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

Scientists investigate why memory circuits break down in Alzheimer’s disease

Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at VTC scientists receive Virginia grant to study how energy failure inside brain cells may damage key memory pathways

2025-09-02
(Press-News.org)

One of the first parts of the brain affected by Alzheimer’s disease is the entorhinal cortex — a region that plays a big role in memory, spatial navigation, and the brain’s internal mapping system.

With support from the Commonwealth of Virginia’s Alzheimer’s and Related Diseases Research Award Fund (ARDRAF), Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at VTC scientists Sharon Swanger and Shannon Farris are working to understand why this area is especially vulnerable. 

Swanger studies how brain cells communicate across synapses in disease-susceptible brain circuits, while Farris focuses on how different circuits in the brain’s memory center function at the molecular level. Their overlapping expertise made the collaboration a natural fit.

“We’ve both been studying how circuits differ at the molecular level for a while,” said Swanger, an assistant professor at the research institute. “This new collaborative project brings together my work on synapses and Shannon’s on mitochondria in a way that addresses a big gap in the Alzheimer’s disease field.”

“This kind of state-level support is critical,” Farris said. “It gives researchers in Virginia the chance to ask questions that may eventually make a difference for people living with Alzheimer’s. It’s meaningful to be part of research that could help people facing that journey.”

A key focus of their research is mitochondria — tiny structures inside brain cells that provide the energy needed for a variety of cellular functions in neurons including synaptic transmission. In Alzheimer’s disease, mitochondria  stop working properly in the course of the disease.

Farris and Swanger are investigating whether mitochondria in a vulnerable memory-related circuit may become overloaded with calcium, a key signaling chemical for multiple neuronal and synaptic processes. That overload could contribute to the early breakdown of memory circuits.

“The connection between these cells is one of the first to fail in Alzheimer’s,” Farris said.  “We found that this synapse has unusually strong calcium signals in nearby mitochondria — so strong we can see them clearly under a light microscope. Those kinds of signals are  hard to ignore. It gives us a model where we can really watch what’s happening as things start to go wrong.”

To test their hypothesis, the researchers will study brain tissue from healthy mice and mice with certain aspects of Alzheimer’s pathology. By comparing how mitochondria function and how brain cells communicate across synapses in each group, they hope to find early signs of stress or failure in the entorhinal cortex–hippocampus circuit.

Swanger and Farris are members of the Fralin Biomedical Research Institute’s Center for Neurobiology Research and also faculty in the Department of Biomedical Sciences and Pathobiology of the Virginia-Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Psychedelic research transforms global mental health treatment paradigms

2025-09-02
VILLARS-SUR-GLÂNE, SWITZERLAND, 2 September 2025 -- In a revealing Genomic Press Interview published today in Psychedelics, Professor Gregor Hasler unveils transformative discoveries that are fundamentally reshaping international approaches to mental health treatment through psychedelic research. As Chair of Psychiatry at the University of Fribourg and Director of the Molecular Psychiatry Lab, Professor Hasler stands at the vanguard of a scientific revolution that promises to alleviate suffering for millions worldwide who struggle with treatment-resistant psychiatric conditions. The interview, part of the Innovators ...

Revolutionary psychiatrist transforms global understanding of treatment-resistant depression

2025-09-02
VIENNA, AUSTRIA, 2 September 2025 -- In a compelling Genomic Press Interview published today in Brain Medicine, Professor Siegfried Kasper shares extraordinary insights from his distinguished career that has transformed global understanding of psychiatric disorders and their treatment. The interview reveals how this internationally renowned psychiatrist revolutionized approaches to treatment-resistant depression while establishing biological psychiatry as a cornerstone of modern medicine worldwide. Professor Kasper, who serves as Professor Emeritus at the Medical University of ...

“Greetings from 51 Pegasi b”: How NASA made exoplanets into tourist destinations

2025-09-02
Looking for the perfect vacation? Do you crave late-night fun? PSO J318.5−22, the planet with no star where nightlife never ends, is perfect for you! Prefer some peace and a chance to catch some rays? Kepler-16b, the land of two suns—where your shadow always has company—is waiting! In 2015, NASA launched an unusual and brilliant exoplanet outreach campaign, offering retro-style posters, virtual guided tours, and even coloring books. The project quickly went viral worldwide. What explains the success of a campaign about a relatively young field of science that—unlike other areas of space research—lacks spectacular imagery? Ceridwen Dovey, science communicator, ...

Study reveals global inequalities in cancer research funding

2025-09-01
Researchers at the University of Southampton examining worldwide variations in funding for cancer research say there’s a pressing need to invest more in lower income countries. They also reveal research into certain treatments urgently need more money, in particular surgery and radiotherapy, and that overall annual research investment has largely decreased, globally, since 2016. The team’s study, due for publication in the journal The Lancet Oncology, shows most research income is concentrated in higher income countries, leaving others struggling to keep pace ...

England’s forgotten first king deserves to be famous, says Æthelstan biographer as anniversaries approach

2025-09-01
University of Cambridge media release   England’s forgotten first king deserves to be famous, says Æthelstan biographer as anniversaries approach   UNDER STRICT EMBARGO UNTIL 19:01 (US ET) ON MONDAY 1ST SEPTEMBER 2025 / 00:01AM (UK TIME) ON TUESDAY 2ND SEPTEMBER 2025   A groundbreaking new biography of Æthelstan marks 1,100 years since his coronation in 925AD, reasserts his right to be called the first king of England, explains why he isn’t better known and highlights his many overlooked achievements. The book’s author, Professor David Woodman, is campaigning for greater public recognition ...

Experts urge the medical profession to confront the global arms industry

2025-09-01
As the UK and other NATO nations dramatically increase defence spending to counter growing global aggressions, one under-recognised aspect of security debates is the role of the arms industry.  And as London prepares to host the world’s largest arms fair next week, health professionals must do more to counterbalance the arms industry’s influence on government agendas and its damaging effects on human and planetary health, say experts in The BMJ. In a series of articles published today, Mark Bellis at Liverpool John Moores University and international colleagues lay out the direct and wider harms ...

Personalized risk messages fail to boost colorectal cancer screening participation

2025-09-01
Embargoed for release until 5:00 p.m. ET on Monday 1 September 2025    Follow @Annalsofim on X, Facebook, Instagram, Bluesky, and Linkedin              Below please find summaries of new articles that will be published in the next issue of Annals of Internal Medicine. The summaries are not intended to substitute for the full articles as a source of information. This information is under strict embargo and by taking it into possession, media representatives are committing to the terms of the embargo not only on their own behalf, but also on behalf of the organization ...

Something from nothing: Physicists model vacuum tunnelling in a 2D superfluid

2025-09-01
In 1951, physicist Julian Schwinger theorized that by applying a uniform electrical field to a vacuum, electron-positron pairs would be spontaneously created out of nothing, through a phenomenon called quantum tunnelling. The problem with turning the matter-out-of-nowhere theory into Star Trek replicators or transporters? Enormously high electric fields would be required—far beyond the limits of any direct physical experiments.  As a result, the aptly named Schwinger effect has never been seen.  Now theoretical physicists at the University of British Columbia (UBC) have described a parallel effect in a more manageable system. In their model, ...

CRISPR’s efficiency triples with DNA-wrapped nanoparticles

2025-09-01
With the power to rewrite the genetic code underlying countless diseases, CRISPR holds immense promise to revolutionize medicine. But until scientists can deliver its gene-editing machinery safely and efficiently into relevant cells and tissues, that promise will remain out of reach. Now, Northwestern University chemists have unveiled a new type of nanostructure that dramatically improves CRISPR delivery and potentially extends its scope of utility. Called lipid nanoparticle spherical nucleic acids (LNP-SNAs), these tiny structures carry the full set of CRISPR editing tools — Cas9 enzymes, ...

For the first time in 40 Years, Panama’s deep and cold ocean waters failed to emerge, possibly affecting fisheries and coral health

2025-09-01
During the dry season in Central America (generally between December and April), northern trade winds generate upwelling events in the ocean waters of the Gulf of Panama. Upwelling is a process that allows cold, nutrient-rich waters from the depths of the ocean to rise to the surface. This dynamic supports highly productive fisheries and helps protect coral reefs from thermal stress. Thanks to this movement of water, the sea along Panama’s Pacific beaches remains cooler during the "summer" vacation season. Scientists from the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI) have studied this phenomenon and their records show that this seasonal upwelling, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

When tropical oceans were oxygen oases

Positive interactions dominate among marine microbes, six-year study reveals

Safeguarding the Winter Olympics-Paralympics against climate change

Most would recommend RSV immunizations for older and pregnant people

Donated blood has a shelf life. A new test tracks how it's aging

Stroke during pregnancy, postpartum associated with more illness, job status later

American Meteorological Society announces new executive director

People with “binge-watching addiction” are more likely to be lonely

Wild potato follows a path to domestication in the American Southwest

General climate advocacy ad campaign received more public engagement compared to more-tailored ad campaign promoting sustainable fashion

Medical LLMs may show real-world potential in identifying individuals with major depressive disorder using WhatsApp voice note recordings

Early translational study supports the role of high-dose inhaled nitric oxide as a potential antimicrobial therapy

AI can predict preemies’ path, Stanford Medicine-led study shows

A wild potato that changed the story of agriculture in the American Southwest

Cancer’s super-enhancers may set the map for DNA breaks and repair: A key clue to why tumors become aggressive and genetically unstable

Prehistoric tool made from elephant bone is the oldest discovered in Europe

Mineralized dental plaque from the Iron Age provides insight into the diet of the Scythians

Salty facts: takeaways have more salt than labels claim

When scientists build nanoscale architecture to solve textile and pharmaceutical industry challenges

Massive cloud with metallic winds discovered orbiting mystery object

Old diseases return as settlement pushes into the Amazon rainforest

Takeaways are used to reward and console – study

Velocity gradients key to explaining large-scale magnetic field structure

Bird retinas function without oxygen – solving a centuries-old biological mystery

Pregnancy- and abortion-related mortality in the US, 2018-2021

Global burden of violence against transgender and gender-diverse adults

Generative AI use and depressive symptoms among US adults

Antibiotic therapy for uncomplicated acute appendicitis

Childhood ADHD linked to midlife physical health problems

Patients struggle to measure blood pressure at home

[Press-News.org] Scientists investigate why memory circuits break down in Alzheimer’s disease
Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at VTC scientists receive Virginia grant to study how energy failure inside brain cells may damage key memory pathways