Category Archives: Neuroscience

War’s Toll on the Brain: Widespread PTSD and Anxiety Among Ukrainians – Neuroscience News

Summary: A new study reveals severe mental health impacts among displaced Ukrainians due to the ongoing conflict with Russia. Surveying over 8,000 individuals, researchers found widespread PTSD, anxiety, and flashbacks, particularly among those still in Ukraine, highlighting the compounded mental strain of war and displacement.

Nearly 70% of participants reported experiencing anxiety, with a significant correlation between blast exposure and PTSD symptoms. This research underscores the urgent need for prioritizing mental health support in humanitarian efforts for both refugees and those displaced within Ukraine.

Key Facts:

Source: PLOS

Researchers from the International Blast Injury Research Network at the University of Southampton conducted a survey to understand how the mental health of displaced Ukrainians has been affected by the ongoing war.

Their findings, published in PLOS Global Public Health, describe high levels of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and generalized anxiety among both refugees and people displaced within Ukraine.

Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine began in February 2022, at least 13 million people have been displaced from their homes. Both exposure to war and displacementspecifically loss of community, housing and economic resourcesaffect mental health. These impacts tend to be magnified among the elderly, those caring for children, and otherwise vulnerable populations.

Between April and July of 2022, the researchers surveyed over 8,000 participants, all of whom were either refugees or people displaced within Ukraine. The participants answered questions about their current circumstances, their mental health, and their exposures to blastsexplosions caused by bombs or other military actions.

Nearly 8 out of 10 participants who remained in Ukraine and more than half of refugees reported blast exposure. Almost 70 percent of all survey participants reported anxiety, with people remaining in Ukraine reporting higher anxiety and more frequent flashbacks to traumatic events compared to refugees.

Flashbacks are a symptom of PTSD and can range from fleeting, intrusive memories to minutes-long episodes where a person feels they are reliving the traumatic eventsin this study, the frequency of flashbacks was correlated to blast exposure.

Overall, this study suggests displaced people remaining in Ukraine face poorer mental health outcomes compared to refugees, likely because of their ongoing exposure to war.

However, refugees still face considerable mental health challenges. The researchers emphasize, Mental health and psychosocial support must be prioritized within humanitarian relief.

The authors add: Exposure to blast events can be incredibly distressing. Our survey of 8300 Ukrainian respondents show that almost 70% reported witnessing a blast event during the first 4 months of Russias full-scale invasion in 2022. Most worryingly, many respondents who were blast-exposed reported adverse mental health outcomes, including symptoms of PTSD.

Funding:This research was funded by small grants kindly provided from Public Policy@Southampton (MH, KB, BPH), the Clinical Informatics Research Unit, University of Southampton (KB, MH), and the ESRC Centre for Population Change (BPH). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of this manuscript.

Author: Charlotte Bhaskar Source: PLOS Contact: Charlotte Bhaskar PLOS Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: Open access. Effects of blast exposure on anxiety and symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among displaced Ukrainian populations by Ken Brackstone et al. PLOS Global Public Health

Abstract

Effects of blast exposure on anxiety and symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among displaced Ukrainian populations

Generalized anxiety and symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are common among individuals forcibly displaced during war and conflict. Blast exposure may be one important contributor of such symptoms.

The aims of this study were to provide data on blast-related experiences of internally displaced persons (IDPs) and refugees following Russias invasion of Ukraine, and to assess the influence of blast exposure on generalized anxiety, and PTSD flashbacks and nightmares.

An online health needs survey was distributed to Ukrainian IDPs and refugees between April and July 2022 using Facebook Ads Manager. Participants reported whether they experienced blast exposure since the beginning of the invasion, and whether they took medication for a mental health condition before the war started.

Finally, they completed measures of generalized anxiety (GAD-2), and PTSD flashbacks and nightmares. Analyses included 3253 IDPs and 5073 refugees (N= 8326). Results revealed that 67.6% of total participants 79.9% of IDPs and 61.7% of refugeesreported blast exposure since Russias invasion.

Further, 69.1% (95% CI: 68.05, 70.15) of total participants met the cut-off for generalized anxiety in which further diagnostic evaluation was warranted. Compared to refugees, IDPs reported higher generalized anxiety and greater frequency of PTSD symptoms, specifically flashbacks and nightmares.

Further analyses revealed that the impact of blast exposure on flashback frequency was stronger among IDPs compared to refugees ( = 0.51;t(8322) = 11.88,p< .0001, 95% CI: 0.43, 0.60) and among participants with pre-existing mental health conditions compared to those without ( = 0.18;t(8157) = 2.50,p= .013, 95% CI: 0.04, 0.33).

Mental health and psychosocial support must be prioritised within humanitarian relief for both IDPs and refugees and especially among people with underlying mental health conditions.

Original post:
War's Toll on the Brain: Widespread PTSD and Anxiety Among Ukrainians - Neuroscience News

Paints and Pesticides Linked to ALS Risk – Neuroscience News

Summary: A new study reveals a possible link between storing chemicals in home garages and an increased risk of developing amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Researchers identified significant associations between ALS risk and the residential storage of volatile chemicals such as pesticides, gasoline, and paint.

The studys findings underscore the importance of the ALS exposomea concept describing the cumulative exposure to environmental toxins linked to ALS. Insights from the study suggest interventions to minimize exposure and potentially reduce ALS risk by modifying storage practices in homes.

Key Facts:

Source: University of Michigan

Over the last decade, researchers at University of Michigan continue to find that exposure to environmental toxins from pesticides used in agriculture to volatile organic compounds in themanufacturing industry is linked to the development of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS.

The buildup of exposures, which researchers call the ALS exposome, is possibly associated with recreational activities such as woodworking and gardening.

Now, a Michigan Medicine study finds thatstoring chemicals in a garage at home may associate with an increased risk of ALS.

The results are published inAmyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis and Frontotemporal Degeneration.

Identifying disease-provoking exposures can inform and motivate interventions to reduce exposure, risk and, ultimately, the ALS burden, said first authorStephen Goutman, M.D., M.S., director of thePranger ALS Clinicand associate director of theALS Center of Excellence at University of Michigan.

Exposures in the home setting are an important part of the ALS exposome, as it is one place where behavior modifications could possibly lessen ALS risk.

Storage containing volatile chemicals in garages is extremely common, whether its in a car or motorcycle, equipment like a chainsaw, or solvents, cleaners, paints and other items.

Investigators assessed exposures in the residential setting from a survey of more than 600 participants both with and without ALS. Through statistical analysis, they found that the storage of chemicals including gasoline and gasoline powered equipment, lawn care products, pesticides, paint and woodworking supplies were significantly associated with ALS risk.

All of the reported chemicals linked to disease development were volatile with toxic components. Most participants reported storing several of the items in their attached garage.

Storing chemicals in a detached garage, however, did not show as strong of an association with risk.

Researchers say the flow of air and airborne pollutants from attached garages to the living space may explain the finding.

Especially in colder climates, air in the garage tends to rush into the house when the entry door is opened, and air flows occur more or less continuously through small cracks and openings in walls and floors, said Stuart Batterman, Ph.D., senior author and professor of environmental health science at the U-M School of Public Health.

Thus, it makes sense that keeping volatile chemicals in an attached garage shows the stronger effect.

The latest building codes, Batterman notes, tackle this problem by specifying measures to reduce or eliminate these air flows.

We are beginning to see risk factors across multiple settings that may associate with a greater ALS risk; we also see some relationships across the studies, for example, woodworking and woodworking supplies and gardening and lawn care supplies, Goutman said.

This begs the question: is it the activities that associate with ALS risk or the exposures to related products? This requires further research.

In 2016, the research team found that people with ALS hadhigher concentrations of pesticides in their bloodcompared to people without the condition.

A subsequent study published in 2019 linked organochlorine pesticides and polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBS, to worsening survival for ALS.

With each study, we better understand the types of exposures that increase the risk of developing ALS, said seniorauthor Eva Feldman, M.D., Ph.D.,director of the ALS Center of Excellence at U-M and James W. Albers Distinguished University Professor at U-M.

We now need to build on these discoveries to understand how these exposures increase ALS risk. In parallel, we must continue to advocate to make ALS a reportable disease. Only then we will fully understand the array of exposures that increase disease risk.

Studies to understand how environmental exposures contribute to the development of ALS and other neurodegenerative diseases, both of peoplewithandwithoutfamily history of the condition, are underway.

Additional authors:Include Jonathan Boss, Ph.D., Dae Gyu Jang, Ph.D., Caroline Piecuch, Hasan Farid, Madeleine Batra, Bhramar Mukherjee, Ph.D all of University of Michigan.

Funding:This study was supported by the National Institutes of Health, The National ALS Registry/CDC/ATSDR, the ALS Association, the NeuroNetwork for Emerging Therapies, the Robert and Katherine Jacobs Environmental Health Initiative, the NeuroNetwork Therapeutic Discovery Fund, the Peter R. Clark Fund for ALS Research, theSinai Medical Staff Foundation, Scott L. Pranger, and theUniversity of Michigan.

Author: Noah Fromson Source: University of Michigan Contact: Noah Fromson University of Michigan Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: Closed access. Residential exposure associations with ALS risk, survival, and phenotype: a Michigan-based case-control study by Stephen Goutman et al. Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis and Frontotemporal Degeneration

Abstract

Residential exposure associations with ALS risk, survival, and phenotype: a Michigan-based case-control study

Background: Environmental exposures impact amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) risk and progression, a fatal and progressive neurodegenerative disease. Better characterization of these exposures is needed to decrease disease burden.

Objective: To identify exposures in the residential setting that associate with ALS risk, survival, and onset segment.

Methods: ALS and control participants recruited from University of Michigan completed a survey that ascertained exposure risks in the residential setting. ALS risk was assessed using logistic regression models followed by latent profile analysis to consider exposure profiles. A case-only analysis considered the contribution of the residential exposure variables via a Cox proportional hazards model for survival outcomes and multinomial logistic regression for onset segment, a polytomous outcome.

Results: This study included 367 ALS and 255 control participants. Twelve residential variables were associated with ALS risk after correcting for multiple comparison testing, with storage in an attached garage of chemical products including gasoline or kerosene (odds ratio (OR)=1.14,padjusted<0.001), gasoline-powered equipment (OR = 1.16,padjusted<0.001), and lawn care products (OR = 1.15,padjusted<0.001) representing the top three risk factors sorted byadjusted.

Latent profile analysis indicated that storage of these chemical products in both attached and detached garages increased ALS risk. Although residential variables were not associated with poorer ALS survival following multiple testing corrections, storing pesticides, lawn care products, and woodworking supplies in the home were associated with shorter ALS survival using nominalpvalues. No exposures were associated with ALS onset segment.

Conclusion: Residential exposures may be important modifiable components of the ALS susceptibility and prognosis exposome.

Original post:
Paints and Pesticides Linked to ALS Risk - Neuroscience News

AI STORIES: A New Vision for AI and Narratives – Neuroscience News

Summary: Researchers embark on the AI STORIES project to explore AI-generated narratives and their cultural impacts. The study aims to delve into how large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT interpret and produce stories, challenging the notion that AI merely mimics human language without understanding.

By comparing Scandinavian, Australian, and Indian or Nigerian narratives to dominant American stories, the project seeks to prevent the homogenization of global narratives by AI. The researchers advocate for a new narratology in AI development, emphasizing the importance of narrative theory in shaping ethical and diverse AI technologies.

Key Facts:

Source: University of Bergen

ProfessorJill Walker Rettberg, Co-Director of the Centre for Digital Narrative at the University of Bergen, is awarded an ERC Advanced Grant for the project AI STORIES. The grant consists of 2.5 million Euro over 5 years. This is Rettbergs second ERC Grant.

The AI STORIES project builds on the premise that storytelling is central to human culture, with narratives shaping our understanding of the world. We will study artificial intelligence and how it creates new narratives, says Rettberg.

Generative AI has been dubbed a stochastic parrot, mimics of language patterns who doesnt really understand what they are saying. AI STORIES posits that the large language models (LLMs) which form the foundations for ChatGPT are more influenced by deep narrative structures than previously recognized. To manage AI bias, we need to consider the underlying narratives in the training data and not just proximity of words and images.

WhenMicrosofts AI chatbot expressed its love for a journalist in 2023, was it really in love? Most likely not. Generative AI is, after all, a statistical game, and not actual feelings. This new research will test the hypothesis that the AI said I love you because it is trained on so many of our sci-fi stories where AI gains conscience and human emotions.

Earlier Rettberg has talked about how AI can replace or homogenise stories from certain storytelling traditions, like the Norwegian childrens storyWhen the Robbers Came to Cardamom Town:

This story is more than a shared cultural reference it supports the Norwegian criminal justice systems priority of rehabilitation over punishment. It is distinct from Disney movies, with their unambiguous villains who are punished at the end, and from Hollywood bank heists and gangster movies that glorify criminals.

The project will conduct case studies on Scandinavian, Australian, and Indian or Nigerian narratives, contrasting them with the dominant American and English-speaking narratives in LLMs.

Generative AI might well bury stories likeCardamom Townby stuffing chatbot responses and search results worldwide with homogenized American narratives, says Rettberg.

I think what we need is a new narratology, to see how narrative theory shapes and can be used when we develop and use AI, says Rettberg.

The new narratology will inform policymakers, developers, and educators on the future direction of AI. Current LLMs has mainly been developed by computer scientists and linguists, but Rettberg posits that narratologists should perhaps be just as important to the AI future.

Rettberg and her colleagues will cooperate with developer industry and developer communities.

I congratulate Jill Walker Rettberg, who solidifies her position at the top of her field, demonstrating both quality and originality. Her achievements serve as an inspiration for others at UiB, says University of Bergens RectorMargareth Hagen.

With Rettbergs project, researchers at the University of Bergen have so far secured a total of 50 ERC grants spanning the period from 2010 to 2024.

Rettberg is among the 255 selected outstanding research leaders in Europe to receive this grant, according to a press release from the ERC.

The competition attracted 1,829 proposals which were reviewed by panels of internationally renowned researchers. The funding is amongst the EUs most prestigious and competitive, providing leading senior researchers with the opportunity to pursue ambitious, curiosity-driven projects that could lead to major scientific breakthroughs.

The new grants are part of the EUs Horizon Europe programme.

Prestigious research funding with applicants from all over the world. Awarded by theEuropean Research Council(ERC).

ERC Advanced Grants are awarded to established world-class researchers with up to2.5 million over 5 years.

Large language models are algorithmic foundations for generative AI chatbots like OpenAIs ChatGPT and Googles Bard. LLMs are fed vast datasets, including articles, books, and internet resources, with the goal of generating human-like responses to questions or prompts from the users.

Based on the training data it can be used to generate everything from wedding speeches to fact boxes to frameworks.

Generative AI has uses across a wide range of industries, but it also poses potential challenges and risks, such as cybercrime, the creation of fake news or deepfakes that can deceive or manipulate people.

AI STORIES is Professor Rettbergs second ERC Grant, the first was a ERC Consolidator Grant on the projectMachine Vision, which ended in 2023. She is also the Co-Director of the Center for Digital Narrative.

Author: shild Nylund Source: University of Bergen Contact: shild Nylund University of Bergen Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Read more here:
AI STORIES: A New Vision for AI and Narratives - Neuroscience News

Neuroscience Breakthrough Unveils How We Learn and Remember – SciTechDaily

New findings in memory research reveal the role of dendritic translation in learning, identifying thousands of micropeptides and key regulatory proteins, offering insights into intellectual disabilities and broader neurological functions. Credit: SciTechDaily.com

Activity taking place within the dendrites that branch off of neuron cell bodies is key to memory formation.

Less than twenty minutes after finishing this article, your brain will begin to store the information that youve just read in a coordinated burst of neuronal activity. Underpinning this process is a phenomenon known as dendritic translation, which involves an uptick in localized protein production within dendrites, the spiny branches that project off the neuron cell body and receive signals from other neurons at synapses. Its a process key to memoryand its dysfunction is linked to intellectual disorders.

That makes the inner workings of dendritic translation a holy grail for understanding memory formation, says Rockefellers Robert B. Darnell, whose team just published a study in Nature Neuroscience describing a new platform capable of identifying the specific regulatory mechanisms that drive dendritic translation. The team leveraged a method, dubbed TurboID, to discover an entire suite of previously unknown factors in memory formation, revealing now mechanisms that underlie how protein synthesis in dendrites contributes to learning and memory. The findings may also have implications for intellectual disabilities, such as Fragile X syndrome.

Technological limitations have long prevented a comprehensive inventory of the activity at the synapse involved in memory formation, says lead author Ezgi Hacisuleyman, who conducted the research as a postdoctoral researcher in Darnells laboratory. She is now an assistant professor at The Herbert Wertheim UF Scripps Institute for Biomedical Innovation & Technology. Our new techniques can accomplish this with extremely high resolution to look at neurons in vitro that are closely mimicking what we see in the brain.

Hacisuleymans work defines a whole new biochemical pathway which fits with, complements, and vastly expands what we already knew about memory and learning, adds Darnell, the Robert and Harriet Heilbrunn professor.

Memory formation centers around the hippocampus, a brain region so central to learning that, when surgeons removed it from people with epilepsy in the 1940s, the patients remembered their childhoods but lost the ability to form new memories. It has since become clear that memories form, in part, because of new protein synthesis made locally in the dendrites of the hippocampus.

Darnell, a physician-scientist, observed the importance of dendritic translation firsthand while working with patients whose immune systems had attacked the hippocampus. I would talk to a patient for 30 minutes, leave the room, walk back in, and it was like they had never seen me before, he says. Thats when I began focusing on why neurons of the hippocampus have their own system for regulating RNA metabolisma system that no other cell in the body uses.

That system, it turns out, lies at the heart of how our brains form memories and learn new information, and became a focus for the Darnell lab, culminating in his teams 2003 development of CLIP, a method that allowed researchers to study the proteins that bind and influence RNA. But limitations remained. Many details about how neurons respond to stimuli at the dendrites were still missing, Hacisuleyman says. We needed that information, because that plays a role in determining how neurons functionand where things often go awry in neurologic disease.

To get a better idea of the role that changes in dendrites play in learning, Hacisuleyman extended the TurboID platform to works in concert with RNA-sequencing, CLIP, translation and protein analysis. The platform allowed the team to track activity in dendrites before, during, and several minutes after the neuron activates, capturing the moments critical to protein synthesis in the cell and, more importantly, the stage considered key to memory formation.

An analysis of these crucial moments revealed a microscopic upheaval in the dendrite. Upon activation, local ribosomes jump onto mRNAs, an action that has all the biochemical hallmarks of memory formation, and which models predicted will cause the dendrite to produce not only new proteins, but 1,000 small proteins known as micropeptides, with as-yet unknown function. The team also identified an RNA-binding protein that helps seal the connection between these ribosomes and mRNA, and demonstrated that if that protein is disabled, the proposed micropeptides and their associated downstream proteins will not form.

We never knew these micropeptides might even exist, Darnell says. It opens a new field of study, where we can ask what these peptides might be doing and how they could play into memory formation. Its such a vast discovery that there are dozens if not hundreds of avenues in which to pursue this.

Among the many observations that researchers will unpack in future studies, one stood out: the team noted that a certain protein stood out for its prolific binding of mRNA in the dendrite. The protein, called FMRP, is key to brain development and function, and genetic mutations that adversely impact FMRP contribute to Fragile X syndrome, one of the most common genetic causes of intellectual disability. Our findings fit nicely with the molecular biology of FMRP, and also open the door to future insights into what is going wrong in Fragile X, Darnell says.

Beyond the papers immediate findings, dendritic-TurboID could also allow researchers to examine RNA regulation and protein synthesis in other brain regions and apply the findings to different diseases. We can now begin to look at many other sites with a fine-toothed comb, Hacisuleyman says.

When you develop a new technique as Hacisuleyman did, you enter a room that nobody has ever been in before, Darnell adds. The light turns on, and the findings just take your breath away.

Reference: Neuronal activity rapidly reprograms dendritic translation via eIF4G2:uORF binding by Ezgi Hacisuleyman, Caryn R. Hale, Natalie Noble, Ji-dung Luo, John J. Fak, Misa Saito, Jin Chen, Jonathan S. Weissman and Robert B. Darnell, 8 April 2024, Nature Neuroscience. DOI: 10.1038/s41593-024-01615-5

Go here to read the rest:
Neuroscience Breakthrough Unveils How We Learn and Remember - SciTechDaily

Pregnancy’s Toll: Accelerated Aging in Young Mothers – Neuroscience News

Summary: Pregnancy may accelerate biological aging in women. Utilizing advanced epigenetic clocks to measure DNA methylation, researchers compared the biological age of women with varying numbers of pregnancies against those who had never been pregnant, revealing that increased pregnancies correlate with signs of accelerated aging.

This effect was not observed in men, suggesting a unique biological cost associated with pregnancy and possibly breastfeeding. The findings, which highlight a significant gap in our understanding of the reproductive costs on womens health, point to the urgent need for supportive measures for young mothers, especially in contexts of limited resources.

Key Facts:

Source: Columbia University

Pregnancy may carry a cost, reports a new study from the Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health.

The research, carried out among 1735 young people in the Philippines, shows that women who reported having been pregnant looked biologically older than women who had never been pregnant, and women who had been pregnant more often looked biologically older than those who reported fewer pregnancies.

Notably, the number of pregnancies fathered was not associated with biological aging among same-aged cohort men, which implies that it is something about pregnancy or breastfeeding specifically that accelerates biological aging.

The findings are published inThe Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences.

This study builds on epidemiological findings that high fertility can have negative side effects on womens health and longevity. What was unknown, however, was whether the costs of reproduction were present earlier in life, before disease and age-related decline start to become apparent.

Until now, one of the challenges has been quantifying biological aging among the young. This challenge was overcome by using a collection of new tools that use DNA methylation (DNAm) to study different facets of cellular aging, health, and mortality risk. These tools, called epigenetic clocks allow researchers to study aging earlier in life, filling a key gap in the study of biological aging.

Epigenetic clocks have revolutionized how we study biological aging across the lifecourse and open up new opportunities to study how and when long-term health costs of reproduction and other life events take hold, said Calen Ryan PhD, lead author of the study and associate research scientist in the Columbia Aging Center.

Our findings suggest that pregnancy speeds up biological aging, and that these effects are apparent in young, high-fertility women, said Ryan.

Our results are also the first to follow the same women through time, linking changes in each womans pregnancy number to changes in her biological age.

The relationship between pregnancy history and biological age persisted even after taking into account various other factors tied to biological aging, such as socioeconomic status, smoking, and genetic variation, but were not present among men from the same sample.

This finding, noted Ryan, points to some aspect of bearing children rather than sociocultural factors associated with early fertility or sexual activity as a driver of biological aging.

Despite the striking nature of the findings, Ryan encourages readers to remember the context: Many of the reported pregnancies in our baseline measure occurred during late adolescence, when women are still growing.

We expect this kind of pregnancy to be particularly challenging for a growing mother, especially if her access to healthcare, resources, or other forms of support is limited.

Ryan also acknowledged that there is more work to do, We still have a lot to learn about the role of pregnancy and other aspects of reproduction in the aging process. We also do not know the extent to which accelerated epigenetic aging in these particular individuals will manifest as poor health or mortality decades later in life.

Ryan said that our current understanding of epigenetic clocks and how they predict health and mortality comes largely from North America and Europe, but that the aging process can take slightly different forms in the Philippines and other places around the world.

Ultimately I think our findings highlight the potential long-term impacts of pregnancy on womens health, and the importance of taking care of new parents, especially young mothers.

Co-authors are Christopher Kuzawa, Northwestern University, Nanette R. Lee and Delia B. Carba,USC-Office of Population Studies Foundation; Julie L. MacIsaac, David S. Lin, and Parmida Atashzay, University of British Columbia; Daniel BelskyColumbia Public Health and Columbia Aging Center; Michael S. Kobor, University of British Columbia, Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Centre for Molecular Medicine and Therapeutics.

Funding: The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health R01AG061006; National Science Foundation BCS 1751912; University of British Columbia UBC 60055724

Author: Stephanie Berger Source: Columbia University Contact: Stephanie Berger Columbia University Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: The findings will appear in PNAS

Continued here:
Pregnancy's Toll: Accelerated Aging in Young Mothers - Neuroscience News

Learning and Memory Formation’s Molecular Basis – Neuroscience News

Summary: Researchers developed a new platform to explore dendritic translations role in memory formation and its implications for intellectual disorders. By employing a novel method named TurboID, researchers uncovered a suite of previously unknown factors involved in memory-related protein synthesis within dendrites, shedding light on the molecular mechanisms that could underlie conditions like Fragile X syndrome.

This study marks a significant advance in understanding how protein synthesis in dendrites contributes to learning and memory, potentially opening new pathways for treating neurodevelopmental disorders. The teams findings suggest that the localized production of proteins, including newly discovered micropeptides, within dendrites is crucial for memory formation, with implications for diseases characterized by memory impairment.

Key Facts:

Source: Rockefeller University

Less than twenty minutes after finishing this article, your brain will begin to store the information that youve just read in a coordinated burst of neuronal activity.

Underpinning this process is a phenomenon known as dendritic translation, which involves an uptick in localized protein production within dendrites, the spiny branches that project off the neuron cell body and receive signals from other neurons at synapses. Its a process key to memoryand its dysfunction is linked to intellectual disorders.

That makes the inner workings of dendritic translation a holy grail for understanding memory formation, says RockefellersRobert B. Darnell, whose team just publisheda study inNature Neurosciencedescribing a new platform capable of identifying the specific regulatory mechanisms that drive dendritic translation.

The team leveraged a method, dubbed TurboID, to discover an entire suite of previously unknown factors in memory formation, revealing now mechanisms that underlie how protein synthesis in dendrites contributes to learning and memory.

The findings may also have implications for intellectual disabilities, such as Fragile X syndrome.

Technological limitations have long prevented a comprehensive inventory of the activity at the synapse involved in memory formation, says lead author Ezgi Hacisuleyman, who conducted the research as a postdoctoral researcher in Darnells laboratory. She is now an assistant professor at The UF Scripps Institute.

Our new techniques can accomplish this with extremely high resolution to look at neurons in vitro that are closely mimicking what we see in the brain.

Hacisuleymans work defines a whole new biochemical pathway which fits with, complements, and vastly expands what we already knew about memory and learning, adds Darnell, the Robert and Harriet Heilbrunn professor.

A unique way to metabolize RNA

Memory formation centers around the hippocampus, a brain region so central to learning that, when surgeons removed it from people with epilepsy in the 1940s, the patients remembered their childhoods but lost the ability to form new memories.

It has since become clear that memories form, in part, because of new protein synthesis made locally in the dendrites of the hippocampus.

Darnell, a physician-scientist, observed the importance of dendritic translation firsthand while working with patients whose immune systems had attacked the hippocampus.

I would talk to a patient for 30 minutes, leave the room, walk back in, and it was like they had never seen me before, he says.

Thats when I began focusing on why neurons of the hippocampus have their own system for regulating RNA metabolisma system that no other cell in the body uses.

That system, it turns out, lies at the heart of how our brains form memories and learn new information, and became a focus for the Darnell lab, culminating in his teams 2003 development of CLIP, a method that allowed researchers to study the proteins that bind and influence RNA. But limitations remained.

Many details about how neurons respond to stimuli at the dendrites were still missing, Hacisuleyman says.

We needed that information, because that plays a role in determining how neurons functionand where things often go awry in neurologic disease.

1,000 micropeptides

To get a better idea of the role that changes in dendrites play in learning, Hacisuleyman extended the TurboID platform to works in concert with RNA-sequencing, CLIP, translation and protein analysis.

The platform allowed the team to track activity in dendrites before, during, and several minutes after the neuron activates, capturing the moments critical to protein synthesis in the cell and, more importantly, the stage considered key to memory formation.

An analysis of these crucial moments revealed a microscopic upheaval in the dendrite. Upon activation, local ribosomes jump onto mRNAs, an action that has all the biochemical hallmarks of memory formation, and which models predicted will cause the dendrite to produce not only new proteins, but 1,000 small proteins known as micropeptides, with as-yet unknown function.

The team also identified an RNA-binding protein that helps seal the connection between these ribosomes and mRNA, and demonstrated that if that protein is disabled, the proposed micropeptides will not form.

We never knew these micropeptides might even exist, Darnell says.

It opens a new field of study, where we can ask what these peptides might be doing and how they could play into memory formation. Its such a vast discovery that there are dozens if not hundreds of avenues in which to pursue this.

Among the many observations that researchers will unpack in future studies, one stood out: the team noted that a certain protein stood out for its prolific binding of mRNA in the dendrite.

The protein, called FMRP, is key to brain development and function, and genetic mutations that adversely impact FMRP contribute to Fragile X syndrome, one of the most common genetic causes of intellectual disability.

Our findings fit nicely with the molecular biology of FMRP, and also open the door to future insights into what is going wrong in Fragile X, Darnell says.

Beyond the papers immediate findings, dendritic-TurboID could also allow researchers to examine protein synthesis in other brain regions and apply the findings to different diseases.

We can now begin to look at many other sites with a fine-toothed comb, Hacisuleyman says.

When you develop a new technique as Hacisuleyman did, you enter a room that nobody has ever been in before, Darnell adds. The light turns on, and the findings just take your breath away.

Author: Katherine Fenz Source: Rockefeller University Contact: Katherine Fenz Rockefeller University Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: Open access. Neuronal activity rapidly reprograms dendritic translation via eIF4G2:uORF binding by Robert B. Darnell et al. Nature Neuroscience

Abstract

Neuronal activity rapidly reprograms dendritic translation via eIF4G2:uORF binding

Learning and memory require activity-induced changes in dendritic translation, but which mRNAs are involved and how they are regulated are unclear.

In this study, to monitor how depolarization impacts local dendritic biology, we employed a dendritically targeted proximity labeling approach followed by crosslinking immunoprecipitation, ribosome profiling and mass spectrometry.

Depolarization of primary cortical neurons with KCl or the glutamate agonist DHPG caused rapid reprogramming of dendritic protein expression, where changes in dendritic mRNAs and proteins are weakly correlated.

For a subset of pre-localized messages, depolarization increased the translation of upstream open reading frames (uORFs) and their downstream coding sequences, enabling localized production of proteins involved in long-term potentiation, cell signaling and energy metabolism.

This activity-dependent translation was accompanied by the phosphorylation and recruitment of the non-canonical translation initiation factor eIF4G2, and the translated uORFs were sufficient to confer depolarization-induced, eIF4G2-dependent translational control.

These studies uncovered an unanticipated mechanism by which activity-dependent uORF translational control by eIF4G2 couples activity to local dendritic remodeling.

Go here to read the rest:
Learning and Memory Formation's Molecular Basis - Neuroscience News

Acetaminophen in Pregnancy Not Linked to Autism, ADHD Risk – Neuroscience News

Summary: A comprehensive study involving over 2.4 million Swedish children has debunked the notion that acetaminophen use during pregnancy increases the risk of autism, ADHD, and intellectual disability in offspring. The research employed a novel sibling comparison method to eliminate confounding familial and environmental factors, revealing no increased risk of neurodevelopmental disorders among siblings exposed to acetaminophen prenatally versus those who were not.

This finding challenges previous reports linking acetaminophen with such risks and offers reassurance to expectant parents regarding the safety of this common pain reliever during pregnancy.

Key Facts:

Source: Drexel University

In the largest study to date on the subject, researchers found no evidence to support a causal link between acetaminophen use during pregnancy and increased risk of autism, ADHD and intellectual disability in children.

The findings, using data from a nationwide cohort of over 2.4 million children born in Sweden, including siblings not exposed to the drug before birth, were published today in the Journal of theAmerican Medical Association(JAMA) from researchers atDrexels Dornsife School of Public HealthandKarolinska Institutetof Sweden.

Advertised as a pain reliever and fever reducer, the generic drug acetaminophen is the active ingredient in Tylenol and is an ingredient in versions of other drugs, such as Theraflu, Excedrin, and Mucinex, among others.

Following each child up to 26 years after birth, the team found a small increased risk of autism, ADHD and intellectual disability in the overall population as seen in similar previous studies that reported such a link.

However, the authors found no increased risk of any of the conditions when comparing full siblings when one sibling was exposed to acetaminophen while in the uterus before birth and the other sibling was not.

Because siblings share a substantial portion of their genetic background, as well as similar exposure to many of the same environmental factors during development, comparing siblings helps to control for these shared factors that are otherwise hard to measure in epidemiological studies, the authors noted.

Users of acetaminophen differ from non-users in a number of ways and standard statistical analyses without a sibling control cant control for all of the differences, said co-senior authorBrian Lee, PhD, an associate professor in DrexelsDornsife School of Public Health, fellow at theA.J. Drexel Autism Institute, and research affiliate at the Karolinska Institutet.

Sibling comparisons allow us to control for familial characteristics that might explain an apparent relationship between acetaminophen use during pregnancy and risk of neurodevelopmental conditions.

Using data from Swedens national health and prescription drug registers, the researchers gathered data on medication use throughout pregnancy for births from 1995 to 2019.

Only about 7.5% of the study sample 185,909 children were exposed to acetaminophen during pregnancy. In previous studies, acetaminophen use during pregnancy varied greatly depending on the study setting; astudyin Denmark reported 6.2% use while onestudyin the U.S. reported 10-fold higher use.

Previous studies suggested that many pregnant people, who may benefit from acetaminophen, do not take it for fear of side effects, such as a2019 studythat surveyed 850 pregnant Swedish persons, in which more than 60% considered medication use during early pregnancy to be probably harmful or harmful.

This studys findings may be welcome news for birthing people who use acetaminophen as a pain or fever management option, since there are few safe alternatives for relief available, said co-senior authorRenee M. Gardner, PhD, of Swedens Karolinska Institutet.

We hope that our results provide reassurance to expectant parents when faced with the sometimes fraught decision of whether to take these medications during pregnancy when suffering from pain or fever.

The authors say all patients should follow the guidance from their physician on whether acetaminophen is safe for them and their future children.

The study authors said that the statistically increased risk of neurodevelopmental disorders in children exposed to acetaminophen in the womb is likely due to other factors.

Our study and others suggest there are many different health and familial factors that are associated with both acetaminophen use and neurodevelopmental disorders, said Lee. Genetics likely play a role, but future work to elucidate this mechanism is crucial.

In 2015, theU.S. Food and Drug Administrationsaid that studies on over-the-counter pain medicines are too limited to make any recommendations, but noted that severe and persistent pain that is not effectively treated during pregnancy can result in depression, anxiety, and high blood pressure in the mother.

A 2021consensus statement inNature Reviews Endocrinologyby an international group of scientists and clinicians recommended that pregnant individuals minimize exposure (to acetaminophen) by using the lowest effective dose for the shortest possible time due to research suggesting that prenatal exposure to the drug could increase the risk of neurodevelopmental and other disorders.

Although the Drexel and Karolinskastudy used data on prescribed acetaminophen and reports from pregnant people to their midwives during prenatal care and may not capture all over-the-counter use in all patients, the findings represent data from a large representative sample and controls for many other factors that may be linked to neurodevelopmental disorders.

Funding: The study was supported by National Institutes of Healths National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke 1R01NS107607. Beyond funding, NIH had no role in carrying out the study or interpretation of its findings. Lee has received consulting fees for literature reviews for law firms, but has provided no expert litigation, and no external parties had any role in the study.

Other than Gardner and Lee, other authors on the paper include shared lead authors Viktor H. Ahlqvist, PhD, and Hugo Sjqvist, Christina Dalman, MD, PhD, Hkan Karlsson, PhD, Olof Stephansson, MD, PhD, Stefan Johansson, MD, PhD, and Cecilia Magnusson, MD, PhD, all who hold academic appointments at the Karolinska Institutet.

Author: Greg Richter Source: Drexel University Contact: Greg Richter Drexel University Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: The findings will appear in JAMA

Continued here:
Acetaminophen in Pregnancy Not Linked to Autism, ADHD Risk - Neuroscience News

Childhood Loneliness Linked to Later Psychosis – Neuroscience News

Summary: Childhood loneliness significantly increases the likelihood of experiencing a psychotic episode later in life, particularly in women. Through an observational case-control study involving 285 first-episode psychosis patients and 261 controls, the research distinguished the effects of subjective loneliness from objective social isolation.

Key findings demonstrate that loneliness before age 12 doubles the risk of psychosis, with a notably stronger correlation in women. These insights emphasize the importance of early interventions targeting social connectedness to mitigate the risk of developing psychotic disorders.

Key Facts:

Source: European Psychiatric Association

A new study suggests that children who felt lonely for more than 6 months before the age of 12 are more likely to experience an episode of psychosis than children who did not, with women more affected than men.

Psychosis refers to a collection of symptoms that affect a persons mind, where there has been some loss of contact with reality.During an episode of psychosis, a person may have difficulty recognising what is real and what is not.

Symptoms of psychosis include hallucinations, delusions and confused thoughts.In some instances, psychosis may be a symptom of other mental health conditions, such as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or severe depression.

Symptoms of schizophrenia are often categorised as positive (any change in behaviour or thoughts, such as hallucinations or delusions), negative (where people appear to withdraw from the world around them).

Loneliness is defined as the subjective feeling of distress associated with a lack of meaningful relationships, regardless of the amount of social contact, whereas social isolation is defined as the objective lack of social contact or support.

In an observational, case-control study, researchers assessed loneliness in children with the question Have you ever felt lonely for more than 6 months before the age of 12 and differentiated this from social isolation by using the peer relationships item from the Premorbid Adjustment Scale.

The study sample comprised 285 patients who had experienced their first episode of psychosis and 261 controls.

Key findings from the study include:

Dr Covadonga Daz-Caneja of the Institute of Psychiatry and Mental Health, Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Maran, Madrid, Spain, saidThere is increasing evidence of the negative health and social consequences of loneliness in adults, but much less is known about the long-term effects of loneliness in young people.

Despite their preliminary nature, our results suggest that childhood loneliness may serve as an early risk factor for later psychotic disorders and support its role as a potential target for preventive mental health interventions from an early age.

This may be especially relevant considering that childhood loneliness is a prevalent phenomenon that appears to be increasing in recent years.

This study offers valuable insight into the association between childhood loneliness and first-episode psychosis. With the rise of digitalisation and social isolation, loneliness has become a pervasive issue affecting young individuals.

The compelling findings of this study, which establish a direct connection between childhood loneliness and the onset of psychosis, highlight a concerning trend and underscore the importance of addressing social connectedness and emotional well-being from an early age,said Professor Andrea Fiorillo, President Elect of the European Psychiatric Association.

Author: Sarah Carter Source: European Psychiatric Association Contact: Sarah Carter European Psychiatric Association Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: The findings will be presented at the 32nd European Congress of Psychiatry

Continued here:
Childhood Loneliness Linked to Later Psychosis - Neuroscience News

Vigil Neuroscience, Inc. (NASDAQ:VIGL) Expected to Post Q1 2024 Earnings of ($0.58) Per Share – Defense World

Vigil Neuroscience, Inc. (NASDAQ:VIGL Free Report) Research analysts at HC Wainwright issued their Q1 2024 earnings per share estimates for shares of Vigil Neuroscience in a research report issued on Wednesday, March 27th. HC Wainwright analyst A. Fein expects that the company will earn ($0.58) per share for the quarter. HC Wainwright has a Buy rating and a $24.00 price objective on the stock. The consensus estimate for Vigil Neurosciences current full-year earnings is ($2.56) per share. HC Wainwright also issued estimates for Vigil Neurosciences Q3 2024 earnings at ($0.58) EPS.

Separately, Morgan Stanley cut Vigil Neuroscience from an equal weight rating to an underweight rating and decreased their price objective for the company from $13.00 to $4.00 in a report on Tuesday, December 19th. One research analyst has rated the stock with a sell rating and four have given a buy rating to the stock. According to data from MarketBeat, the company presently has a consensus rating of Moderate Buy and an average price target of $17.40.

NASDAQ:VIGL opened at $3.41 on Thursday. The stocks fifty day moving average price is $3.06 and its two-hundred day moving average price is $4.32. Vigil Neuroscience has a 52-week low of $2.53 and a 52-week high of $11.11. The company has a market cap of $122.35 million, a price-to-earnings ratio of -1.60 and a beta of 1.80.

Several hedge funds have recently bought and sold shares of the company. Strs Ohio acquired a new stake in Vigil Neuroscience during the fourth quarter worth approximately $27,000. Royal Bank of Canada acquired a new stake in Vigil Neuroscience during the second quarter worth approximately $33,000. California State Teachers Retirement System acquired a new stake in Vigil Neuroscience during the second quarter worth approximately $50,000. Wells Fargo & Company MN lifted its position in Vigil Neuroscience by 6,988.4% during the second quarter. Wells Fargo & Company MN now owns 6,096 shares of the companys stock worth $57,000 after acquiring an additional 6,010 shares during the last quarter. Finally, MetLife Investment Management LLC acquired a new stake in Vigil Neuroscience during the second quarter worth approximately $86,000. 83.64% of the stock is currently owned by institutional investors and hedge funds.

(Get Free Report)

Vigil Neuroscience, Inc, a clinical-stage biotechnology company, focuses on developing treatments for rare and common neurodegenerative diseases by restoring the vigilance of microglia, the sentinel immune cells of the brain. Its lead candidate is VGL101, a human monoclonal antibody agonist targeting human triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 2 and is in a Phase 2 proof-of-concept trial in patients with adult-onset leukoencephalopathy with axonal spheroids and pigmented glia (ALSP), a rare and fatal neurodegenerative disease.

Receive News & Ratings for Vigil Neuroscience Daily - Enter your email address below to receive a concise daily summary of the latest news and analysts' ratings for Vigil Neuroscience and related companies with MarketBeat.com's FREE daily email newsletter.

See more here:
Vigil Neuroscience, Inc. (NASDAQ:VIGL) Expected to Post Q1 2024 Earnings of ($0.58) Per Share - Defense World

International Brain Research Organisation (IBRO) Diversity Grants 2024 Opportunity Desk – Opportunity Desk

Deadline: April 15, 2024

Applications are open for the International Brain Research Organisation (IBRO) Diversity Grants 2024. IBROs core values aim to serve the global neuroscience community through the promotion of diversity, equity, and inclusion in neuroscience research. In alignment with this vision, the IBRO Diversity Grants seek to support events that prioritize and foster regional and gender diversity in neuroscience. This program specifically targets neuroscience societies and other event organizers.

Applicants interested in applying to this funding program are encouraged to address the unique needs prevalent in their region and/or country. IBRO acknowledges the fact that cultural, socio-economic and infrastructural contexts shape the practice of neuroscience globally and encourages applicants to craft proposals tailored to address these unique diversity challenges.

Funds will be transferred according to an 80:20 format. This means that 80% of the grant will be awarded two months prior to the start date of the event, whereas the remaining 20% will be processed upon completion of the event and submission of the required grant report.

Grant

Eligibility

Application

Click here to apply

For more information, visit IBRO Diversity Grants.

Visit link:
International Brain Research Organisation (IBRO) Diversity Grants 2024 Opportunity Desk - Opportunity Desk