Sentences with phrase «recent mice studies»

Further, consider integrating meat prep using these TMAO mitigation strategies (shown in recent mice studies, April 2016 and Dec 2015).
Recent mouse studies have found that a stiffer extracellular matrix triggers the production of proteins that promote the growth of precancerous breast cancer cells.
A recent mouse study of a drug known as CTEP suggests the drug is surprisingly helpful for HD - like symptoms in mice.
In a recent mouse study, daily fasting flipped a genetic switch that strengthened the gut barrier against harmful bacteria, preventing the bad guys from escaping into the bloodstream to trigger an immune and inflammatory response.
Doctors know very little about polycystic ovarian syndrome, but a recent mouse study sheds light...
An article sent in by a reader claims that a recent mouse study has identified the perfect diet for everyone, but especially for older people: a high - carb, low - protein one.
Doctors know very little about polycystic ovarian syndrome, but a recent mouse study sheds light on a possible cause.

Not exact matches

A recent study assessing the oncogenic potential of capsaicin revealed that dermal application of capsaicin did not lead to the induction of preneoplastic or neoplastic skin lesions in the Tg.Ac mouse model (47).
A recent study showed that mice were better models when they were exposed to common human viruses.
A recent study in mice found just a single session of exercise before catching flu reduced disease severity, although regular exercise beforehand worked even better.
This scheme mimics a human scenario better than the recent study, which analyzed mice that express or lack APOE from birth.
The diabetes link makes sense, Melzer says, pointing to recent animal and cell studies finding that bisphenol A interferes with insulin production in mice.
A recent study published in Cell revealed that, while the related parasite Tritrichomonas musculis makes the intestine susceptible to both colitis and colorectal cancer, it induces an immune response that protects mice against Salmonella infection.
But recent studies in both humans and lab mice have suggested that motor neurons in the brain — the upper motor neurons — may be involved in disease progression, although the extent and significance of this involvement has remained unknown.
The team's recent study in mice has found that the treatment reduced the mass of ovarian cancer tumors and was more effective at suppressing tumor growth than chemotherapy.
In the more recent study, cellular changes began to reverse themselves when the mice's ears were unplugged.
Two recent studies — one in mice and another in humans — provide new evidence that a mind - numbingly complex array of genes influence body weight.
Research in recent years has covered both preclinical basic research and the transfer of the results generated from studies of mouse models to clinically applicable techniques for treating female infertility.
Chemicals found in a variety of routinely used consumer products may be contributing to the substantial drop in sperm counts and sperm quality among men in recent decades, a new study in mice suggests.
Four recent studies in mice, rats and monkeys suggest that a high - fat diet during pregnancy may have adverse effects on offspring, adding another item to the list of things moms - to - be might fret about.
Recent studies in mice have linked some fungicides to obesity.
In a recent study, researchers injected carbon nanotubes into kidney tumors in mice, and then directed a near - infrared laser at the tumors.
In the six - month study, which was published online in a recent edition of Biology of Reproduction, female mice were fed a control or a zinc - deficient diet for four to five days before ovulation.
In a recent study published in the December 15th issue of Human Molecular Genetics, Dr. Gangwani and his team of researchers at TTUHSC El Paso describe how mice with spinal muscular atrophy saw great improvement when the JNK3 enzyme was genetically inhibited to eliminate its activity.
In a recent study he provided evidence that the virus accidentally originated during mouse lab experiments.
The recent study follows a similar paper published earlier this month by developmental neurobiologist Jian Zuo, of St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee, who damaged sensory cells in live mice.
The drug has shown positive results in recent studies of mouse models of these diseases.
The study builds on recent work by Tyler Jacks, the director of the Koch Institute, who has also used CRISPR to generate lung and liver tumors in mice.
The reductions in hepatic lipid content and steatosis observed following WBV in male db / db mice in the current study are also consistent with a recent report in female db / db mice (45).
Some mice were anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital, a common anesthetic used for taste nerve recording (Horio et al., 2011) and used in a recent study on the possible role of 5 - HT1 and 5 - HT3 in taste function (Jaber et al., 2014).
In their recent study, the UCSF team reports the discovery that a class of commonly prescribed Type - 2 diabetes drugs, called TZDs (thiazolidinediones, such as Actos and Avandia), promoted the conversion of white fat cells into brown (in mice and culture dishes) by stabilizing the PRDM16 protein.
In recent years, researchers have developed so - called «senolytic» drugs that wipe out senescent cells in aging mice and mouse models of age - related disease, exploiting the high dependence of these cells on specific biochemical survival pathways.9, 10 In these studies, senolytic drugs have restored exercise capacity9 and formation of new blood and immune precursor cells11 in aging mice to near youthful norms, and prevented or treated mouse models of diseases of aging like osteoarthritis, 12 fibrotic lung disease, 13 hair loss, 14 atherosclerosis, 15,16 and age - related diseases of the heart itself.9 UNITY Biotechnology is leading a growing charge toward the clinic, with human clinical trials expected to begin in 2019.
A recent study found that the timing of the Neurospora biological clock is controlled by a feedback mechanism that is similar to the mechanism in flies and mice.
His most recent work, studying human skin tissues, confirms that these mouse models mimic the allergic immune response seen in humans.
In a recent study, researchers showed that this enzyme could reverse degeneration in mice.
Type I parasites are typically highly lethal in mice; however, the recent identification of ROP5 genes as the mediators of acute virulence and the generation of attenuated parasites lacking this locus [16], [17] permits long - term Type I infection studies in mice, perhaps due to a non-persistent infection following Immunity Related GTPase - mediated clearance.
Recent studies have been conducted that demonstrate how memory loss can be reversed (in mice) by simply interfering with the enzyme responsible for forming the blockade in the first place.
This is consistent with a recent animal study [9] but contradictory to a previous report showing FSHR and LHR mRNA expression in mouse oocytes and pre-implantation embryos [10].
Recent studies of various mouse strains showing «striking differences» in the repair of axons — the long, slender projections in nerve cells that conduct electrical impulses — could be applied to human cells «to identify biomarkers of central nervous system repair potential and provide new targets for intervention,» he says.
Another recent study from Xiao - Jiang Li's laboratory at Emory University used a similar (but not exactly the same) technique to remove huntingtin in mice at 2, 4, and 8 months of age.
Together with other recent studies on the same mouse populations, the new research provides one of the first known examples of a mammal adapting to urban habitats, said Harris.
Recent studies in mice suggested that antibodies produced by old individuals may be encoded by distinct immunoglobulin (Ig) genes and that the somatic hypermutation process in these individuals is compromised.
Recent studies have demonstrated that mouse ES cells can differentiate into female and male germ cells in vitro, thus producing ovarian follicle - like structures [1], [4] and testicular germ cells 2, 3.
In most cases, there was no evidence of dopaminergic cell death in the substantia nigra, with the exception of one of the more recent studies that observed it in a subset of DJ - 1 − / − mice (Rousseaux et al., 2012).
Many studies in mouse models, and more recent research among human populations as well, have correlated differences in gut microbe populations with risks of developing the autoimmune condition.
Recent projects include a study of mice that develop compulsive grooming behavior thought to model aspects of human obsessive compulsive and related disorders.
Our recent study has demonstrated that peripheral amylin treatment reduces the amyloid pathology in the brain of Alzheimer's disease (AD) mouse models, and improves their learning and memory.
Three recent experimental studies focused on low consumption / exposure.949596 In one study, 29 smokers each consumed a single cigarette, immediately after which they had a significant decrease in blood vessel output power and significant increase in blood vessel ageing level and remaining blood volume 25 minutes later, as markers of atherosclerosis.94 In another study, human coronary artery endothelial cells were exposed to the smoke equivalent to one cigarette, which led to activation of oxidant stress sensing transcription factor NFR2 and up - regulation of cytochrome p450, considered to have a role in the development of heart disease.95 These effects were not seen when heart cells were exposed to the vapour from one e - cigarette.95 A study exposed adult mice to low intensity tobacco smoke (two cigarettes) for one to two months and found adverse histopathological effects on brain cells.96
Abstract: Our recent study has demonstrated that peripheral amylin treatment reduces the amyloid pathology in the brain of Alzheimer's disease (AD) mouse models, and improves their learning and memory.
A recent study led by BSI member Professor Andrew Sewell from Cardiff University and published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation showed that a synthetic «mirror image» version of a protein belonging to the influenza A virus generated strong immune responses in human cells and mice, with the mice also being protected when exposed to a strain of influenza A.
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