WHAT'S HOT:
Secret to naked mole rats' long, healthy life discovered
May 11, 4:43 pm
Washington, May 11 (ANI): Scientists have found a clue that possibly makes naked mole rats live longer and healthy life.The typical East African rodent live 25 to 30 years, during which it shows little decline in activity, bone health, reproductive capacity and cognitive ability. From infancy to old age, naked mole rats are blessed with large amounts of a protein essential for normal brain function
, according to the team from the United States and Israel. "Naked mole rats have the highest level of a growth factor called NRG-1 in the cerebellum. Its levels are sustained throughout their life, from development through adulthood," said Yael Edrey, doctoral student at The University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio's Barshop Institute for Longevity and Aging Studies.Edrey is the lead author of research that compared lifelong NRG-1 levels across seven species of rodents, from mice and guinea pigs to blind mole rats and Damaraland mole rats. NRG-1 levels were monitored in
naked mole rats at different ages ranging from 1 day to 26 years. The other six rodent species have maximum life spans of three to 19 years.The cerebellum coordinates movements and maintains bodily equilibrium. The research team hypothesized that long-lived species would maintain higher levels of NRG-1 in this region of the brain, with simultaneous healthy activity levels. Among each of the species, the longest-lived members exhibited the highest lifelong levels of NRG-1. The naked mole rat had the most robust and enduring supply. "In both mice and in humans, NRG-1 levels go down with age," Edrey said. Researchers have documented various characteristics of naked mole rat physiology, revealing the integrity of proteins in the liver, kidney and muscle. This is the first set of data evaluating species' differences in a key factor involved in maintaining the integrity of the rodent's brain. "The strong correlation between this protective brain factor and maximum life span highlights a new focus for aging research, further supporting earlier findings that it is not the amount of oxidative damage an organism encounters that determines species life span but rather that the protective mechanisms may be more important," said senior author Rochelle Buffenstein, Ph.D., professor of physiology and cellular and structural biology at the Barshop Institute. She is Edrey's research mentor.The finding, while not directly applicable to humans, has many implications for NRG-1's role in maintaining neuron integrity.The study has been described in an issue of Aging Cell. (ANI)
Boy's stem cells successfully treat cerebral palsy
May 24, 3:53 pm
Washington, May 24 (ANI): Doctors have been able to successfully treat a 2.5-year-old boy who had suffered from cardiac arrest and brain damage, putting him in a vegetative state, using his own cord blood containing stem cells.
Full Story »
Anti-cancer drug reverses Alzheimer's disease deficits in mice
May 24, 3:53 pm
Washington, May 24 (ANI): An anti-cancer drug has been found to reverse memory deficits in mice suffering from Alzheimer's.
Full Story »
Breast cancer cells release protective proteins that suppress tumour growth
May 24, 3:18 pm
Washington, May 24 (ANI): University of East Anglia scientists have made a breakthrough in breast cancer research which shows how some enzymes released by cancerous cells could have a protective function.
Full Story »
Ability to filter visual motion can predict IQ
May 24, 3:18 pm
Washington, May 24 (ANI): Researchers at the University of Rochester have found that a simple visual task can predict IQ
Full Story »
Comments
LATEST STORIES
-
950628
- Narcissists woo women more easily
- Cockroaches outsmart sugar traps
- Secrets behind itching revealed
- Discovery of Arctic bacterium offers clues to possible life on Mars
- Professor Stephen Hawking set to star in comic book series
- Earth's mantle affects long-term sea-level rise estimates
- Way to make cancer cells more responsive to chemotherapy identified
- Top 10 newly discovered species revealed
- Mystery behind white tiger solved
- Depression symptoms of Huntington's disease prevented in mice
TOP VIDEO STORIES
PHOTO GALLERY
- HOME
- NATIONAL
- WORLD
- SPORTS
- ENTERTAINMENT
- LIFESTYLE
- HEALTH
- SCIENCE
- TECH
- WORK
- SPACE
- ABOUT US
- PRIVACY POLICY
- CONTACT US
- ADVERTISE WITH US
- FEEDBACK
- SITEMAP
Copyright © 2010 aninews.in All rights reserved.
RSS




