Scientist grows new medication to treat type 2 diabetes without undesired reactions Kumar Jeetendra | June 24, 2020 Syracuse University science educator Dr. Robert P. Doyle has built up another medication lead to treat type 2 diabetes in a great many patients who are looking to all the more likely control their glucose without the basic symptoms of queasiness, spewing, and in select cases, undesired weight reduction. Doyle’s examination article, “Corrination of a …
Examination distinguishes explicit brain cells that trigger sugar utilization and longings Kumar Jeetendra | July 18, 2020 New research has identified the particular brain cells that control just how much sugar you eat and how much you crave sweet tasting meals. Most people like a candy treat every now and then. However an unchecked”sweet tooth” can lead to overconsumption of sugary foods and chronic health problems such as obesity and type two …
Remedial got from turmeric shows guarantee in treating canine visual condition Kumar Jeetendra | September 5, 2020 Researchers in Texas A&M University have produced a curative derived from turmeric, a spice long-praised because of its natural anti-inflammatory properties, that shows promise in decreasing ocular inflammation in dogs suffering from uveitis, an inflammation of the eye that leads to pain and reduced vision. Uveitis — a frequent condition in dogs, humans, and other …
Amniotic liquid undifferentiated cells may prompt better treatment for ischemic stroke Kumar Jeetendra | October 7, 2020 A study published today in STEM CELLS Translational Medicine points the way to a potential new avenue of treatment for ischemic stroke. The study, led by Annamaria Cimini, Ph.D., of the University of L’Aquila, and Liborio Stuppia, M.D., of D’Annunzio University, Italy, shows how the secretome of amniotic fluid stem cells can restore neuronal plasticity …
Female mosquitoes can distinguish a mix of four unique substances in blood Kumar Jeetendra | October 13, 2020 Mosquitoes spread diseases like malaria, dengue, and yellow fever that kill at least a half a million people each year. Researchers are learning what people taste like to mosquitoesdown to the individual neurons that sense blood’s distinctive, flavorful taste. Female mosquitoes have a sense of taste that is especially tuned to detect a combination of …
Bacteria use signaling particles to adjust their way of life to winning everyday environments Kumar Jeetendra | November 16, 2020 Bacteria are considered to be true experts in survival. Their rapid adaptive response to changing environmental conditions is based, among other things, on two rival signaling molecules. As the”Yin and Yang” of metabolic control they choose the lifestyle of bacteria, according to researchers in the University of Basel. The findings also play a role in …
New drug mixture improves blood glucose manipulate and weight reduction in mice Kumar Jeetendra | December 23, 2020 Scientists have demonstrated that adding an experimental cancer drug to a widely used diabetes treatment improves blood glucose control and weight loss in mice, according to a study published today in eLife. The results pave the way for clinical trials of this new drug combination as a more successful long-term remedy for countless individuals with …
Biomarkers can foresee how hereditarily identical cells act distinctively under pressure Kumar Jeetendra | January 10, 2021 A set of biomarkers not traditionally associated with cell fate can accurately forecast how genetically identical cells behave differently under pressure, according to a UT Southwestern study. The findings, published by Cell Reports as a Dec. 1 cover story, could eventually result in more predictable responses to pharmaceutical remedies. Groups of the same types of …
Scientists plan new biosynthetic pathways for short-chain essential amines Kumar Jeetendra | January 18, 2021 Researchers report a new strategy for the microbial production of multiple short-chain primary amines through retrobiosynthesis. KAIST metabolic engineers introduced the bio-based production of numerous short-chain primary amines that have a broad assortment of applications in chemical industries for the first time. The research team led by Distinguished Professor Sang Yup Lee from the Department …
Sloan Kettering Institute specialists offer news answer to 100-year-old malignancy secret Kumar Jeetendra | January 23, 2021 The year 2021 marks the 100th anniversary of a basic discovery that is taught in every biochemistry textbook. In 1921, German doctor Otto Warburg observed that cancer cells harvest energy from sugar sugar in a strangely inefficient manner: instead of”burn” it using cancer cells do what yeast do — they ferment it. This oxygen-independent process …
Pancreatic β cell-inferred exosomal miR-29s control glucose homeostasis Kumar Jeetendra | January 24, 2021 In a new study published in Journal of Extracellular Vesicles, Chen-Yu Zhang’s team at Nanjing University, School of Life Sciences, and Antonio Vidal-Puig’s group at University of Cambridge report that pancreatic β cells secrete miR-29 family members (miR-29s) via exosomes in reaction to high levels of free fatty acids (FFAs). Formerly, Chen-Yu Zhang’s team identified …
Study shows why children of obese moms have inclination to create metabolic illnesses Kumar Jeetendra | January 27, 2021 A Brazilian study published in the journal Molecular Human Reproduction helps understand why overweight mothers often have children with a propensity to develop metabolic disease during their lifetime, according to previous research. According to the authors,”transgenerational transmission of metabolic disorders” may be associated with Mfn2 deficiency in the mother’s oocytes (immature eggs). Mfn2 refers to …