Menu

Blog

Archive for the ‘biotech/medical’ category: Page 99

Aug 9, 2024

Study identifies RNA molecule that Regulates Cellular Aging

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, life extension, neuroscience

A team led by UT Southwestern Medical Center researchers has discovered a new way that cells regulate senescence, an irreversible end to cell division. The findings, published in Cell, could one day lead to new interventions for a variety of conditions associated with aging, including neurodegenerative and cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, and cancer, as well as new therapies for a collection of diseases known as ribosomopathies.

“There is great interest in reducing senescence to slow or reverse aging or aging-associated diseases. We discovered a noncoding RNA that when inhibited strongly impairs senescence, suggesting that it could be a therapeutic target for conditions associated with aging,” said Joshua Mendell, M.D., Ph.D., Professor of Molecular Biology and a member of the Harold C. Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center at UT Southwestern. He is also a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator.

Dr. Mendell led the study with co-first authors Yujing Cheng, Ph.D., a recent graduate of the Genetics, Development, and Disease graduate program; and Siwen Wang, M.D., a former postdoctoral researcher, both in the Mendell Lab.

Aug 9, 2024

Dr. Ryan Potts, Ph.D. — VP and Head, Induced Proximity Platform, Amgen — Any Target, Every Time

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry, genetics

Leading The Next Wave Of Innovation In Drug Discovery, To Modulate Any Target, Every Time — Dr. P. Ryan Potts, Ph.D., VP and Head, Induced Proximity Platform, Amgen.


Dr. Ryan Potts, Ph.D. is Vice President and Head, Induced Proximity Platform at Amgen (https://www.amgen.com/science/researc…) which is focused on novel ways to bring two or more molecules in close proximity to each other to tackle drug targets that are currently considered “undruggable.” He also leads Amgen’s Research \& Development Postdoctoral Fellows Program (https://www.amgen.com/science/scienti…).

Continue reading “Dr. Ryan Potts, Ph.D. — VP and Head, Induced Proximity Platform, Amgen — Any Target, Every Time” »

Aug 9, 2024

‘Then I Am Myself the World’ ponders what it means to be conscious

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

Then I Am Myself the World Christof Koch Basic Books, $30

The human brain is the most complex information integrator known in the universe. With 86 billion neurons and 100 trillion connections between them, the brain gives us our rich subjective experiences and our capacity for free will — our consciousness.

Despite being a universal human phenomenon, consciousness is notoriously difficult to describe, and scientists still debate how it arises. In Then I Am Myself the World, neuroscientist Christof Koch offers the latest entry into the long list of books attempting to demystify the origins of our inner lives (SN: 1/5/22). While the topic can be a head-scratcher, Koch’s adept use of analogies and entertaining anecdotes — complete with his own near-death experience and psychedelic drug trips — make the book a compelling and surprisingly light read.

Aug 9, 2024

A controversial Chinese CRISPR scientist is still hopeful about embryo gene editing. Here’s why

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, genetics, law enforcement

He Jiankui, who went to prison for three years for making the world’s first gene-edited babies, talked to MIT Technology Review about his new research plans.

Aug 8, 2024

How the stressed-out brain can weaken the immune system

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

Stress sensitive neural circuits change the gut microbiome and the duodenal glands.

Precision mapping of a gut-brain circuit w/ functional impact.

Glands in the small intestine (Brunner’s) have GLP-1 receptors, are stress-sensitive, connect to the brain via the vagal nerve, modulate bacterial…

Continue reading “How the stressed-out brain can weaken the immune system” »

Aug 8, 2024

CRISPRi-based circuits to control gene expression in plants

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, genetics

Programmable and reversible CRISPRi-based genetic circuits function in a variety of plants.

Aug 8, 2024

Glimpse into the nanoworld: Microscope reveals tiniest cell processes

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

What does the inside of a cell really look like? In the past, standard microscopes were limited in how well they could answer this question. Now, researchers from the Universities of Göttingen and Oxford, in collaboration with the University Medical Center Göttingen (UMG), have succeeded in developing a microscope with resolutions better than five nanometers (five billionths of a meter). This is roughly equivalent to the width of a hair split into 10,000 strands. Their new method was published in Nature Photonics.

Aug 8, 2024

Engineered brain parasite ferries useful proteins into neurons

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

Microbe found in cat poo could be harnessed to deliver large, complex proteins across the blood–brain barrier.

Aug 8, 2024

Heart attack doctor asks, is death now reversible?

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

As a medical scientist, he looks at how new findings will help develop new treatments to revive people now considered hopeless and restore brain damage.

Aug 7, 2024

Northrop Grumman spacecraft hitches ride on SpaceX rocket for NASA resupply mission

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, space travel

The Cygnus spacecraft is filled with nearly 8,200 pounds of supplies, hardware and other critical materials for dozens of scientific and research experiments, according to NASA.

That includes tests for water recovery technology and supplies needed for a process to produce blood and immune stem cells in microgravity. Also included in the payload are materials to study the effects of spaceflight on engineered liver tissue and microorganism DNA, NASA said.

Page 99 of 2,753First96979899100101102103Last