Category Health/Medical

New Protein discovered in Aging, Cancer

ITGB3 (integrin β3) is regulated by the Polycomb protein CBX7 •β3 regulates senescence by activating TGF-β in a paracrine and autocrine fashion •β3 is highly expressed in OIS and induces senescence via ligand-independent pathway •There is a positive correlation between β3 levels and aging in different tissues

ITGB3 (integrin β3) is regulated by the Polycomb protein CBX7 •β3 regulates senescence by activating TGF-β in a paracrine and autocrine fashion •β3 is highly expressed in OIS and induces senescence via ligand-independent pathway •There is a positive correlation between β3 levels and aging in different tissues

A protein has been found to have a previously unknown role in the aging of cells, according to an early study by Queen Mary University of London (QMUL). The researchers hope that the findings could one day lead to new treatments for aging and early cancer. A number of ‘abnormal’ cells have previously been found in tissues derived from old patients and at the initial stages of cancer...

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Boosting your own Defenses against Heart Disease

ATF6 is protective in the heart; it is expressed at high levels in the young heart, and low levels in the aged heart. Gene therapy studies that were done in the Glembotski lab at the SDSU Heart Institute have shown that restoring ATF6 in the aged mouse heart to levels in the young heart provides remarkable protection against heart disease, and could pave the way for development of this therapy for use in humans in the near future. Credit: Chris Glembotski

ATF6 is protective in the heart; it is expressed at high levels in the young heart, and low levels in the aged heart. Gene therapy studies that were done in the Glembotski lab at the SDSU Heart Institute have shown that restoring ATF6 in the aged mouse heart to levels in the young heart provides remarkable protection against heart disease, and could pave the way for development of this therapy for use in humans in the near future. Credit: Chris Glembotski

A protein found in the heart that is known to be involved in cellular stress responses in cancer cells is now believed to play a critical role in the ability of cardiac cells to combat heart disease and recover from a heart attack...

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10 Million Lives Saved by 1962 Breakthrough, study says

S. J. Olshansky, L. Hayflick. The Role of the WI-38 Cell Strain in Saving Lives and Reducing Morbidity. AIMS Public Health, 2017; 4 (2): 127 DOI: 10.3934/publichealth.2017.2.127 Credit: National Cancer Institute

S. J. Olshansky, L. Hayflick. The Role of the WI-38 Cell Strain in Saving Lives and Reducing Morbidity. AIMS Public Health, 2017; 4 (2): 127 DOI: 10.3934/publichealth.2017.2.127 Credit: National Cancer Institute

Nearly 200 million cases of polio, measles, mumps, rubella, varicella, adenovirus, rabies and hepatitis A – and ~450,000 deaths from these diseases – were prevented in the U.S. alone between 1963 and 2015 by vaccination. The study is published in AIMS Public Health. In 1963, vaccination against these infections became widespread, thanks to the development of a human cell strain that allowed vaccines to be produced safely. Globally, the vaccines developed from this strain and its derivatives prevented an ~4.5 billion cases of disease and saved more than 10 million lives.

Author S...

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Link between Microbiome in the Gut, Parkinson’s discovered

Parkinson's disease and Parkinson's disease medications have distinct signatures of the gut microbiome. Movement Disorders, 2017; DOI: 10.1002/mds.26942

Parkinson’s disease and Parkinson’s disease medications have distinct signatures of the gut microbiome. Movement Disorders, 2017; DOI: 10.1002/mds.26942

A new study from researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham shows that Parkinson’s disease, and medications to treat Parkinson’s, have distinct effects on the composition of the trillions of bacteria that make up the gut microbiome. At this point, researchers do not know which comes first. Does having Parkinson’s cause changes in an individual’s gut microbiome, or are changes in the microbiome a predictor or early warning sign of Parkinson’s? What is known is that the first signs of Parkinson’s often arise as gastrointestinal symptoms such as inflammation or constipation.

“The human gut hosts tens of trillions of microorganisms...

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