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

Researchers discover that a hormone can access the brain by hitchhiking

Touro University researchers have found that particles in the blood shuttle hormones through the body, including the brain, supercharging the transport in response to physical exercise

2025-12-15
(Press-News.org) Researchers at Touro University Nevada have discovered that tiny particles in the blood, called extracellular vesicles (EVs), are a major player in how a group of hormones are shuttled through the body.  Physical exercise can stimulate this process. The findings, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), open the door to deeper understanding of hormone circulation and access to the brain, how exercise may trigger changes in energy balance, mental health, and immune function, and circulation of certain drugs.

Blood and other body fluids are teeming with EVs—tiny particles that exist outside of cells. EVs transmit signals from cell-to-cell within tissues and long distance across organ systems by delivering biological cargo such as proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids into cells. They also remove cell waste.

Scientists have known that EVs play key roles, from the immune response to cancer progression, but much less is known about how they might interact with hormones.

The researchers focused on a hormone precursor called proopiomelanocortin (POMC), which transforms into a range of hormones including endorphins (responsible for the runner’s high) and adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), which manages the body’s stress response. Because exercise has been previously associated with these hormones, the researchers used exercise to provoke changes to shed light on interactions between POMC and EVs.

The study found that vigorous exercise causes four times more POMC to hitch a ride on the EVs.

“This study doesn’t just show an ‘exercise effect’ but it reveals a new biological mechanism where stress from exercise makes EVs temporarily act as hormone transport shuttles in the bloodstream,” explains  the study’s first author Mark Santos, Ph.D., assistant professor at Touro.

The study also found that in the lab, EV-bound POMC can cross human blood vessel barriers, including the blood-brain barrier, more efficiently than POMC alone.

Since POMC must be processed into so-called “mature” hormones to initiate a response in the notoriously difficult-to-access brain, more work is required to understand how the exercise-induced rise in POMC affects the brain.

“The observation that EVs can carry POMC has so many potential directions, says Aurelio Lorico, MD, PhD, professor of pathology at Touro and co-senior author on the study together with Cheryl Hightower. It may have wide-ranging implications, for pain management, metabolism and obesity, inflammation, and the stress response,” he says.

 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

University of Oklahoma researcher awarded funding to pursue AI-powered material design

2025-12-15
NORMAN, Okla. – Mike Banad, a researcher with the University of Oklahoma, has been awarded funding from the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) to pursue the development of advanced materials that could shape the future of energy-efficient electronics and photonics. His project uses inverse design techniques that aim to accelerate their creation and develop a systematic framework for future materials engineering that targets specific, desired properties. While the framework can be used to rapidly design a wide range of materials, Banad’s current work centers on metal-insulator transition (MIT) chalcogenides. These materials ...

Exploring how the visual system recovers following injury

2025-12-15
The brain shows a capacity to recover from traumatic injury, which somewhat contradicts the widely accepted idea that neurons do not regenerate. So how is recovery possible? In a new JNeurosci paper, Athanasios Alexandris and colleagues, from Johns Hopkins University, used mice to explore how the visual brain system recovers following traumatic injury.  The researchers monitored connections from cells in the eye to the brain after injury. They discovered that surviving cells ...

Support for parents with infants at pediatric check-ups leads to better reading and math skills in elementary school

2025-12-15
Guiding parents to have pretend play and read aloud with their babies increased parental support of their children’s cognitive development and academic skills by the time they turned six—especially for families facing poverty. This is the finding of a new study, led by researchers at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, New York University, and the University of Pittsburgh, which evaluated the effects of a comprehensive model to support parenting. Called Smart Beginnings, the approach combines PlayReadVIP (formerly Video Interaction Project) at pediatric check-ups from birth to age 3, in which parents watch themselves on video reading or playing ...

Kids’ behavioral health is a growing share of family health costs

2025-12-15
Mental health, substance use, and other behavioral health care made up 40% of all health expenditures for U.S. children in 2022, according to a new study by researchers at UC San Francisco. That is almost twice what it was in 2011. The costs to families for this type of care grew more than twice as fast as the costs for other types of medical care. Out-of-pocket spending on behavioral health rose an average of 6.4% each year for families, compared with 2.7% for non-behavioral health care. “Families are bearing growing costs,” ...

Day & night: Cancer disrupts the brain’s natural rhythm

2025-12-15
“The brain is an exquisite sensor of what’s going on in your body,” says Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Assistant Professor Jeremy Borniger. “But it requires balance. Neurons need to be active or inactive at the right times. If that rhythm goes out of sync even a little bit, it can change the function of the entire brain.” In mice, the Borniger lab has found that breast cancer disrupts the diurnal, or day-night, rhythms of corticosterone levels. Corticosterone is the primary stress hormone ...

COVID-19 vaccination significantly reduces risk to pregnant women and baby

2025-12-15
Pregnant people who received a COVID-19 vaccine were far less likely to experience severe illness or deliver their babies prematurely, according to a major new UBC-led study published in JAMA.  Drawing on data from nearly 20,000 pregnancies across Canada, the research found that vaccination was strongly associated with lower risks of hospitalization, intensive care admission and preterm birth. These benefits persisted as the virus evolved from the Delta variant to Omicron, which has evolved into newer sublineages that still dominate today.  “Our ...

The role of vaccination in maternal and perinatal outcomes associated with COVID-19 in pregnancy

2025-12-15
About The Study: This study found that vaccination against SARS-CoV-2 prior to and during pregnancy, before COVID-19 diagnosis, was associated with a lower risk of severe maternal disease and preterm birth regardless of variant time period. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Deborah Money, MD, email deborah.money@ubc.ca. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jama.2025.21001) Editor’s Note: Please ...

Mayo Clinic smartwatch system helps parents shorten and defuse children's severe tantrums early

2025-12-15
ROCHESTER, Minn. — Mayo Clinic researchers have developed a smartwatch-based alert system that signals parents at the earliest signs of a tantrum in children with emotional and behavioral disorders — prompting them to intervene before it intensifies.   In a new study published in JAMA Network Open, these alerts helped parents intervene within four seconds and shortened severe tantrums by an average of 11 minutes — about half the duration seen with standard therapy.   In this system, a smartwatch worn by the ...

Behavioral health spending spikes to 40% of all children’s health expenditures, nearly doubling in a decade

2025-12-15
Behavioral health care has surged to represent 40% of all medical expenditures for U.S. children in 2022, nearly doubling from 22% in 2011, according to a new study published in JAMA Pediatrics. Researchers found that pediatric behavioral health expenditures totaled $41.8 billion in 2022, with families paying $2.9 billion out-of-pocket. Most concerning, out-of-pocket costs for children's behavioral health increased at more than twice the rate of other medical expenses, leaving many families struggling with significant financial burden. The study analyzed data on nationally representative spending patterns for ...

Digital cognitive behavioral treatment for generalized anxiety disorder

2025-12-15
About The Study: In this randomized clinical trial, digital cognitive behavioral therapy provided significant and sustained benefits to adults with generalized anxiety disorder. Given the limitations in access to empirically supported cognitive behavioral therapy, an efficacious digital cognitive behavioral therapy program has clear potential for public health benefit. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, E. Marie Parsons, PhD, email mariepar@bu.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.48884) Editor’s Note: Please ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

UMD team finds E. coli, other pathogens in Potomac River after sewage spill

New vaccine platform promotes rare protective B cells

Apes share human ability to imagine

Major step toward a quantum-secure internet demonstrated over city-scale distance

Increasing toxicity trends impede progress in global pesticide reduction commitments

Methane jump wasn’t just emissions — the atmosphere (temporarily) stopped breaking it down

Flexible governance for biological data is needed to reduce AI’s biosecurity risks

Increasing pesticide toxicity threatens UN goal of global biodiversity protection by 2030

How “invisible” vaccine scaffolding boosts HIV immune response

Study reveals the extent of rare earthquakes in deep layer below Earth’s crust

Boston College scientists help explain why methane spiked in the early 2020s

Penn Nursing study identifies key predictors for chronic opioid use following surgery

KTU researcher’s study: Why Nobel Prize-level materials have yet to reach industry

Research spotlight: Interplay of hormonal contraceptive use, stress and cardiovascular risk in women

Pennington Biomedical’s Dr. Catherine Prater awarded postdoctoral fellowship from the American Heart Association

AI agents debate more effectively when given personalities and the ability to interrupt

Tenecteplase for acute non–large vessel occlusion 4.5 to 24 hours after ischemic stroke

Immune 'hijacking' predicts cancer evolution

VIP-2 experiment narrows the search for exotic physics beyond the Pauli exclusion principle

A global challenge posed by the presence of pharmaceuticals in the environment

Dream engineering can help solve ‘puzzling’ questions

Sport: ‘Football fever’ peaks on match day

Scientists describe a window into evolution before the tree of life

Survival of patients diagnosed with cancer during the COVID-19 pandemic

Growth trajectories in infants from families with plant-based or omnivorous dietary patterns

Korea University College of Medicine hosts lecture by Austrian neuropathology expert, Professor Adelheid Wöhrer

5-FU chemotherapy linked to rare brain toxicity in cancer patient

JMIR Publications introduces the new Karma program: A merit-based reward system dedicated to peer review excellence

H5N1 causes die-off of Antarctic skuas, a seabird

Study suggests protein made in the liver is a key factor in men’s bone health

[Press-News.org] Researchers discover that a hormone can access the brain by hitchhiking
Touro University researchers have found that particles in the blood shuttle hormones through the body, including the brain, supercharging the transport in response to physical exercise