NSF supports study of how isolation and dopamine impact the brain
2025-09-25
Scientists know that social isolation can alter brain structure and lead to the breakdown of myelin, the fatty coating that insulates nerve fibers in the brain. But they don’t yet know exactly how or why it happens.
A new, five-year study, supported by the National Science Foundation, investigates the potential mechanisms that drive the process. “We’re looking at the role of dopamine in regulating changes in myelin caused by social isolation,” said study leader Leora Yetnikoff, a professor of Biology and a member of the CUNY Neuroscience Collaborative at the CUNY Graduate Center, and a professor of psychology at the College of Staten Island.
Yetnikoff ...
FAU awarded US EPA grant to integrate genetics in Florida bay sponge restoration
2025-09-25
Andia Chaves-Fonnegra, Ph.D., an associate professor of biology at Florida Atlantic University’s Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute and Harriet L. Wilkes Honors College, has been awarded a five-year, $720,446 grant from the United States EPA to support a pioneering project aimed at restoring sponge populations in Florida Bay through a genetics-based approach.
Florida Bay is a shallow body of water between the southern tip of mainland Florida and the Florida Keys. It is part of Everglades National Park, which supports important marine life like sponges, fish and spiny lobster.
The project marks the first genetic assessment of sponge restoration ...
A rapid rise of private club and travel teams in youth sports
2025-09-25
COLUMBUS, Ohio – A new study provides evidence of the explosive growth of private club and travel teams in youth sports over the past 60 years.
Researchers found that kids who were born in the 1990s were about three times as likely to participate in private club and travel sports as those who were born in the 1950s. Findings were based on adults’ retrospective reports of their experiences while growing up.
About 4% of surveyed adults who were born in the 50s said they ...
Turning rust into fuel: MANA advances green rust catalyst for next-gen hydrogen vehicles
2025-09-25
Researchers from the Research Center for Materials Nanoarchitectonics (MANA), one of the centers under the National Institute for Materials Science (NIMS), Japan, report an inexpensive iron hydroxide catalyst that could support the use of sodium borohydride as a hydrogen storage material.
As the world moves toward hydrogen-powered societies, one major challenge remains: storing and releasing hydrogen efficiently. Sodium borohydride (SBH) is a promising hydrogen storage material that can generate hydrogen ...
New genetic model reveals calcium-induced calcium release is dispensable for skeletal muscle contraction
2025-09-25
The mechanism of skeletal muscle contraction is a process that relies on calcium signaling. However, the physiological role of calcium-induced calcium release (CICR) through the ryanodine receptor type 1 (RyR1) has remained unresolved for decades. A new study led by Associate Professor Takashi Murayama from Juntendo University in Japan, along with his team members Drs. Takuya Kobayashi and Nagomi Kurebayashi from Juntendo University, and Dr. Toshiko Yamazawa from Jikei University School of Medicine, published ...
Unfolded Protein Response pathway offers new targets to treat bone weakness in cancer patients
2025-09-25
Before a chain of amino acids can become an active and useful protein, it must be processed and folded into the appropriate conformation. Much of this processing occurs in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of every cell. However, any disruptions in protein homeostasis can be very stressful to the ER, and when the ER gets overwhelmed, a safety system called the Unfolded Protein Response (UPR) engages to slow down protein synthesis and allow the ER to catch up. If a temporary slowdown of protein synthesis isn’t enough ...
Nobel Laureate David Baltimore reviews NF-κB research: Mastering cell fate, regulating health and disease
2025-09-25
The transcription factor NF-κB is a key regulator of cell fate, extensively involved in various physiological and pathological processes such as immune responses, inflammatory reactions, cell differentiation, development, and proliferation. Since its transcriptional regulatory function was first identified in B cells by Ranjan Sen and David Baltimore in 1986, the NF-κB signaling pathway has been intensively studied for almost four decades. However, its complex regulatory network and continuously discovered ...
In quest for better NSAIDs, researchers decouple inflammation from pain
2025-09-25
Scientists at the NYU Pain Research Center have identified which receptor in prostaglandins—the hormone-like substance targeted by common painkillers—causes pain but not inflammation. The findings, published in the journal Nature Communications, may help researchers to develop more selective drugs to treat pain with fewer side effects.
“Inflammation and pain are usually thought to go hand in hand. But being able to block pain and allow inflammation—which promotes healing—to proceed is an important step in ...
The fattening forest: trees of the Amazon are getting bigger
2025-09-25
Average tree size across the Amazon has increased by 3.2% every decade consistent with a response to rising carbon dioxide levels, a new study suggests.
The new research published today (25 Sep) in Nature Plants by a global team of tropical forest scientists shows that the average size of trees in Amazon forests has increased over recent decades. The team of almost a hundred researchers monitored the size of trees in 188 permanent plots and discovered that the increase has continued for at least 30 years.
The study is the result ...
USC researchers develop new brain imaging method to reveal hidden vascular changes with aging
2025-09-25
Researchers at the Mark and Mary Stevens Neuroimaging and Informatics Institute (Stevens INI) at the Keck School of Medicine of USC have developed a groundbreaking brain imaging technique that reveals how tiny blood vessels in the brain pulse with each heartbeat—changes that may hold clues to aging and diseases such as Alzheimer’s.
The study, published in Nature Cardiovascular Research, introduces the first noninvasive method for measuring “microvascular volumetric pulsatility”—the rhythmic expansion ...
Topology reveals the hidden rules of amorphous materials — Softness arises from hierarchical structures
2025-09-25
Osaka, Japan — Why do glass and other amorphous materials deform more easily in some regions than in others? A research team from The University of Osaka, the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), Okayama University, and the University of Tokyo has uncovered the answer. By applying a mathematical method known as persistent homology, the team demonstrated that these soft regions are governed by hidden hierarchical structures, where ordered and disordered atomic arrangements coexist.
Crystalline solids, such as salt or ice, have atoms neatly arranged in repeating ...
CU Anschutz researchers discover how lymphatic endothelials cells help the body remember infections
2025-09-25
A study published today in Nature Communications describes how lymphatic endothelial cells assist in generating robust immune memory, offering new insights into how the immune system functions.
Specifically, the researchers found there is a particular genetic program within the lymphatic endothelial cells that enables storage and archival of portions of an immunization or pathogen (antigens) for future use.
The research is among the first to outline that there’s a genetic “transcriptional” program within lymphatic endothelial cells that impact the immune response and could be manipulated.
The study was led ...
Indonesian breeds may carry genetics that can make cattle more sustainable and productive
2025-09-25
In Indonesia, cattle are not just cattle. The large island-nation houses a variety of different breeds, locally preferred for their unique set of physical attributes and strongly linked to culture and ceremonies. There is even a distinct species of domesticated bovine here, namely the Bali cattle, a domesticated version of the wild banteng (see Box 1). Little is known about the history of cattle in this archipelago, which is positioned at a crossroad between major historical trading empires and cultures, notably India and China. Local ...
Reducing the environmental ‘paw-print’ - plant-based dog foods are better for the environment than red meat options
2025-09-25
A new study, led by experts at the University of Nottingham, has found that the production of meat-based pet foods has a much greater impact on the environment in comparison to plant-based alternatives.
The study, led by Rebecca Brociek from the School of Veterinary Medicine and Science, and published in Frontiers in Nutrition - Nutrition and Sustainable Diets, showed that plant-based diets for pets had the lowest impact across all measures of environmental impact. This included the land needed ...
Minute witnesses from the primordial sea
2025-09-25
Earth scientists often face huge challenges when researching the earth’s history: many significant events occurred such a long time ago that there is little direct evidence available. Consequently, researchers often have to rely on indirect clues or on computer models. The team led by ETH Professor Jordon Hemingway, however, has now discovered a unique natural witness to this period: tiny egg-shaped iron oxide stones that can be used to directly measure the carbon reserves in the primordial ocean.
Viewed ...
Hot springs in Japan give insight into ancient microbial life on Earth
2025-09-25
Earth was not always the blue-green world we know today: the early Earth's oxygen levels were about a million times lower than we now experience. There were no forests and no animals. For ancient organisms, oxygen was toxic. What did life look like at that time then? A recent study led by Fatima Li-Hau (graduate student at ELSI at the time of the research) along with the supervisor Associate Professor Shawn McGlynn (at the time of research) of the Earth-Life Science Institute (ELSI) at Institute of Science Tokyo, Japan, explores this question by examining iron-rich hot springs that mimic the chemistry of Earth's ancient oceans around the time ...
Shortfin mako sharks show enhanced thermoregulation abilities during deep dives
2025-09-25
Tunas, billfishes, and some sharks, such as white sharks and shortfin mako sharks, have an ability known as regional endothermy, which allows them to maintain body temperatures higher than the ambient water. This ability has been regarded as an adaptation to cold environments. However, its role in warm-water species such as shortfin mako sharks, bigeye tuna, and swordfish has been unclear.
In this study, we attached data loggers to shortfin mako sharks caught off southeastern Taiwan to record water temperature, body temperature, and swimming depth (Fig. 1). During repeated deep dives, ...
Motion of planet-forming spirals captured on video
2025-09-25
The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) has captured the motion of spirals of dust around a young star and shown that the winding motion of the spiral pattern is conducive to planet formation. This provides new evidence for planet formation around this young star. The results could have implications for other young stars as well.
Observations have revealed a spiral pattern in the disk of gas and dust around the young star IM Lup located 515 light-years away in the direction of the constellation Lupus. Spiral patterns are thought to be one of the signs that a new planet will form soon, but ...
Routing photonic entanglement towards a quantum internet
2025-09-25
Imagine the benefits if the entire internet got a game-changing upgrade to speed and security. This is the promise of the quantum internet - an advanced system that uses single photons (particles of light) to operate. Researchers at Tohoku University developed a new photonic router that can direct single and (quantum) entangled photons with unprecedented levels of efficiency. This advancement in quantum optics brings us closer to quantum networks and next-generation photonic quantum technologies becoming an everyday reality.
The findings were published in Advanced Quantum Technologies on September 2, 2025.
Photons are the backbone ...
High-pressure processing alters stability of anthocyanin–catechin complexes
2025-09-25
Researchers found that while HPP promotes the formation of anthocyanin–catechin complexes, it simultaneously reduces their thermal and light stability by decreasing the proportion of dominant conformations.
Anthocyanins are natural pigments abundant in fruits, vegetables, tea, and wine, prized for their vivid colors and health benefits including antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and cardioprotective properties. Yet their poor stability under heat and light has long hindered food applications. Copigmentation—complex formation between anthocyanins and polyphenols such as catechins—enhances both stability ...
Scientists develop a virus cocktail to combat superbugs
2025-09-25
In a major advance for infectious disease treatment, researchers from Monash University and The Alfred have developed a bespoke phage therapy product that uses bacterial viruses, known as ‘bacteriophages’, to combat a highly problematic, antimicrobial resistant bacteria.
The treatment, named Entelli-02, is a five-phage cocktail designed specifically to target Enterobacter cloacae complex (ECC), a group of bacteria responsible for severe, often difficult-to-treat infections.
The study, published in Nature Microbiology, was led by Professor Jeremy J. Barr from the Monash ...
Fishy forensics improves tracking of fish migrations
2025-09-25
As the world’s oceans warm, tropical fish species are moving into cooler waters and exploring new habitats beyond their traditional ranges. Researchers have discovered a new way to track their migration patterns by combining environmental DNA with visual surveys.
“Climate change has already caused more than 12,000 species to shift their homes across land, freshwater and the sea,” says the University of Adelaide’s Dr Chloe Hayes, who has published a study on the new approach.
“In ...
INSEAD launches Master in Finance: a global launchpad for the next generation of financial leaders
2025-09-25
INSEAD, The Business School for the World, today announced the launch of its new Master in Finance (MIF), an innovative pre-experience degree for recent graduates and young professionals.
Designed to meet the growing demand for finance professionals who combine technical mastery with cross-cultural agility, global business acumen, and leadership skills, the INSEAD MIF reflects both market demand and INSEAD’s DNA in leadership education. This pre-experience programme aims to shape the financial leaders of tomorrow.
Shaping Leaders for a Transforming Financial World
Building on the success of INSEAD’s Master in Management ...
Reversing age-related vision decline
2025-09-25
Changes in vision are often a common sign of aging. If you sit in a dimly lit restaurant with anyone over the age of 60, you’ll likely hear the person say, “Hold on — let me pull out my cell phone. I need more light to read the menu!” But what if we could reverse age-related visual decline?
In a new study, UC Irvine researchers explore a possible therapy for addressing “aging” in the eye and for preventing diseases such as age-related macular degeneration (AMD).
“We show the potential for reversing age-related vision loss,” says Dorota Skowronska-Krawczyk, PhD, an associate ...
Crnic Institute breakthrough maps how Down Syndrome biology changes with age
2025-09-25
AURORA, Colo. (Sept. 24, 2025) – In a groundbreaking new study published in Nature Communications, researchers from the Linda Crnic Institute for Down Syndrome (Crnic Institute) at the University of Colorado Anschutz discovered important differences in the physiological changes observed in over 300 individuals with Down syndrome across the lifespan.
The study is part of the ongoing Human Trisome Project, a large, detailed cohort study of people with Down syndrome, including deep annotation ...
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