A blue orchard bee (Osmia lignaria) is one of two species of solitary bees studied by a team of researchers led by Penn State. It was the first study to examine how extreme heat waves affect the host-pathogen relationship between solitary bees and a protozoan pathogen (Crithidia mellificae). Credit: Robert Webster The historically high heat waves that gripped the southwest United States and southern Europe this summer are causing problems for more than just humans. Extreme heat waves affect pollinators and the pathogens that live on them, creating a mutual imbalance that could have major economic and public health consequences. A global research team led by Penn State was the first to study how extreme heat waves affect the host-pathogen relationship between two species of solitary bees (Osmia cornifrons and Osmia lignaria) and a protozoan pathogen (Crithidia mellificae). The researchers recently published their findings in the journal Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution. The researchers found that the one-two punch of extreme heat exposure and prior infection led solitary bees, which account for over 90% of the roughly 4,000 species of bees in North America, to be less likely to forage for food. If bees don’t forage, they don’t eat, and importantly for humans, they don’t pollinate crops that are vital to the global economy and food security. “We are now experiencing the highest temperatures in recorded history,” said Mitzy Porras, a postdoctoral researcher in Penn State’s College of Agricultural Sciences and lead author of the study. “These heat waves are lasting three, or even four days, which is a long period of heat tolerance for bees. Then, when you combine that with prior infection from a pathogen, we’re looking at two factors that can severely negatively impact pollinator populations.” The researchers devised an experimental method for testing that Porras calls “thermal boldness,” the amount of heat a bee can withstand in order to move to a food source. The bees were placed in a tunnel. On one side of the tunnel was a chamber with temperatures akin to what would be experienced in a summer heat wave, and on the other side of the hot chamber was a meal of sugar water and pollen. The team found that bees, which had previously been infected with a common protozoan pathogen, were far less tolerant of heat and much less likely to take the risk of passing through the chamber to eat. In general, they found that the heat negatively impacted both the bee host and its pathogen, but the host bore the brunt of it. Exposure to heat decreased the bees’ thermal boldness and their heat tolerance, whereas the pathogen’s growth rate was only slightly negatively affected by heat. “These asymmetrical relationships between organisms are often overlooked when studying climate impacts, but they are essential if we want to understand what is really going on,” Porras said. “When we looked at the host and pathogen in tandem, we found that infection greatly reduces heat tolerance in the host—a finding we wouldn’t have discovered if we had only been studying bees.” The researchers found that a healthy bee could tolerate a heat wave of 109.4 degrees Fahrenheit, but after infection its tolerance was reduced to 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit. “Our results shed light on the implications of extreme heat waves on host–pathogen dynamics under a warmer world,” said co-author Ed Rajotte, professor emeritus of entomology at Penn State. “We’re not going to see a simple, linear change as the climate warms. Every organism will respond differently and the relationships between organisms will be fundamentally altered. If we’re going to try to predict the impacts of climate change, relationships matter. There are real consequences to changes in our ecosystems and we must understand the subtleties if we are going to prepare ourselves for the reality of a changing climate.” Solitary bees, often called the workhorses of the pollinator world due to their high foraging capacity, live for roughly a year, but are only active outside their nests for two to four weeks, for example, in early spring. They do a lifetime of pollinating in less than a month, Rajotte explained. For humans, a three or four-day heat wave may just be an uncomfortable blip, but for a solitary bee, it can represent a quarter of the total time they are active outside their nests—and can severely affect their fitness for mating, pollinating and producing offspring. The researchers demonstrated that their health is even further jeopardized if they have been previously infected with a pathogen. The team concluded that extreme heat exposure reduces the bees’ heat tolerance generally, but heat waves exacerbated the adverse effects of infection on the bees’ thermal physiology and ultimately affected their behavior. “We have to think about the big picture,” Porras said. “Climate change is not just impacting species; it is impacting the relationships between species and that could have huge implications for human health and the planet as a whole.” Other Penn State co-authors on the paper are David Biddinger and Sharifa Crandall. The other authors are Carlos Navas and Gustavo Agudelo-Cantero of the University of São Paulo; Michel Geovanni Santiago-Martínez of the University of Connecticut; and Volker Loeschcke and Jesper Givskov Sørensen of Aarhus University in Denmark. More information: Mitzy F. Porras et al, Extreme heat alters the performance of hosts and pathogen, Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution (2023). DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2023.1186452 Provided by Pennsylvania State University Citation: Bee populations at risk of one-two punch from heat waves, pathogen infection (2023, August 16) retrieved 17 August 2023 from https://phys.org/news/2023-08-bee-populations-one-two-pathogen-infection.html This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.
Day: July 2, 2024
A study found that almost one in three men worldwide is infected with at least one genital human papillomavirus (HPV), further evidencing the importance of including men in vaccination strategies. The study, published in the leading scientific journal The Lancet on Tuesday (15 August), estimated that the global pooled prevalence for genital HPV infection among men is 31% for any HPV and 21% for high-risk HPV, on the basis of data from 65 studies conducted between Jan 1 1995, and June 1 2022. “Sexually active men, regardless of age, are an important reservoir of HPV genital infection,” the study said. The findings underline the need for men to be incorporated into comprehensive HPV prevention strategies to reduce HPV-related morbidity and mortality and ultimately achieve the elimination of cervical cancer and other HPV-related diseases. HPV is the most common sexually transmitted viral infection worldwide, with most sexually active men and women acquiring at least one genital HPV infection during their lives. Over 200 HPV types can be transmitted sexually, while at least 12 types are carcinogenic, or cancer-causing. While the majority of HPV infections in men and women are asymptomatic, they can lead to further serious health issues, such as cervical cancer as well as penile, anal, and oropharyngeal cancers. In the EU, cervical cancer is the second most common cancer after breast cancer to affect women aged 15–44 years. Each year, there are around 33,000 cases of cervical cancer in the EU and 15,000 deaths. The primary cause of cervical cancer is a persistent infection of the genital tract by some specific types of human papillomavirus (HPV). Importance of vaccination HPV vaccines have been available in the EU since 2006, and have become increasingly accessible over time in Europe and worldwide. At the moment three prophylactic HPV vaccines have been granted a license for use in Europe, a bivalent, a quadrivalent and a nine-valent vaccine according to the number of types of HPV they contain. The Eurosurveillance report praised EU/EEA countries’ overall move towards a gender-neutral HPV vaccination strategy which also vaccinates men, though some countries still only vaccinate women. “The indirect protection from vaccination of girls with suboptimal uptake” is not “sufficient to adequately protect males”, the report said. Furthermore, that strategy fails to account for men who have sex with men. Vaccinating both sexes helps protect “against sudden drops in vaccine uptake” and would be more effective in reducing virus circulation in the general public, the authors urge. The EU’s push to eliminate cancer, including vaccine-preventable cancers, continues. Europe’s Beating Cancer Plan, launched in 2021 and considered “a key pillar of the European Health Union”, set a target of vaccinating at least 90% of girls for HPV by the age of 15 and increasing the vaccination of boys by 2030. In the third quarter of 2023, it is expected that the Commission will present an EU Council recommendation on vaccine-preventable cancers, which touch on HPV as well as other cancers, such as hepatitis B virus. These actions will include reducing physical obstacles to vaccination, targeted communication, and fighting mis- and disinformation. According to the implementation roadmap, the vaccination plan is already in place and being distributed, and the roadmap will be updated in the next months. [Edited by Nathalie Weatherald] Read more with EURACTIV
Most infants admitted to the intensive care or high acuity unit for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infections during fall 2022 were previously healthy and born at term, according to a new study reported in JAMA Network Open. The findings from this study support the use of preventative interventions in all infants to protect them from RSV, the leading cause of lower respiratory tract infections (LRTI) and hospitalizations worldwide. RSV accounts for about 57,000-80,000 hospitalizations in children younger than 5 years with 1 in 5 RSV-positive hospitalized children being admitted to intensive care units, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Researchers across the United States evaluated the characteristics and outcomes of RSV-related critical illness in 600 infants from 39 hospitals across 27 states as part of the RSV Pediatric Intensive Care registry. The registry conducted prospective surveillance during the RSV seasonal peak in 2022. During the two-month period, the investigators found: The median age for infants requiring intensive care was 2.6 months. 169 (28%) were premature. 487 (81%) had no underlying medical conditions. 143 (24%) received invasive mechanical ventilation. “Most of the infants in our study receiving ICU-level care were young, healthy and born at term,” said lead investigator Natasha Halasa, MD, MPH, Craig Weaver Professor of Pediatrics in the Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases at Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt. “Although mortality was rare, our findings emphasize the significant illness caused by RSV in young infants.” Children with a history of prematurity or certain underlying medical conditions such as congenital heart disease, neurologic or neurodevelopmental/neuromuscular disorders, chronic lung disease and immunocompromising conditions are at higher risk for life-threatening RSV disease, according to Halasa and co-corresponding author Angela Campbell, MD, MPH, from the CDC. High-risk infants are the only eligible population approved to receive a monoclonal antibody to prevent RSV-associated LRTI called palivizumab. However, most infants in our study admitted to the ICU with severe RSV did not have an underlying medical condition. Therefore, our data support the need for RSV preventative interventions targeting all infants to reduce the burden of severe RSV illness, including nirsevimab, the long-acting RSV-neutralizing monoclonal antibody. The drug was recently approved by the Food and Drug Administration, and a maternal vaccine for RSV prevention is under consideration.” Natasha Halasa, MD, MPH, Craig Weaver Professor of Pediatrics in the Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases at Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt Related Stories “These products may protect both high-risk and healthy infants from medically attended RSV-associated LRTI.” On Aug. 3, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) unanimously recommended nirsevimab for all infants younger than 8 months, born during or entering their first RSV season and for children ages 8-19 months who are at increased risk of severe RSV disease and entering their second RSV season. Additionally, ACIP unanimously recommended inclusion of nirsevimab in the Vaccines for Children program. The current study found that only 2 of 17 infants eligible for palivizumab received the treatment, which highlights administration barriers and emphasizes the need to ensure that all eligible patients receive therapeutic interventions in a timely manner. Since nirsevimab requires only one shot versus monthly shots, it is believed that uptake and compliance will be improved. “We hope that our study findings will aid in the design of future RSV prophylactic and maternal RSV vaccine effectiveness and usage studies and recommendations,” Halasa said. The study was supported by the CDC. Vanderbilt University Medical Center Journal reference: Halasa, N., et al. (2023). Infants Admitted to US Intensive Care Units for RSV Infection During the 2022 Seasonal Peak. JAMA Network Open. doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.28950.
<div data-thumb="https://scx1.b-cdn.net/csz/news/tmb/2023/blood-factor-can-turn.jpg" data-src="https://scx2.b-cdn.net/gfx/news/hires/2023/blood-factor-can-turn.jpg" data-sub-html="Systemic PF4 enhances adult hippocampal neurogenesis in vivo. a Experimental design of PF4 injection paradigm in young mice. b, c Intravenous (i.v.) PF4 injections for 1 week did not affect neural precursor cell proliferation in the subgranular zone (SGZ; n = 10 mice in saline group; n = 9 mice in PF4 group; counts of one hemisphere), but increased the number of doublecortin+ (DCX+) cells (n = 15 mice per group; counts of one hemisphere). d Experimental design of the double-labeling paradigm with CldU and IdU. e Acute administration of PF4 did not affect neural precursor cell proliferation, including the recruitment of cells from quiescence (n = 20 mice per group). f Running paradigm of PF4 knockout (KO) mice. g Representative images of Ki67+ cells in the SGZ of PF4 KO and wildtype (WT) mice. Scale bar: 50 μm. h PF4 KO mice show a significant reduction in the number of proliferating cells compared to wildtype mice. Physical exercise did not increase neural precursor proliferation in PF4 KO mice (WT STD n = 12; WT RUN n = 8; KO STD n = 14; KO RUN n = 8; counts of one hemisphere). i Representative images of DCX+ cells in the dentate gyrus (DG) of PF4 KO and wildtype mice. Scale bar: 50 μm. j PF4 KO mice have significantly lower levels of baseline neurogenesis compared to wildtype littermates (WT STD n = 12; KO STD n = 14; counts of one hemisphere). STD standard-housing, RUN 10-day running. Bars are mean ± SEM. Statistical analysis was performed using unpaired Student’s two-tailed t tests in (c) and (j), and one-way ANOVA with Sidak comparison in (h). *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001. Source data are provided as Source Data file. Credit: Nature Communications (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-39873-9″> Systemic PF4 enhances adult hippocampal neurogenesis in vivo. a Experimental design of PF4 injection paradigm in young mice. b, c Intravenous (i.v.) PF4 injections for 1 week did not affect neural precursor cell proliferation in the subgranular zone (SGZ; n = 10 mice in saline group; n = 9 mice in PF4 group; counts of one hemisphere), but increased the number of doublecortin+ (DCX+) cells (n = 15 mice per group; counts of one hemisphere). d Experimental design of the double-labeling paradigm with CldU and IdU. e Acute administration of PF4 did not affect neural precursor cell proliferation, including the recruitment of cells from quiescence (n = 20 mice per group). f Running paradigm of PF4 knockout (KO) mice. g Representative images of Ki67+ cells in the SGZ of PF4 KO and wildtype (WT) mice. Scale bar: 50 μm. h PF4 KO mice show a significant reduction in the number of proliferating cells compared to wildtype mice. Physical exercise did not increase neural precursor proliferation in PF4 KO mice (WT STD n = 12; WT RUN n = 8; KO STD n = 14; KO RUN n = 8; counts of one hemisphere). i Representative images of DCX+ cells in the dentate gyrus (DG) of PF4 KO and wildtype mice. Scale bar: 50 μm. j PF4 KO mice have significantly lower levels of baseline neurogenesis compared to wildtype littermates (WT STD n = 12; KO STD n = 14; counts of one hemisphere). STD standard-housing, RUN 10-day running. Bars are mean ± SEM. Statistical analysis was performed using unpaired Student’s two-tailed t tests in (c) and (j), and one-way ANOVA with Sidak comparison in (h). *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001. Source data are provided as Source Data file. Credit: Nature Communications (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-39873-9 Platelets are behind the cognitive benefits of young blood, exercise and the longevity hormone klotho. In a remarkable convergence, scientists have discovered that the same blood factor is responsible for the cognitive enhancement that results from young blood transfusion, the longevity hormone klotho, and exercise. In a trio of papers appearing in Nature, Nature Aging and Nature Communications, two UCSF teams and a team from the University of Queensland (Australia), identify platelet factor 4 (PF4) as a common messenger of each of these interventions. As its name suggests, PF4 is made by platelets, a type of blood cell that alerts the immune system when there is a wound and helps to form clots. It turns out that PF4 is also a cognitive enhancer. Under its influence, old mice recover the sharpness of middle age and young mice get smarter. “Young blood, klotho, and exercise can somehow tell your brain, ‘Hey, improve your function,’” said Saul Villeda, Ph.D., associate director of the UCSF Bakar Aging Research Institute and the senior author on the Nature paper. “With PF4, we’re starting to understand the vocabulary behind this rejuvenation.” Villeda led the study on young blood, which was published in Nature. Dena Dubal, MD, Ph.D., UCSF professor and David A. Coulter Endowed Chair in Aging and Neurodegenerative Disease, led the study on klotho, which was published in Nature Aging. Tara Walker, Ph.D., professor of neuroscience at the University of Queensland, led the study on exercise, which was published in Nature Communications. They committed to releasing their findings at the same time to make the case for PF4 from three different angles. “When we realized we had independently and serendipitously found the same thing, our jaws dropped,” Dubal said. “The fact that three separate interventions converged on platelet factors truly highlights the validity and reproducibility of this biology. The time has come to pursue platelet factors in brain health and cognitive enhancement.” Platelets quell the inflammation of an aging brain and body Villeda is an expert on parabiosis, an experiment in which two animals are linked together by their blood circulation. When a young, sprightly animal is connected to an aging animal, the aging animal becomes more youthful–its muscles more resilient, its brain more capable of learning. In 2014, Villeda found that plasma, consisting of blood minus red blood cells, mimicked parabiosis: young blood plasma, injected into old animals, was restorative. When his team compared young plasma to old plasma, they found it contained much more PF4. Just injecting PF4 into old animals was about as restorative as young plasma. It calmed down the aged immune system in the body and the brain. Old animals treated with PF4 performed better on a variety of memory and learning tasks. “PF4 actually causes the immune system to
Antibiotic use and infections are closely associated with late-onset atopic dermatitis (AD), according to a study published in Annals of Dermatology. The researchers explained that recent studies have suggested that varying onset times of AD may differ by patient risk factors. Consequently, they conducted a nationwide population-based case-control study to investigate potential differences in the influence of antibiotic use or infections on AD risk according to patients’ onset ages. They analyzed data of patients with AD from the Korean Health Insurance Review and Assessment Service. The researchers identified patients with AD as those who visited medical institutions with an AD principal diagnostic code (L20, L20.0, L20.8, and L20.9 in the International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision) more than twice in 6 months, defining AD onset as the patient’s first visit date. For comparison, the researchers created an age- and sex-matched control group for each patient with AD. Similarly, the researchers identified patients’ infection episodes as their visits to medical institutes with a principal diagnostic code for infectious diseases. Also, they calculated the number of infection episodes and categorized them by organ involvement (eg, respiratory, gastrointestinal, otology, genitourinary, cutaneous, hematologic). Additionally, the researchers defined antibiotic cycles as a prescription of antibiotics, calculating the number of antibiotic cycles and the use duration. white pills spilling from orange bottle | Image credit: neirfy – stock.adobe.com. The study population consisted of 244,805 children with AD and an equal amount of sex- and age-matched healthy children. The researchers divided the patients according to onset age; the early-onset group consisted of patients who developed AD at younger than 2 years and the late-onset group consisted of those who developed AD at 2 years or older. Of the population, 216,563 (88.5%) developed AD before age 2 years. The analysis showed that infections had a positive association with AD risk in both groups, but it was greater in those with late-onset AD (odds ratio [OR], 15.81; 95% CI, 12.40-20.17; early-onset group: OR, 1.56; 95% CI, 1.54-1.59). Through further analysis, the researchers found that the association was strongest after skin infections in the early-onset group (OR, 1.95; 95% CI, 1.91-1.99) and respiratory infections in the late-onset group (OR, 15.57; 95% CI, 12.44-19.49). Antibiotic use was also positively associated with AD risk in both groups, with the association stronger in the late-onset group (OR, 8.78; 95% CI, 7.42-10.40; early-onset group: OR, 1.07; 95% CI, 1.06-1.09). Through their findings, the researchers concluded that the degree of association between the risk of AD and infection or antibiotic use was different as they found it to have a greater influence on late-onset AD. They also found that respiratory infections strongly affected late-onset AD development. “Abnormal epithelial barrier or immune regulation can be the common underlying risk factors for AD and respiratory infection,” the authors wrote. “These immune responses may explain the strong association between respiratory infection and AD identified in this study.” The researchers acknowledged their study’s limitations, one being that they could not find information on confounding factors like environmental influences or a personal or family history of atopic disorders. Despite these limitations, they concluded by noting that “the prevention of infections can be a way to reduce the risk of AD, especially late-onset AD.” Reference Choi CW, Yang BR, Suh DI, et al. Infections and exposure to antibiotics may affect the development of late-onset rather than early-onset atopic dermatitis. Ann Dermatol. 2023;35(4):325-328. doi:10.5021/ad.21.240
Vibriosis, a rare but potentially fatal bacterial infection that can cause skin breakdown and ulcers, has been identified in a recently deceased individual from Suffolk County, New York. Fatal cases of vibriosis have also been identified in Connecticut. Governor Kathy Hochul on Wednesday urged New Yorkers to learn how to avoid exposure and to take appropriate precautions, as the New York State Department of Health reminded providers to consider vibriosis when diagnosing wound infections or sepsis of unknown origins. Vibriosis is caused by several species of bacteria, including the Vibrio vulnificus bacteria, which occurs naturally in saltwater coastal environments and can be found in higher concentrations from May to October when the weather is warmer. Infection with vibriosis can cause a range of symptoms when ingested, including diarrhea, stomach cramps, vomiting, fever and chills. Exposure can also result in ear infections and cause sepsis and life-threatening wound infections. The death in Suffolk County is still being investigated to determine if the bacteria was encountered in New York waters or elsewhere. In the meantime, the New York State Department of Health this week reminded healthcare providers to consider vibrio vulnificus when seeing individuals with severe wound infections or sepsis with or without wound infections. While anyone can get vibriosis, those with liver disease, cancer, or a weakened immune system or people taking medicine to decrease stomach acid levels may be more likely to get an infection or develop complications when infected. To help prevent vibriosis, people with a wound, such as a cut or scrape, a recent piercing or tattoo, should avoid exposing skin to warm seawater in coastal environments or cover the wound with a waterproof bandage. In addition, those with compromised immune systems should avoid eating raw or undercooked shellfish, such as oysters, which can carry the bacteria. Wear gloves when handling raw shellfish and thoroughly wash your hands with soap and water when finished. More information about vibriosis can be found here (https://www.health.ny.gov/diseases/communicable/vibriosis/index.htm). Get the top stories on your radio 24/7 on Finger Lakes News Radio 96.3 and 1590, WAUB and 106.3 and 1240, WGVA, and on Finger Lakes Country, 96.1/96.9/101.9/1570 WFLR.
IAN HERBERT: Blood seeping through their socks, England ran the show and silenced the partisan Australia crowd… now the Lionesses stand on the brink of World Cup glory England reached the World Cup final with a 3-1 win over hosts Australia The Lionesses are now on the brink of glory with only Spain standing in their way WATCH: ‘It’s All Kicking Off’ – Episode 1 – Mail Sport’s brand new football show By Ian Herbert For The Daily Mail Published: 13:59 EDT, 16 August 2023 | Updated: 14:05 EDT, 16 August 2023
Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain Researchers at Rutgers and Emory University are gaining insights into how schizophrenia develops by studying the strongest-known genetic risk factor. When a small portion of chromosome 3 is missing—known as 3q29 deletion syndrome—it increases the risk for schizophrenia by about 40-fold. Researchers have now analyzed overlapping patterns of altered gene activity in two models of 3q29 deletion syndrome, including mice where the deletion has been engineered in using CRIPSR, and human brain organoids, or three-dimensional tissue cultures used to study disease. These two systems both exhibit impaired mitochondrial function. This dysfunction can cause energy shortfalls in the brain and result in psychiatric symptoms and disorders. “Our data give strong support to the hypothesis that mitochondrial dysregulation is a contributor to the development of schizophrenia,” said Jennifer Mulle, associate professor of psychiatry, neuroscience and cell biology at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School and a co-senior author of the study published in Science Advances. “The interplay between mitochondrial dynamics and neuronal maturation is an important area for additional detailed and rigorous study.” Mulle, a member of the Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine at Rutgers, and colleagues first showed that 3q29 deletion was a risk factor for schizophrenia in 2010. The findings converge with work on another genetic risk factor for schizophrenia, 22q11 deletion syndrome (or DiGeorge syndrome), which has also been found to involve disrupted mitochondrial function. “For genetic variants associated with schizophrenia, we want to understand the primary pathology at the cellular level,” said Ryan Purcell, assistant professor of cell biology at Emory University School of Medicine and co-lead author of the study. “This gives us a foothold, which may help cut through schizophrenia’s polygenic complexity and better understand the neurobiology.” About one in 30,000 people are born with 3q29 deletion syndrome. In addition to increasing the risk for schizophrenia, 3q29 deletion can include intellectual disability, autism spectrum disorder and congenital heart defects. The effect of 3q29 deletion on schizophrenia risk is more than any single known gene variant, but the contributions of individual genes within the deletion are still being unraveled. The finding that various schizophrenia-associated chromosomal deletions impair mitochondria runs counter to an expectation in the field that such mutations should alter proteins in the synapses that connect neurons. However, mitochondria are critical for energy-hungry synapses’ function—so these models may not be in conflict. It was also surprising that 3q29 cells have poorly functioning mitochondria because only one of the 22 genes in the deletion appears to encode a protein located in mitochondria. However, that gene or others within the interval may instead regulate the production or importation of mitochondrial proteins, the researchers said. Mitochondria, which are found in every cell, produce energy from sugar or fat. Sometimes this process is aerobic (done with extra oxygen from inhaled air) and sometimes anaerobic (done without oxygen). As a result of altered mitochondrial function, 3q29 cells lack metabolic flexibility, meaning their mitochondria have difficulty adapting to changes in sources of energy. This may interfere with neuronal development because maturing neurons need to switch to relying on aerobic energy production as they differentiate. The results illustrate how 3q29 deletion affects the whole body, not just the brain: The effects on mitochondria are seen in kidney cells as well as in brain cells. Individuals with 3q29 deletion syndrome also tend to be smaller in size, possibly because of altered fat metabolism. “Eventually, we want to understand which cellular changes like these are linked to specific clinical outcomes, which could help in designing more effective therapeutic strategies,” Purcell said. More information: Ryan Purcell et al, Cross-species analysis identifies mitochondrial dysregulation as a functional consequence of the schizophrenia-associated 3q29 deletion, Science Advances (2023). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adh0558. www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adh0558 Provided by Rutgers University Citation: Study supports hypothesis that mitochondrial dysregulation is a contributor to the development of schizophrenia (2023, August 16) retrieved 16 August 2023 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2023-08-hypothesis-mitochondrial-dysregulation-contributor-schizophrenia.html This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.
ByZarafshan Shiraz, New Delhi Aug 16, 2023 07:31 PM IST Share Via Copy Link There are a large number of people who are detected with hepatitis A and E during the rainy season. Here are its causes along with treatment and prevention tips Gastrointestinal problems, including liver diseases, surge during the monsoon season owing to factors such as contaminated water and food hence, there are a large number of people who are detected with hepatitis A and E during the rainy season. People should take precautionary measures to keep liver problems at bay and lead a healthy life and avoid eating unclean raw food and vegetables, give up on street food as it can be made with contaminated water, get vaccinated for hepatitis and take medication prescribed by the doctor only. Causes of increased hepatitis risk in monsoon, tips for a healthy liver (Photo by Twitter/AbeDan14) In an interview with HT Lifestyle, Dr Harshad Joshi, Consultant Gastroenterologist at Apollo Spectra in Mumbai, shared, “Monsoon is synonymous with a host of gastrointestinal problems including hepatitis infection. From children to adults to senior citizens, anyone can suffer from liver problems. “Contamination during rainy seasons leads to stomach infections. The common stomach infections are dysentery and diarrhea causing stomach pain, loose motions, and nausea. Typhoid is a serious bacterial infection causing High fever, stomach pain, nausea, and vomiting. Hepatitis A and Jaundice can also give one a tough time. Hepatitis A means inflammation (swelling) of the liver. Poor sanitation, and water and food contamination raise the chances of dysfunction. One will suffer from jaundice leading to yellow eyes, yellow urine, white stools and stomach pain.” Dr Vikas Pandey, Gastroenterologist at Zynova Shalby Hospital, highlighted, “Liver infections or hepatitis cases are on the rise during monsoon owing to A and E viruses. One gets hepatitis A or E because of contaminated food or water or from close contact with an infected person. Eating food available on the streets or opting for pre-cut fruits that may be washed with contaminated water, drinking juices, and having pani puris, gola, sherbet made from contaminated water or ice, unclean raw food, and vegetables can make one prone to hepatitis. In 2021, 110 people suffering from liver and gastrointestinal diseases were treated during monsoon. In 2022, the number of patients increased to 326 patients. This year, when the rainy season has just started, 220 patients suffering from liver problems and gastrointestinal diseases have been found. Water intake is greatly reduced during monsoons. It increases liver and stomach-related disorders. So it is very important to drink enough water irrespective of the season.” Dr Vikram Raut, Director of Liver Transplantation and HPB Surgery at Medicover Hospitals in Navi Mumbai, revealed, “Hepatitis A and E can take a toll on one’s overall well-being. It can steal one’s peace of mind as if left untreated, they can damage the liver. Hepatitis A and E presents as jaundice when the skin and the eyes turn yellow. One’s condition can worsen when he/she doesn’t seek timely treatment leading to acute liver failure and ultimately liver transplantation.” Talking about the treatment and preventive measures, Dr Harshad Joshi suggested, “The treatment will be based on symptoms and differ from one-person-to-another. Take the medication prescribed by the doctor only. Avoid eating raw food and vegetables or street food and boil the water before drinking. Juices and other drinks are a strict no-no as they may contain contaminated ice, do not eat pre-cut fruits available at roadside stalls, wash hands from time to time.” Topics Treatment Stomach Pain Hepatitis A Vaccination Hepatitis C Hepatitis B Monsoon Health Fitness Rain Rains Rainfall Liver