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

Producing new neurones under all circumstances: A challenge that is just a mouse away

2013-04-09
(Press-News.org) These results incentivise the development of targeted therapies enabling improved neurone production to alleviate cognitive decline in the elderly and reduce the cerebral lesions caused by radiotherapy. The research is published in the journal EMBO Molecular Medicine.

New neurones are formed regularly in the adult brain in order to guarantee that all our cognitive capacities are maintained. This neurogenesis may be adversely affected in various situations and especially: in the course of ageing, after radiotherapy treatment of a brain tumour. (The irradiation of certain areas of the brain is, in fact, a central adjunctive therapy for brain tumours in adults and children). According to certain studies, the reduction in our "stock" of neurones contributes to an irreversible decline in cognition. In the mouse, for example, researchers reported that exposing the brain to radiation in the order of 15 Gy is accompanied by disruption to the olfactive memory and a reduction in neurogenesis. The same happens in ageing in which a reduction in neurogenesis is associated with a loss of certain cognitive faculties. In patients receiving radiotherapy due to the removal of a brain tumour, the same phenomena can be observed. Researchers are studying how to preserve the "neurone stock". To do this, they have tried to discover which factors are responsible for the decline in neurogenesis. Contrary to what might have been believed, their initial observations show that neither heavy doses of radiation nor ageing are responsible for the complete disappearance of the neural stem cells capable of producing neurones (and thus the origin of neurogenesis). Those that survive remain localised in a certain small area of the brain (the sub-ventricular zone (SVZ)). They nevertheless appear not to be capable of working correctly.

Additional experiments have made it possible to establish that in both situations, irradiation and ageing, high levels of the cytokine TGFβ cause the stem cells to become dormant, increasing their susceptibility to apoptosis (PCD) and reducing the number of new neurones.

"Our study concluded that although neurogenesis reduced in ageing and after a high dose of radiation, many stem cells survive for several months, retaining their 'stem' characteristics", explains Marc-Andre Mouthon, one of the main authors of the research, that was conducted in conjunction with José Piñeda and François Boussin. The second part of the project demonstrated that pharmacological blocking of TGFβ restores the production of new neurones in irradiated or ageing mice. For the researchers, these results will encourage the development of targeted therapies to block TGFβ in order to reduce the impact of brain lesions caused by radiotherapy and improving the production of neurones in the elderly presenting with a cognitive decline. ### Sources Vascular-derived TGF-β increases in the stem cell niche and perturbs neurogenesis during aging and following irradiation in the adult mouse brain Jose R. Pineda, Mathieu Daynac, Alexandra Chicheportiche, Arantxa Cebrian-Silla, Karine Sii Felice, Jose Manuel Garcia-Verdugo, François D. Boussin and Marc-Andre Mouthon

Embo Molecular Medicine


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Beavers use their noses to assess their foes

2013-04-09
For territorial animals, such as beavers, "owning" a territory ensures access to food, mates and nest sites. Defending that territory can involve fights which cause injury or death. How does an animal decide whether to take on an opponent or not? A new study by Helga Tinnesand and her colleagues from the Telemark University College in Norway has found that the anal gland secretions of beavers contain information about age and social status which helps other beavers gauge their level of response to the perceived threat. The study is published online today in Springer's journal ...

1 factor that can help determine black men's college success

2013-04-09
COLUMBUS, OHIO -- Beyond good test scores and high school grades, a new study finds one key factor that helps predict if a young black man will succeed at a predominantly white university. That factor is "grit" – a dedication to pursuing and achieving a goal, whatever the obstacles and failures along the way. Grit is so important that it was found to affect college grades for black men almost as much as high school GPA and ACT scores, said Terrell Strayhorn, author of the study and associate professor of educational studies at The Ohio State University. "For many ...

Is medical therapy a better and safer choice than angioplasty

2013-04-09
New Rochelle, NY, April 9, 2013–The decision to perform an invasive procedure to open clogged arteries in the heart instead of first trying medication and lifestyle changes may not reduce a patient's risk of death or of a major cardiac event. Unnecessary procedures to treat chronic, stable heart disease contribute to rising health care costs. A targeted approach to avoiding this kind of overutilization by instead relying on evidence-based decision-making is presented in Population Health Management, a peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The article ...

Sensational success in patients with major depression

2013-04-09
Researchers from the Bonn University Hospital implanted pacemaker electrodes into the medial forebrain bundle in the brains of patients suffering from major depression with amazing results: In six out of seven patients, symptoms improved both considerably and rapidly. The method of Deep Brain Stimulation had already been tested on various structures within the brain, but with clearly lesser effect. The results of this new study have now been published in the renowned international journal "Biological Psychiatry." After months of deep sadness, a first smile appears on ...

New models predict dramatically greener Arctic in the coming decades

2013-04-09
Rising temperatures will lead to a massive "greening" of the Arctic by mid-century, as a result of marked increases in plant cover, according to research supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) as part of its International Polar Year (IPY) portfolio. The greening not only will have effects on plant life, the researchers noted, but also on the wildlife that depends on vegetation for cover. The greening could also have a multiplier effect on warming, as dark vegetation absorbs more solar radiation than ice, which reflects sunlight. In a paper published March ...

'Diseases of affluence' spreading to poorer countries

2013-04-09
High blood pressure and obesity are no longer confined to wealthy countries, a new study has found. These health risks have traditionally been associated with affluence, and in 1980, they were more prevalent in countries with a higher income. The new research, published in Circulation, shows that the average body mass index of the population is now just as high or higher in middle-income countries. For blood pressure, the situation has reversed among women, with a tendency for blood pressure to be higher in poorer countries. Researchers at Imperial College London, ...

Low on self-control? Surrounding yourself with strong-willed friends may help

2013-04-09
We all desire self-control — the resolve to skip happy hour and go to the gym instead, to finish a report before checking Facebook, to say no to the last piece of chocolate cake. Though many struggle to resist those temptations, new research suggests that people with low self-control prefer and depend on people with high self-control, possibly as a way to make up for the skills they themselves lack. This research, conducted by psychological scientists Catherine Shea, Gráinne Fitzsimons, and Erin Davisson of Duke University, is published in Psychological Science, a journal ...

Measuring microbes makes wetland health monitoring more affordable, says MU researcher

2013-04-09
Wetlands serve as the Earth's kidneys. They filter and clean people's water supplies while serving as important habitat for many species, including iconic species like cattails, cranes and alligators. Conventional ecosystem health assessments have focused on populations of these larger species. However, the tiny, unseen creatures in the wetlands provided crucial indicators of the ecosystems' health in a study by University of Missouri Associate Professor of Engineering Zhiqiang Hu and his team. Using analysis of the microbiological health of wetlands is cheaper and faster ...

Short-term benefits seen with repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation for focal hand dystonia

2013-04-09
Amsterdam, NL, April 9, 2013 – Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) is being increasingly explored as a therapeutic tool for movement disorders associated with deficient inhibition throughout the central nervous system. This includes treatment of focal hand dystonia (FHD), characterized by involuntary movement of the fingers either curling into the palm or extending outward. A new study published in Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience reports short-term changes in behavioral, physiologic, and clinical measures that support further research into the therapeutic ...

Contacts, collisions, sutures, belts, and margins -- new GSA Bulletin content

2013-04-09
Boulder, Colo., USA – GSA Bulletin articles posted online ahead of print over the last month study (1) a Carboniferous collision in central Asia; (2) crystal xenoliths in the Bolivian Altiplano; (3) The Tsakhir Event; (4) Onverwacht Group and Fig Tree Group contact, Barberton greenstone belt, South Africa; (5) iron oxide deposits in the Paraíba Basin, NE Brazil; (6) the southern Alaska syntaxis; (7) paleotopography of the South Norwegian margin; and (8) the Cheyenne belt suture zone, USA. GSA BULLETIN articles published ahead of print are online at http://gsabulletin.gsapubs.org/content/early/recent; ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Mathematician solves algebra’s oldest problem using intriguing new number sequences

Cornstarch sanitary pads cheap enough to avoid tonnes of ocean plastics

Loss of genetic plant diversity is visible from space

Rare cancer synovial sarcoma reduced using plasma-activated medium

Keck Hospital of USC receives 10th “A” Leapfrog safety grade

Gabapentinoids unlikely to be directly linked to self-harm risk

No-touch vein harvesting has meaningful benefits for heart bypass patients

Single DNA mutation disrupts key tumour-suppressing pathways, elevating blood cancer risk

ChatGPT vs students

Semaglutide treats liver disease in two thirds of patients

Gene therapy restores immune function and extends lives of children with rare immune disorder

VCU-led research highlights semaglutide’s potential for treating fatty liver disease

Does your biological age affect your risk of dementia?

Research collaboration charts global four-stage evolution of inflammatory bowel disease

Ecological Society of America announces 2025 Fellows

Critically endangered axolotls bred in captivity appear able to survive release into both artificial and restored Mexican wetlands, but may need specific temperatures to thrive

Tunnel vision during planning can lead us to neglect negative consequences, but this cognitive bias can be addressed by simply prompting people to explicitly consider them

2.1 kids per woman might not be enough for population survival

New “hidden in plain sight” facial and eye biomarkers for tinnitus severity could unlock path to testing treatments

“Explainable” AI cracks secret language of sticky proteins

Setting, acute reaction and mental health history shape ayahuasca's longer-term psychological effects

National-Level Actions Effective at Tackling Antibiotic Resistance

Machine learning brings new insights to cell’s role in addiction, relapse

The duke mouse brain atlas will accelerate studies of neurological disorders

In VR school, fish teach robots

Every action counts: Global study shows countries can reverse increasing antibiotic resistance

Hiding in plain sight: Researchers uncover the prevalence of ‘curiosity’ virus

Fusion energy: ITER completes world’s largest and most powerful pulsed magnet system with major components built by USA, Russia, Europe, China

New study unlocks how root cells sense and adapt to soil

Landmark experiment sheds new light on the origins of consciousness

[Press-News.org] Producing new neurones under all circumstances: A challenge that is just a mouse away