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

Scientists discover why the flu is more deadly for older people

2025-09-08
(Press-News.org) Scientists have discovered why older people are more likely to suffer severely from the flu, and can now use their findings to address this risk.

In a new study, which is published in PNAS, experts discovered that older people produce a glycosylated protein called apoplipoprotein D (ApoD), which is involved in lipid metabolism and inflammation, at much higher levels than in younger people. This has the effect of reducing the patient’s ability to resist virus infection, resulting in a more serious disease outcome.

The team established that highly elevated ApoD production with age in the lung drives extensive tissue damage during infection to reduce the protective antiviral type I interferon response.

The research was an international collaboration led by scientists from the China Agricultural University, University of Notttingham, Institute of Microbiology (Chinese Academy of Sciences), National Institute for Viral Disease Control and Prevention (Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention) and the University of Edinburgh.

“Aging is a leading risk factor in influenza-related deaths. Furthermore, the global population is aging at an unprecedented rate in human history, posing major issues for healthcare and the economy. So we need to find out why older patients often suffer more severely from influenza virus infection,”  says Professor Kin-Chow Chang from the School of Veterinary Medicine and Science at the University of Nottingham, and co-author on the paper.

In this new study, the team investigated the mechanisms behind increased severity of influenza virus infection with age using an aging-mouse model and appropriate donor human tissue sections.

They identified ApoD as an age-related cell factor that impairs the activation of the immune system’s antiviral response to influenza virus infection by causing extensive breakdown of mitochondria (mitophagy) resulting in greater production of virus and lung damage during infection. Mitochondria are essential for cellular production of energy and for induction of protective interferons.

ApoD is therefore a target for therapeutic intervention to protect against severe influenza virus infection in the elderly which would have a major impact on reducing morbidity and mortality in the aging population.

Professor Chang, added: “There is now an exciting opportunity to therapeutically ameliorate disease severity of the elderly from influenza virus infection by the inhibitory targeting of ApoD.”

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

The salmon superfood you’ve never heard of

2025-09-08
In northern California, salmon are more than just fish—they’re a cornerstone of tribal traditions, a driver of tourism and a sign of healthy rivers. So it may not come as a surprise that NAU and University of California Berkeley scientists working along the region’s Eel River have discovered a micro-scale nutrient factory that keeps rivers healthy and allows salmon to thrive.   The scientists’ new study in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) reveals how a partnership ...

How does chemotherapy disrupt circadian rhythms?

2025-09-08
During and after chemotherapy, nearly half of cancer patients endure circadian rhythm disruptions, which worsens treatment side effects. Because the body’s primary rhythm pacemaker is in the brain, this suggests that perhaps chemotherapeutics target the brain to disrupt circadian rhythms. However, research shows that cancer treatments do not penetrate the brain well. To shed light on this discrepancy, researchers led by Leah Pyter at Ohio State University explored whether paclitaxel, a frequently used breast cancer treatment, disrupts the biological clock in the brain to impair circadian rhythms.  In their eNeuro paper, the researchers used a paclitaxel treatment regimen ...

A new bystander effect? Aggression can be contagious when observing it in peers.

2025-09-08
People who repeatedly observe aggression have a higher likelihood of engaging in violent behavior later in life. In a new JNeurosci paper, Jacob Nordman and colleagues, from Southern University of Illinois School of Medicine, used mice to explore the environmental factors and neural mechanisms that lead to the aggression that witnesses later acquire.  In a behavioral paradigm created by this research group, mice observed known peers or unfamiliar strangers attack intruder mice. Only male witnesses later displayed increased aggression themselves, and this happened only after watching familiar peers attack intruders.  What neural mechanism might be driving ...

Do you see what I see? People share brain responses for colors.

2025-09-08
Do colors trigger unique brain responses? And do different people have the same brain responses to colors? In a new JNeurosci paper, Michael Bannert and Andreas Bartels, from the University of Tübingen, explored color representation in the human brain to address these questions.   The researchers measured color-induced brain responses from one set of participants. Next, they predicted what colors other participants were observing by comparing each individual’s brain activity to color-induced responses of the first set of observers. Bannert and Bartels found that ...

Blood test could streamline early Alzheimer's detection

2025-09-08
In a landmark study of Hispanic and Latino adults, researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine have identified a link between self-reported cognitive decline and blood-based biomarkers, which could pave the way for a simple blood test to help diagnose Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias. This approach could be faster, less-invasive and more affordable than existing screening tools. The results are published in JAMA Network Open. “We need ways to identify underlying neurodegenerative ...

New and simple detection method for nanoplastics.

2025-09-08
A joint team from the University of Stuttgart in Germany and the University of Melbourne in Australia has developed a new method for the straightforward analysis of tiny nanoplastic particles in environmental samples. One needs only an ordinary optical microscope and a newly developed test strip—the optical sieve. The research results have now been published in “Nature Photonics” (doi: 10.1038/s41566-025-01733-x). “The test strip can serve as a simple analysis tool in environmental and health research,” explains Prof. ...

Young children are not the main drivers of language change

2025-09-08
Theoretical study by Limor Raviv, Damian Blasi and Vera Kempe, argues that children are not likely to be the main force behind linguistic innovation. For more than a century, scholars have repeated a powerful idea: that the mistakes children make when learning to speak are the seeds of language change. From 19th-century linguist Henry Sweet’s famous claim that “if languages were learnt perfectly by the children of each generation, then languages would not change,” to contemporary studies, the notion that children drive language evolution has been ...

Tarlatamab with anti-PD-L1 as first-line maintenance after chemo-immunotherapy for ES-SCLC demonstrates acceptable safety profile and unprecedented overall survival

2025-09-08
(Barcelona, Spain-- September 8, 2025 at 5:00 PM CEST / UTC +2)— Clinical data presented today demonstrates the combination of tarlatamab with anti-PD-L1 therapy as first-line maintenance has an acceptable safety profile and resulted in unprecedented overall survival in patients with extensive-stage small cell lung cancer (ES-SCLC). K.G. Paulson, MD, Providence-Swedish Cancer Institute, Seattle, Wash., presented new safety and efficacy data from the phase 1b DeLLphi-303 trial evaluating tarlatamab in combination ...

GLP-1 RAs and cardiovascular and kidney outcomes by body mass index in type 2 diabetes

2025-09-08
About The Study: In this cohort study of patients with type 2 diabetes, glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) use was associated with body mass index (BMI) -dependent cardiovascular benefits and consistent kidney protection, suggesting the importance of BMI stratification in guiding treatment decisions. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Ming-Lung Tsai, MD, email mltsai.cgmh@gmail.com. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.30952) Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, ...

Ambient air pollution and the severity of Alzheimer disease neuropathology

2025-09-08
About The Study: In this study, fine particulate matter air pollution exposure was associated with increased dementia severity and increased Alzheimer disease neuropathologic change. Population-based studies are needed to better understand this relationship. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Edward B. Lee, MD, PhD, email edward.lee@pennmedicine.upenn.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamaneurol.2025.3316) Editor’s Note: Please see the article for ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New tectonic geodynamics textbook bridges scientific disciplines

Tiny and powerful – metamaterial lenses for your phones and drones

Study used AI models to improve prediction of chronic kidney disease progression to end stage renal disease

Peanut shell biochar composite shows promise for removing antibiotic-resistant bacteria from aquaculture wastewater

Compact genetic light switches transform disease control

Sunglasses for plants, and sustainable agriculture

Nearly half of those with diabetes unaware they have the disease

Emergency department visits by uninsured children in Texas soar 45% after COVID-era federal funding ends

Bright children from poorer backgrounds twice as likely to receive hospital mental health treatment than affluent high-achievers

‘Artificial cartilage’ could improve arthritis treatment

Breathing device could have profound impact on survival for people with sleep apnoea and type 2 diabetes

Artificial intelligence assessment indicates stress levels in farmed Amazonian fish

Keith Cole receives grant to conduct integrated research on mobility, cognition and aging

Internationally recognized malaria researcher Stefan Kappe, Ph.D., appointed new director of the UM School of Medicine's Center for Vaccine Development and Global Health

Lung cancer genetics study launches open-source data platform to research community

Pre-conception radiation exposure from CT scans increases risk for miscarriage and birth defects

Boston University appoints Kenneth Lutchen to top research job

For video-on-demand platforms, release strategy matters: streaming episodes gradually boosts consumers’ searches, subscription rates

Sleep strengthens muscle and bone by boosting growth hormone levels. Here's how

Only 1 in 7 online health images show proper technique to accurately measure blood pressure

Children receiving biofeedback speech therapy improved faster than with traditional methods

Scientists discover why the flu is more deadly for older people

The salmon superfood you’ve never heard of

How does chemotherapy disrupt circadian rhythms?

A new bystander effect? Aggression can be contagious when observing it in peers.

Do you see what I see? People share brain responses for colors.

Blood test could streamline early Alzheimer's detection

New and simple detection method for nanoplastics.

Young children are not the main drivers of language change

Tarlatamab with anti-PD-L1 as first-line maintenance after chemo-immunotherapy for ES-SCLC demonstrates acceptable safety profile and unprecedented overall survival

[Press-News.org] Scientists discover why the flu is more deadly for older people