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A selective, brain-penetrant GalR1 antagonist restores cholinergic signaling in vitro and rescues cholinergic cognitive deficits in mice

In this study, we characterized PAC-832, a small-molecule GalR1 antagonist with sub-micromolar potency (IC50 = 0.28 μM), 30-fold selectivity over GalR2 and GalR3, and excellent brain penetration and drug-like properties. In functional cell-based assays, PAC-832 reversed galanin-mediated suppression of acetylcholine release. In a scopolamine challenge model, PAC-832 attenuated cognitive deficits in the Y-maze and NOR tasks, with effect sizes comparable to donepezil.

The scopolamine model is widely used in behavioral mouse research to evaluate compounds for procognitive activity. However, because scopolamine impairs cognition by blocking muscarinic receptors rather than by reducing acetylcholine release, our behavioral results do not directly assess whether PAC-832 acts by restoring cholinergic signaling in vivo, or whether it acts through an alternative downstream mechanism. Establishing the former will require direct measurement of acetylcholine release in the CNS (e.g. using microdialysis or biosensor-based approaches) and/or GalR1-dependent in vivo validation (e.g. using transgenic GalR1-knockout mice).

Nonetheless, our work addresses a longstanding pharmacological gap in the galanin field. Despite decades of work implicating galanin signaling in CNS function and disease, translational progress has been limited by a lack of subtype-selective, brain-penetrant small molecule galanin modulators. Recent therapeutic development within the galanin field has largely focused on GalR2 agonism, while GalR1-targeting approaches have remained dependent on peptide tools unable to pass the blood-brain barrier. PAC-832 is, to our knowledge, the first GalR1-selective small molecule antagonist with sufficient brain exposure to test the effects of GalR1 antagonism following peripheral administration.

A 13-second eye test may help predict recovery of consciousness after severe brain injury

A simple bedside eye test may help predict recovery of consciousness in patients with severe brain injuries, according to new research presented at the European Academy of Neurology (EAN) Congress 2026.

The study found that a previously overlooked phase of the pupil response to light, known as the late light-off response (LOR), predicted improvements in consciousness seven days later in patients with acute brain injury. In contrast, standard pupil measurements already widely used in intensive care units (ICUs), including the Neurological Pupil Index (NPi) and pupillary light reflex (PLR) latency, did not predict later gains in consciousness.

Breastfeeding may protect against ADHD symptoms

A new study from the University of Bergen shows an association between breastfeeding up to 6 months of age and a reduced risk of ADHD symptoms from ages 3 to 8.

Breast milk is the primary source of nutrition for infants. It is uniquely tailored for the child and contains numerous components beneficial for growth and brain development, including long-chain fatty acids, amino acids, antibodies and beneficial bacteria.

“It is well established that psychiatric symptoms and disorders can be influenced by both genetic and environmental factors,” says Berit Skretting Solberg, psychiatrist and researcher at the Department of Biomedicine, University of Bergen, and senior consultant at Betanien Hospital.

Humans Were Injected: BREAKTHROUGH Age Reversal For Every Tissue

Life Biosciences just dosed the first human patient with ER-100 — an OSK gene therapy built from three Yamanaka factors, designed to reprogram old cells back toward a younger state. The first target is the eye. But the real implication is much bigger: this method appears to work on every tissue type it has been tried on.

If this first eye trial comes back safe, it could be the first domino in a much larger age-reversal wave: eye, liver, brain, skin, muscle, heart, kidney, blood vessels — potentially every tissue in the body.

This episode reveals the tidal wave of companies racing toward human trials using the same basic strategy: epigenetically reprogramming old cells so they behave young again. Billions of dollars are pouring into this from Jeff Bezos, Sam Altman, Brian Armstrong, Peter Thiel, and the biggest names in longevity biotech.

We walk through who they are, what they are trying to cure, why the eye came first, what worked in mice and monkeys, why NewLimit is going after liver rejuvenation, and whether the cheap pill version could be right behind the expensive gene therapy.

Bottom line: real age reversal is now in a human trial.

LONGEVITY LATTE PRE-ORDER:

The Neuroscience of Happiness and Pleasure

The evolutionary imperatives of survival and procreation, and their associated rewards, are driving life as most animals know it. Perhaps uniquely, humans are able to consciously experience these pleasures and even contemplate the elusive prospect of happiness. The advanced human ability to consciously predict and anticipate the outcome of choices and actions confers on our species an evolutionary advantage, but this is a double-edged sword, as John Steinbeck pointed out as he wrote of “the tragic miracle of consciousness” and how our “species is not set, has not jelled, but is still in a state of becoming” (). While consciousness allows us to experience pleasures, desires, and perhaps even happiness, this is always accompanied by the certainty of the end.

Nevertheless, while life may ultimately meet a tragic end, one could argue that if this is as good as it gets, we might as well enjoy the ride and in particular to maximize happiness. Yet, it is also true that for many happiness is a rare companion due to the competing influences of anxiety and depression.

In order to help understand happiness and alleviate the suffering, neuroscientists and psychologists have started to investigate the brain states associated with happiness components and to consider the relation to well-being. While happiness is in principle difficult to define and study, psychologists have made substantial progress in mapping its empirical features, and neuroscientists have made comparable progress in investigating the functional neuroanatomy of pleasure, which contributes importantly to happiness and is central to our sense of well-being.

Intraoperative functional brain mapping for glioma surgery: a comprehensive review of the University of California San Francisco mapping protocol

Intraoperative functional brain mapping is an essential and intricate technique in modern-day glioma surgery. This article is not a review of the literature but of the technical protocol at our institution that has evolved over the recent decades to the current time and is intended to highlight details that enable us to perform maximal safe resection of gliomas.

Prior to surgery, anatomical and functional imaging protocols are obtained to determine the tumor to be resected within its anatomical and functional environment. Preoperative assessments are used to determine which mapping procedures and tasks are most appropriate. Cortical and subcortical motor and language mapping using low and high frequency stimulation paradigms are applied when appropriate during resection. Methods to interpret findings and troubleshoot issues are reviewed herein.

All preoperative imaging including magnetic resonance imaging, magnetoencephalography of functional cortex, and diffusion tensor imaging of subcortical tracts are uploaded into the neuronavigation station and used throughout surgery for guidance. The decision to continue with tumor resection is based on constant feedback from the mapping paradigms as functional pathways are approached in real time. Both awake and asleep anesthesia regimens are utilized depending on the type of testing required to assess and preserve functional areas during tumor resection. Postoperatively, deficits are assessed using MRI along with clinical exam to predict whether they will be temporary or permanent.

Molecular basis of human daylight vision

In a new study, the researchers have succeeded for the first time in determining the three-dimensional structure of human cone opsins in their dark state and showing how their molecular architecture enables their rapid activation by light. This provides important new insights into human vision and its evolution and may offer new starting points for the study of eye diseases that currently lack effective treatment. The study published in the journal Science.

Cone opsins are photoreceptor proteins found in the cone cells, which are densely packed in the fovea centralis. This area of the human retina is responsible for sharp vision. We humans have six to seven million cones in each eye. Their receptor proteins are activated by light, triggering a signalling cascade that ultimately produces electrical signals processed by the brain. Because this process is exceptionally fast, cone opsins enable us to track fast-moving objects with our eyes. However, they operate mainly during the day when the light levels are high. In low light, at dusk and at night, their evolutionarily younger relative, the rod opsin in rod cells, takes over this task.

Human colour vision is mediated by three types of cone opsins, each tuned to a different region of the visible spectrum. L cones are most sensitive to red light, M cones to green light, and S cones to blue light. Although there are only three cone types, we see the world in more than just three colours, as our colour perception arises from the interplay of their overlapping spectral sensitivities.

How a brain messenger protein drives progression of Alzheimer’s disease

Alzheimer’s disease is driven by a buildup of a toxic protein called Tau that kills neurons. As toxic Tau spreads to new regions of the brain, symptoms worsen and ultimately become fatal.

Now, researchers have discovered that, in mice, a brain protein called Arc helps spread Tau from sick brain cells to healthy ones.

If therapies could be designed to target the spread, they could be a powerful tool to stop Alzheimer’s disease from getting worse.

Scientists discover how a single cell builds a brain with 170 billion cells

How does a single cell build a brain with billions of precisely organized neurons? Researchers suggest that brain cells use their lineage—their cellular family tree—as a kind of positional map. Cells that come from the same ancestor stay near one another, helping the brain organize itself without relying solely on chemical signals.

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