Highlighted in
Health & Life

Health & Medicine
4 mins read

New Insights Into Targeting Stomach Bug Virus Treatment

New study reveals how human astroviruses bind to humans cells and paves the way for new therapies and vaccines Human astroviruses are a leading viral cause of the stomach bug—think vomiting, diarrhea, and fever. It often impacts young children and older adults, leading to vicious cycles of sickness and malnutrition, particularly for those in low and middle income countries. It’s very commonly found in wastewater studies, meaning it’s frequently circulating in communities. As of now, there are no vaccines for…

Read more

All News

Health & Medicine

Neurology Team Explores Stroke Prevention Mechanisms

How can people be prevented from being affected again after a stroke? In order to find new therapeutic approaches for prevention, the international CRESCENDO consortium led by the MHH is conducting research at the molecular level. In Germany, 270,000 people suffer a stroke every year. This can result in severe disabilities: Paralysis, speech disorders and problems walking. Often, it does not remain a one-time event. Many patients experience a recurrence of the stroke and further deterioration of their health. How…

Life & Chemistry

Cellular Waste Removal: How Shredders Vary by Cell Type

“Miniature shredders” are at work in each cell, disassembling and recycling cell components that are defective or no longer required. The exact structure of these shredders differs from cell type to cell type, a study by the University of Bonn now shows. For example, cancer cells have a special variant that can supply them particularly effectively with building blocks for their energy metabolism. The results were published online in advance. The final version has now been published in the journal…

Life & Chemistry

Losing Key Beta Cells Linked to Diabetes Development

Multiple types of beta cells produce insulin in the pancreas, helping to balance blood sugar levels. Losing a particularly productive type of beta cell may contribute to the development of diabetes, according to a new study by Weill Cornell Medicine investigators. In the study, published March 16 in Nature Cell Biology, Dr. James Lo, associate professor of medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine, and colleagues measured gene expression in individual beta cells collected from mice to determine how many different types…

Life & Chemistry

Designing E. Coli: Virus-Resistant Bacteria for Innovation

Researchers create virus-resistant, safely restrained E. coli for medical, industrial applications. In a step forward for genetic engineering and synthetic biology, researchers have modified a strain of Escherichia coli bacteria to be immune to natural viral infections while also minimizing the potential for the bacteria or their modified genes to escape into the wild. The work promises to reduce the threats of viral contamination when harnessing bacteria to produce medicines such as insulin as well as other useful substances, such as biofuels….

Life & Chemistry

CO2 Research Breakthrough: Impact on Ocean Microorganisms

The behavior of microorganisms is crucial to understand the effects of carbon dioxide input in the oceans. Researchers at Constructor University in Bremen, Germany, in collaboration with colleagues from Australia, the United States and Switzerland, have now gained new insights into the metabolic exchanges between microorganisms. The research results were recently published in the renowned journal Nature Microbiology. Microorganisms are central components of marine ecosystems; among other things, they produce oxygen and bind carbon dioxide. “Until now, it was assumed…

Life & Chemistry

Astrocyte Cells: Key Players in Mastering Skilled Movements

From steering a car to swinging a tennis racket, we learn to execute all kinds of skilled movements during our lives. You might think this learning is only implemented by neurons, but a new study by researchers at The Picower Institute for Learning and Memory at MIT shows the essential role of another brain cell type: astrocytes. Just as teams of elite athletes train alongside staffs of coaches, ensembles of neurons in the brain’s motor cortex depend on nearby astrocytes…

Life & Chemistry

‘Glow-in-the-dark’ proteins could help diagnose viral diseases

Despite recent advancements, many highly sensitive diagnostic tests for viral diseases still require complicated techniques to prepare a sample or interpret a result, making them impractical for point-of-care settings or areas with few resources. But now, a team reporting in ACS Central Science has developed a sensitive method that analyzes viral nucleic acids in as little as 20 minutes and can be completed in one step with “glow-in-the-dark” proteins. The firefly’s flash, the anglerfish’s glowing lure and the ghostly blue…

Life & Chemistry

New Method Simplifies Virus Protein Screening for Antibiotic Use

… for antibiotic properties. Bacteriophages could hold the key to combatting antibiotic resistance. Working with them just got a lot easier. As conventional antibiotics continue to lose effectiveness against evolving pathogens, scientists are keen to employ the bacteria-killing techniques perfected by bacteriophages, the viruses that infect bacteria. One major challenge standing in their way is the difficulty of studying individual bacteriophage (phage) proteins and determining precisely how the virus wields these tools to kill their host bacteria. New research from…

Medical Engineering

AI Sidekick Enhances Cirrhosis Detection in Health Records

Medical University of South Carolina researchers show that AI can be used to help to identify cirrhosis in electronic health records. The detectives There is power and value in a highly skilled detective. Sherlock Holmes and his trusty sidekick, Watson, are famous for sifting through enormous amounts of data – identifying patterns and making predictions to uncover a mystery with ease. In the medical world, clinicians are detectives, making diagnoses and drawing conclusions based on their clinical judgment and available…

Life & Chemistry

New Mouse Model Advances Down Syndrome Research and Treatment

New mouse model may inform potential therapeutic options for Down syndrome. National Institutes of Health researchers compared a new genetic animal model of Down syndrome to the standard model and found the updated version to be enhanced. The new mouse model shows milder cognitive traits compared to a previously studied Down syndrome mouse model. The results of this study, published in Biological Psychiatry, may help researchers develop more precise treatments to improve cognition in people with Down syndrome. Scientists found…

Life & Chemistry

New Drug Candidate Targets Brain Tumors in Clinical Trial

Clinical trials are a milestone in the development of safe and effective drugs and therapies. An antibody developed by Helmholtz Munich is now entering a phase 1 clinical trial. Together with the radiopharmaceutical company ITM Isotope Technologies Munich and Münster University Hospital, researchers hope to improve the treatment of patients with brain tumors. Glioblastomas are the most common and aggressive malignant brain tumors. Surgical removal of the tumor and additional radiation and chemotherapy usually do not result in a complete…

Life & Chemistry

Bacterium-Host Therapy: A New Approach to Combat Resistance

… or treating vancomycin-resistant bacterial infections. Antimicrobials with the potential to act as immune stimulators and overcome bacterial resistance are emerging as important alternative approaches to fighting antimicrobial resistance The novel combination therapy pairs Mitoxantrone (MTX) and vancomycin to target both antibiotic-resistant pathogens and the host immune system to combat vancomycin resistance MTX is a promising compound to enhance the host immune system, enabling it to clear bacterial infections more effectively and improve infected wound healing Researchers from the Antimicrobial…

Life & Chemistry

USC Team Uncovers Jaw Assembly Insights in New Study

A USC-led team of scientists has made a drool-worthy discovery about how tendons and salivary glands develop in the jaw. Their results are published in a new study in Developmental Cell. In order for our jaws to function, they require not only a precisely patterned skeleton, but also tendons that connect the jaw skeleton to muscles and salivary glands that lubricate the mouth. Remarkably, the skeleton, tendons, and glands all derive from the same population of stem cells, which arise from…

Life & Chemistry

ATE1 Enzyme Boosts Cellular Stress Response and Therapy Potential

… opening door to new therapeutic targets. The activity of ATE1, which flags misfolded proteins for destruction, is enhanced by binding iron-sulfur clusters. It’s also highly sensitive to oxygen, which may indicate it moderates the cell’s response to oxidative stress. A new paper in Nature Communications illuminates how a previously poorly understood enzyme works in the cell. Many diseases are tied to chronic cellular stress, and UMBC’s Aaron T. Smith and colleagues discovered that this enzyme plays an important role…

Life & Chemistry

Exploring Life Near Underwater Volcanoes and Hydrothermal Vents

Deep down in the ocean at tectonic plate boundaries, hot fluids rise from so-called hydrothermal vents. The fluids are devoid of oxygen and contain large amounts of metals such as iron, manganese or copper. Some may also transport sulfides, methane and hydrogen. When the hot water mixes with the cold and oxygenated surrounding seawater, so-called hydrothermal plumes develop containing smoke-like particles of metal sulfide. These plumes rise hundreds of meters off the seafloor and disperse thousands of kilometers away from…

Life & Chemistry

Trisomy 21 Link to Acute Myeloid Leukaemia Uncovered

People with a third copy of chromosome 21, known as trisomy 21, are at high risk of developing Acute Myeloid Leukaemia (AML), an aggressive form of blood cancer. Scientists led by the Department of Paediatrics at University Hospital Frankfurt have now identified the cause: although the additional chromosome 21 leads to increased gene dosage of many genes, it is above all the perturbation of the RUNX1 gene – a gene that regulates many other genes – that seems to be…

Feedback