Category Biology/Biotechnology

Good Hydration Linked to Healthy Aging

hydration
Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

Adults who stay well-hydrated appear to be healthier, develop fewer chronic conditions, such as heart and lung disease, and live longer than those who may not get sufficient fluids, according to a National Institutes of Health study published in eBioMedicine. Using health data gathered from 11,255 adults over a 30-year period, researchers analyzed links between serum sodium levels—which go up when fluid intake goes down—and various indicators of health. They found that adults with serum sodium levels at the higher end of a normal range were more likely to develop chronic conditions and show signs of advanced biological aging than those with serum sodium levels in the medium ranges...

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Self-assembling Proteins can Store Cellular ‘Memories’

Collage of images against a black background shows a calendar icon in top left. Top right shows 4 protein structures that look like worms, with different pink and blue sections. Bottom shows 1 worm-like protein structure in pink and blue.
MIT engineers have devised a way to induce cells to inscribe the history of cellular events in a long protein structure that can be imaged using a light microscope.
Credits:Courtesy of the researchers

Using these engineered proteins, researchers can record histories that reveal when certain genes are activated, or how cells respond to a drug. As cells perform their everyday functions, they turn on a variety of genes and cellular pathways. MIT engineers have now coaxed cells to inscribe the history of these events in a long protein chain that can be imaged using a light microscope.

Cells programmed to produce these chains continuously add building blocks that encode particular cellular events...

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Good and Bad Feelings for Brain Stem Serotonin

An illustration of a mouse head in profile, indicating areas where facial expression change is observed during the experiment. The majority of the head is blue, but the ears, nose and lower jaw are indigo through read, indicating that these areas are show the most changes. Illustration by Yu Ohmura.
An illustration of the facial expression changes in mice following stimulation and inhibition of the median raphe nucleus (Yu Ohmura).

New insights into the opposing actions of serotonin-producing nerve fibres in mice could lead to drugs for treating addictions and major depression.

Scientists in Japan have identified a nerve pathway involved in the processing of rewarding and distressing stimuli and situations in mice.

The new pathway, originating in a bundle of brain stem nerve fibres called the median raphe nucleus, acts in opposition to a previously identified reward/aversion pathway that originates in the nearby dorsal raphe nucleus...

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Spray-on Smart Skin uses AI to Rapidly Understand Hand Tasks

Spray-on smart skin uses AI to rapidly understand hand tasks
Spray-on sensory system which consists of printed, bio-compatible nanomesh directly connected with wireless Bluetooth module and further trained through meta-learning. Credit: Kyun Kyu “Richard” Kim, Bao Group, Stanford U.

A new smart skin developed at Stanford University might foretell a day when people type on invisible keyboards, identify objects by touch alone, or allow users to communicate by hand gestures with apps in immersive environments.

In a just-publish paper in the journal Nature Electronics the researchers describe a new type of stretchable biocompatible material that gets sprayed on the back of the hand, like suntan spray...

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