Category Biology/Biotechnology

Neuroprotective Mechanism Altered by Alzheimer’s Disease Risk Genes

Researchers have discovered that gene variants associated with risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease disturb the brain’s natural protective mechanism against the condition.

The brain has a natural protective mechanism against Alzheimer’s disease, and researchers at Baylor College of Medicine, Texas Children’s Hospital and collaborating institutions have discovered that gene variants associated with risk of developing the disease disturb the protective mechanism in ways that can lead to neurodegeneration. The researchers also showed in a fruit fly model of the condition that a chemical known as ABCA1 agonist can restore certain alterations of the brain protective mechanism.

The team reveals evidence supporting reactive oxygen species (ROS), natural byproducts of cellular metabol...

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Parkinson’s Protein Blueprint could help Fast-track New Treatments

Microscopy image showing Parkin (cyan)
accumulating at the mitochondrial membrane
(magenta). PINK1 recruits Parkin to help
repair damaged mitochondria.

Researchers have solved a decade-long mystery about a critical protein linked to Parkinson’s disease that could help to fast-track treatments for the incurable disease.

The research, published in Nature, has for the first time produced a ‘live action’ view of the protein, called PINK1, in exquisite molecular detail. The discovery explains how the protein is activated in the cell, where it is responsible for initiating the removal and replacement of damaged mitochondria...

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Smart Sutures to Monitor Deep Surgical Wounds


Surgical sutures with an attached electronic module for wireless and battery-free monitoring of deep surgical sites

Monitoring surgical wounds after an operation is an important step to prevent infection, wound separation and other complications. However, when the surgical site is deep in the body, monitoring is normally limited to clinical observations or costly radiological investigations that often fail to detect complications before they become life-threatening.

Hard bioelectronic sensors can be implanted in the body for continuous monitoring, but may not integrate well with sensitive wound tissue...

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COVID-19 Can Trigger Self-Attacking Antibodies

Photo by Getty Images.
An illustration of antibodies (Y-shaped) responding to SARS-CoV-2 (orange), the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19.

Infection with the virus that causes COVID-19 can trigger an immune response that lasts well beyond the initial infection and recovery—even among people who had mild symptoms or no symptoms at all, according to Cedars-Sinai investigators. The findings are published in the Journal of Translational Medicine.

When people are infected with a virus or other pathogen, their bodies unleash proteins called antibodies that detect foreign substances and keep them from invading cells. In some cases, however, people produce autoantibodies that can attack the body’s own organs and tissues over time.

The Cedars-Sinai investigators found that people w...

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