unaccounted-for factor that researchers think points to implicit bias in the clinical decision-making process.
“The AI model allowed us to distinguish among the many reasons behind these much higher rates of amputation among certain groups of people with vascular disease,” said Paula Strassle, ...
First look at defects in single-crystal indium gallium zinc oxide could fix persistent display instability
2025-07-09
Many displays found in smartphones and televisions rely on thin-film transistors (TFTs) made from indium gallium zinc oxide (IGZO) to control pixels. IGZO offers high transparency due to its large bandgap (the gap existing between the valence and conduction bands), high conductivity, and can operate even in an amorphous (non-crystalline) form, making it ideal for displays, flexible electronics, and solar cells. However, IGZO-based devices face long-term stability issues, such as negative bias illumination stress, ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Underestimated sources of marine pollution
IPK research team unlocks potential of barley’s closest wild relative, Hordeum bulbosum
Study reveals the hidden benefits of weight loss on fat tissue
Gut microbes key to understanding how exercise boosts cancer immunity
Morning vs bedtime dosing and nocturnal blood pressure reduction in patients with hypertension
BMI in children before, during, and after the COVID-19 pandemic
Branching out: Tomato genes point to new medicines
Charité study analyzes 400 million years of enzyme evolution
Large-scale DNA study maps 37,000 years of disease history
Results from largest review of its kind on antidepressant withdrawal symptoms
Twist to the M-ax(is): New twist platform opens path to quantum simulation of more exotic states of matter
Chang'e-6 samples unlock secrets of the Moon’s farside
Teaching lasers to self-correct in high-precision patterned laser micro-grooving
EGFR-targeted therapy resistance in breast and head & neck cancers
JMIR Medical Informatics invites submissions on ambient AI scribes and AI-driven documentation technologies
Global trends and cross-country inequalities of acute hepatitis E in the elderly, 1990–2021
New catalyst enables triple-efficiency decomposition of ammonia for clean hydrogen
FAU Harbor Branch receives $1M grant to study gulf’s mesophotic coral habitats
WSU study provides detailed look at the declining groundwater in regional aquifer system
Creatine may help the brain, not just muscles
Teams develop CO₂ capture-conversion tandem system adaptable to a wide range of CO₂ concentrations
Endocrine Society proposes research efforts to improve treatment options for people with type 1 diabetes
In menopause, sleep is vitally important for women’s long-term heart health, study finds
Why do some brain regions resist Alzheimer’s?
Like humans, monkeys are attracted to videos showing conflict
Dr. Richard M. Peterson elected 39th president of American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery
Addressing “spay-neuter syndrome" with testosterone restoration for neutered male dogs
The ACMG releases 2025 update to secondary findings gene list; SF v3.3
More rural, minoritized people get amputations – AI gets closer to why
First look at defects in single-crystal indium gallium zinc oxide could fix persistent display instability
[Press-News.org] Creatine may help the brain, not just musclesFralin Biomedical Research Institute team is working to get creatine past the blood-brain barrier using focused ultrasound.