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Antidepressants associated with significantly elevated risk of death, researchers find

It's widely known that brain serotonin affects mood, and that most commonly used antidepressant treatment for depression blocks the absorption of serotonin by neurons. It is less widely known, though, that all the major organs of the body -- the heart, kidneys, lungs, liver -- use serotonin from the bloodstream. Antidepressants block the absorption of serotonin in these organs as well, and the researchers warn that antidepressants could increase the risk of death by preventing multiple organs from functioning properly. The researchers reviewed studies involving hundreds of thousands of people and found that antidepressant users had a 33% higher chance of death than non-users. Antidepressant users also had a 14% higher risk of cardiovascular events, such as strokes and heart attacks. The findings were published in the journal  Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics . "We are very concerned by these results. They suggest that we shouldn't be taking antidepressant drugs w...

Chimera viruses can help the fight against lymphomas

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These are mice spleen cells (blue) contaminated with the chimera kaposi virus displaying the LANA protein (purple). Credit score: Pedro Simas Lab, iMM Lisboa Researchers from Instituto de Medicina Molecular (iMM) Lisboa have created a chimera virus that enables the examine of molecules to deal with cancers attributable to human herpes virus an infection in mice fashions of illness. There are a number of sorts of herpesvirus in a position to infect people, resembling herpes simplex, chickenpox, cytomegalovirus , Epstein-Barr and Kaposi Sarcoma herpesvirus. One of many important traits of herpesviruses is their capacity to contaminate their hosts for all times and in a small share of those individuals in the end result in most cancers. Cancers related to Kaposi virus an infection have an Achilles heel: their cells' viability is immediately depending on the survival of the virus, which signifies that if the virus have been to be eradicated most cancers ce...

Google Glass app helps autistic children with social interactions

A new study published in the open-access journal  Frontiers in Robotics and AI  finds that the wearable technology can recognize conversational prompts and provide the user with suitable responses in return. Moreover, children find it easy to operate and enjoy using it. ASD is a life-long condition that affects 1 in 68 people. A defining feature of ASD is difficulties with social communication -- which can include initiating and maintaining conversations with others. "We developed software for a wearable system that helps coach children with autism spectrum disorder in everyday social interactions," says Azadeh Kushki, an Assistant Professor at the Institute of Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering at the University of Toronto, and Scientist at the Bloorview Research Institute, Toronto, Canada. "In this study, we show that children are able to use this new technology and they enjoy interacting with it." Children with autism spectrum disorder are often draw...

Could interstellar ice provide the answer to birth of DNA?

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Halley's Comet. Credit score: NASA Researchers on the College of York have proven that molecules dropped at earth in meteorite strikes might doubtlessly be transformed into the constructing blocks of DNA. They discovered that natural compounds, referred to as amino nitriles, the molecular precursors to amino acids, had been in a position to make use of molecules current in interstellar ice to set off the formation of the spine molecule, 2-deoxy-D-ribose, of DNA. It has lengthy been assumed that amino acids had been current on earth earlier than DNA, and should have been chargeable for the formation of one of many constructing blocks of DNA, however this new analysis throws contemporary doubt on this concept. Dr Paul Clarke, from the College of York's Division of Chemistry, stated: "The origin of vital organic molecules is likely one of the key basic questions in science. The molecules that type the constructing blocks of DNA needed to come from...

New inhibitor brings new hope for aggressive triple receptor-negative breast cancer

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It is a breast most cancers stem cell line 1 (BCSC1) from the newly established cell mannequin. Right here we are able to see the proteins keratin 5 in inexperienced and keratin eight in crimson, with the nucleus in blue. Credit score: Maurer Lab Scientists from the cluster of excellence BIOSS Centre for Organic Signalling Research on the College of Freiburg and the Freiburg College Medical Middle have proven that inhibiting the epigenetic regulator KDM4 would possibly provide a possible novel therapy possibility for breast most cancers sufferers. They used a newly established cell mannequin that permits scientists to isolate most cancers stem cells immediately from affected person tumor. Utilizing this particular tradition system, they have been capable of check potential new most cancers medication . Considered one of these, a novel inhibitor of the epigenetic regulator KDM4, co-developed within the lab of Prof. Schüle, confirmed promising outcomes. The rese...

Synaptic receptor mobility: Discovery of a new mechanism for controlling memory

Communication between neurons passes through over one million billion synapses, tiny structures the tenth of the width of a single hair, in an extremely complex process. Synaptic plasticity -- the ability of synapses to adapt in response to neuronal activity -- was discovered nearly 50 years ago, leading the scientific community to identify it as a vital functional component of memorization and learning. Neurotransmitter receptors -- found at the synapse level -- play a key role in the transmission of nerve messages. A few years ago, the team of researchers in Bordeaux discovered that neurotransmitter receptors were not immobile as thought previously, but in a constant state of agitation. They posited that controlling this agitation through neuronal activity could modulate the effectiveness of synaptic transmission by regulating the number of receptors present at a given time in a synapse. The new research has taken the two teams further in their understanding of the basic mecha...

Obese inducing brain mechanism

The research group of Professor Masaharu Noda, Associate Professor Takafumi Shintani, and a graduate student Satoru Higashi of the National Institute for Basic Biology (NIBB) demonstrated that protein tyrosine phosphatase receptor type J (PTPRJ) inhibits leptin signaling and that induction of PTPRJ in the hypothalamus is a cause of leptin resistance. They showed that Ptprj is expressed in hypothalamic neurons together with leptin receptors, and that PTPRJ inhibits activation of the leptin receptor through dephosphorylation of JAK2, a protein tyrosine kinase associated with the leptin receptor. Ptprj-deficient (Ptprj-KO) mice showed no growth retardation, but exhibited lower weight gain, because of a lower food intake and a lower adiposity, than wild-type (WT) mice. Importantly, PTPRJ expression in the hypothalamus was up-regulated by diet-induced obesity, and, thus, diet-induced leptin resistance did not occur in Ptprj-KO mice. Furthermore, the overexpression of PTPRJ in the hypot...