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

New research provides clues on why hair turns gray

Communication between hair follicles and melanocyte stem cells key to mystery

2011-06-15
(Press-News.org) A new study by researchers at NYU Langone Medical Center has shown that, for the first time, Wnt signaling, already known to control many biological processes, between hair follicles and melanocyte stem cells can dictate hair pigmentation. The study was published in the June 11, 2011 issue of the journal Cell.

The research was led by Mayumi Ito, PhD, assistant professor in the Ronald O. Pereleman Department of Dermatology at NYU Langone. "We have known for decades that hair follicle stem cells and pigment-producing melanocycte cells collaborate to produce colored hair, but the underlying reasons were unknown," said Dr. Ito. "We discovered Wnt signaling is essential for coordinated actions of these two stem cell lineages and critical for hair pigmentation." The study suggests the manipulation of Wnt signaling may be a novel strategy for targeting pigmentation such as graying hair. The research study also illustrates a model for tissue regeneration.

"The human body has many types of stem cells that have the potential to regenerate other organs," said Dr. Ito. "The methods behind communication between stem cells of hair and color during hair replacement may give us important clues to regenerate complex organs containing many different types of cells."

Using genetic mouse models, researchers were able to examine how Wnt signaling pathways enabled both hair follicle stem cells and melanocyte stem cells to work together to generate hair growth and produce hair color. Research also showed the depletion (or inhibition or abnormal) Wnt signaling in hair follicle stem cells not only inhibits hair re-growth but also prevents melanocytes stem cell activation required for producing hair color. The lack of Wnt activation in melanocyte stem cells leads to depigmented or gray hair.

The study raises the possibility that Wnt signaling is a key pathway for the regulation of melanocyte stem cells and shows how melanocyte behavior is associated with hair regeneration. This insight provides further understanding of diseases in which melanocytes are either appropriately lost such as hair graying or undergo uncontrolled cell growth as in melanoma.

###

About NYU Langone Medical Center:

NYU Langone Medical Center, a world-class, patient-centered, integrated, academic medical center, is one on the nation's premier centers for excellence in clinical care, biomedical research and medical education. Located in the heart of Manhattan, NYU Langone is composed of three hospitals – Tisch Hospital, its flagship acute care facility; the Rusk Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine, the first rehabilitation hospital in the world; and the Hospital for Joint Diseases, one of only five hospitals in the nations dedicated to orthopaedics and rheumatology – plus the NYU School of Medicine, which since 1841 has trained thousand of physicians and scientists who have helped to share the course of medical history. The medical center's tri-fold mission to serve, teach and discover is achieved 365 days a year through the seamless integration of a culture devoted to excellence in patient care, education and research. For more information, go to www.NYULMC.org.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Healing times for dental implants could be cut

Healing times for dental implants could be cut
2011-06-15
The technology used to replace lost teeth with titanium dental implants could be improved. By studying the surface structure of dental implants not only at micro level but also at nano level, researchers at the University of Gothenburg; Sweden, have come up with a method that could shorten the healing time for patients. "Increasing the active surface at nano level and changing the conductivity of the implant allows us to affect the body's own biomechanics and speed up the healing of the implant," says Johanna Löberg at the University of Gothenburg's Department of Chemistry. ...

Physician-rating websites are biased, says paper at INFORMS Healthcare conference

2011-06-15
MONTREAL, June 14, 2011 – Patients posting their opinions about doctors on online ratings websites are much less likely to discuss physicians with low perceived quality and are more prone than offline populations to exaggerate their opinions, according to a paper being presented at a healthcare conference sponsored by the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS®). "Patients need high quality information about the most consequential service that they consume: healthcare," said Ritu Agarwal, professor of information systems and director ...

The surprising connection between 2 types of perception

2011-06-15
The brain is constantly changing as it perceives the outside world, processing and learning about everything it encounters. In a new study, which will be published in an upcoming issue of Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, scientists find a surprising connection between two types of perception: If you're looking at a group of objects and getting a general sense of them, it's difficult for your brain to learn relationships between the objects. It's not known how these two ways of perceiving are related, says Nicholas Turk-Browne, ...

New insights into the 'hidden' galaxies of the universe

New insights into the hidden galaxies of the universe
2011-06-15
A unique example of some of the lowest surface brightness galaxies in the universe have been found by an international team of astronomers lead by the Niels Bohr Institute. The galaxy has lower amounts of heavier elements than other known galaxies of this type. The discovery means that small low surface brightness galaxies may have more in common with the first galaxies formed shortly after the Big Bang than previously thought. The results have been published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. As the name implies, the galaxies are faint and therefore ...

New research system uses social media and other tools to gather, analyze expert opinions

2011-06-15
Researchers have developed a new method of eliciting and analyzing opinions from a large group of experts and laypeople to aid complex decision-making, adapting online and social media technologies to lower the cost of such activities while expanding the types of people who can be queried. The system, called ExpertLens, incorporates elements of such well-known approaches as the Delphi method, the Nominal Group Technique and crowdsourcing that are used to collect opinions about problems or to create forecasts. The online system and the associated methodology have performed ...

Fear boosts activation of young, immature brain cells

Fear boosts activation of young, immature brain cells
2011-06-15
Fear burns memories into our brain, and new research by University of California, Berkeley, neuroscientists explains how. Scientists have long known that fear and other highly emotional experiences lead to incredibly strong memories. In a study appearing online today (Tuesday, June 14) in advance of publication in the journal Molecular Psychiatry, UC Berkeley's Daniela Kaufer and colleagues report a new way for emotions to affect memory: The brain's emotional center, the amygdala, induces the hippocampus, a relay hub for memory, to generate new neurons. In a fearful ...

Parkinson's patients sing in tune with creative arts therapy

2011-06-15
CHICAGO – Twice a month a jam session takes place on the third floor of Northwestern Memorial's Prentice Women's Hospital. A diverse group of men and women, ranging in age and ethnicity, gather in a circle with instruments in hand and sing together. This is no ordinary jam band; all its members have Parkinson's disease. They are participating in Creative Arts for Parkinson's, a music and drama therapy program offered through Northwestern's Parkinson's Disease and Movement Disorders Center. Creative Arts for Parkinson's is lead by specially trained music and drama therapists ...

Ancestry plays vital role in nutrition and disease, study shows

2011-06-15
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., -- June 14, 2011 – Over the past decade, much progress has been made regarding the understanding and promise of personalized medicine. Scientists are just beginning to consider the impact of gene-diet interactions in different populations in regards to disease prevention and treatment. The latest research from Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center and the laboratories of Floyd H. "Ski" Chilton, Ph.D., professor of physiology and pharmacology and director of the Center for Botanical Lipids and Inflammatory Disease Prevention, and Rasika Mathias, Sc.D, ...

Phosphate sorption characteristics of European alpine soils

2011-06-15
Soil chemistry plays an important role in the composition of surface waters. In areas with limited human activities, properties of catchment soils directly relate to the exported nutrients to surface waters. Phosphate sorption research is common in agricultural and forest soils, but data from alpine areas are limited. Scientists from the Biology Centre of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Repbublic, from the Centre for Advanced Studies of Blanes, and from the Forest Sciences Center of Catalonia, have conducted research of the impact European alpine soils have on numerous ...

Stress may lead to better bird parenting

Stress may lead to better bird parenting
2011-06-15
Birds with high levels of stress hormones have the highest mating success and offer better parental care to their brood, according to new biology research at Queen's University. "Having high levels of glucocorticoid or stress hormone is often thought to indicate an individual in poor condition who has a low level of mating success. However, our research indicates that tree swallows with the highest levels of stress hormone have the highest reproductive success," says Frances Bonier (Biology) who investigates the way animals cope with challenges in their environment. The ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Ocean temperatures reached another record high in 2025

Dynamically reconfigurable topological routing in nonlinear photonic systems

Crystallographic engineering enables fast low‑temperature ion transport of TiNb2O7 for cold‑region lithium‑ion batteries

Ultrafast sulfur redox dynamics enabled by a PPy@N‑TiO2 Z‑scheme heterojunction photoelectrode for photo‑assisted lithium–sulfur batteries

Optimized biochar use could cut China’s cropland nitrous oxide emissions by up to half

Neural progesterone receptors link ovulation and sexual receptivity in medaka

A new Japanese study investigates how tariff policies influence long-run economic growth

Mental trauma succeeds 1 in 7 dog related injuries, claims data suggest

Breastfeeding may lower mums’ later life depression/anxiety risks for up to 10 years after pregnancy

Study finds more than a quarter of adults worldwide could benefit from GLP-1 medications for weight loss

Hobbies don’t just improve personal lives, they can boost workplace creativity too

Study shows federal safety metric inappropriately penalizes hospitals for lifesaving stroke procedures

Improving sleep isn’t enough: researchers highlight daytime function as key to assessing insomnia treatments

Rice Brain Institute awards first seed grants to jump-start collaborative brain health research

Personalizing cancer treatments significantly improve outcome success

UW researchers analyzed which anthologized writers and books get checked out the most from Seattle Public Library

Study finds food waste compost less effective than potting mix alone

UCLA receives $7.3 million for wide-ranging cannabis research

Why this little-known birth control option deserves more attention

Johns Hopkins-led team creates first map of nerve circuitry in bone, identifies key signals for bone repair

UC Irvine astronomers spot largest known stream of super-heated gas in the universe

Research shows how immune system reacts to pig kidney transplants in living patients

Dark stars could help solve three pressing puzzles of the high-redshift universe

Manganese gets its moment as a potential fuel cell catalyst

“Gifted word learner” dogs can pick up new words by overhearing their owners’ talk

More data, more sharing can help avoid misinterpreting “smoking gun” signals in topological physics

An illegal fentanyl supply shock may have contributed to a dramatic decline in deaths

Some dogs can learn new words by eavesdropping on their owners

Scientists trace facial gestures back to their source. before a smile appears, the brain has already decided

Is “Smoking Gun” evidence enough to prove scientific discovery?

[Press-News.org] New research provides clues on why hair turns gray
Communication between hair follicles and melanocyte stem cells key to mystery