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Newswise: New UCI-led research shows people who live to be 90+ with superior thinking skills are resilient to Alzheimer’s pathology in their brains
Released: 24-May-2023 2:20 PM EDT
New UCI-led research shows people who live to be 90+ with superior thinking skills are resilient to Alzheimer’s pathology in their brains
University of California, Irvine

A University of California, Irvine-led team of researchers have discovered that the oldest-old, those who live to be 90+ and have superior cognitive skills, have similar levels of brain pathology as Alzheimer’s patients, however, they also have less brain pathology of other neurodegenerative diseases that cause memory and thinking problems.

Newswise: $2.5M Gift Targets Gaps in Circadian Biology and Medicine
Released: 23-May-2023 3:15 PM EDT
$2.5M Gift Targets Gaps in Circadian Biology and Medicine
University of California San Diego

A $2.5 million initiative supported by philanthropists Irwin and Joan Jacobs has created the Stuart and Barbara L. Brody Endowed Chair in Circadian Biology and Medicine, along with a supporting research fund, to target largely unexplored areas related to circadian biology and patient health.

   
Released: 23-May-2023 10:05 AM EDT
RPI and Albany Medical College Researchers Awarded $3.3 Million To Improve Breast Cancer Treatment Using Artificial Intelligence
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)

Researchers from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) and Albany Medical College were awarded a $3.3 million grant over five years by the National Cancer Institute to use artificial intelligence (AI) to improve targeted drug therapy in HER2-positive breast cancer treatment. HER2-positive breast cancer tends to grow and spread quickly, but targeted treatments improve outcomes.

   
Released: 23-May-2023 10:00 AM EDT
Hertz Foundation Announces 2023 Hertz Fellows
The Fannie and John Hertz Foundation

From advancing artificial intelligence to strengthening our national security, the 2023 Hertz Fellows will address the most pressing challenges facing our nation.

   
Newswise: TTUHSC El Paso Partners with The MolinaCares Accord and Bank of America Charitable Foundation to Improve Patient Outcomes and Access to Mental Health Services
Released: 23-May-2023 10:00 AM EDT
TTUHSC El Paso Partners with The MolinaCares Accord and Bank of America Charitable Foundation to Improve Patient Outcomes and Access to Mental Health Services
Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso

Mental health is a significant issue across the country. In 2021, over 57 million adults in the United States – about 1 in 5 – experienced mental illness, according to the National Alliance on Mental Illness. As of February 2023, 36.8% of adults in Texas reported symptoms of anxiety and/or depressive disorder, compared to 32.3% of adults in the U.S., according to a Kaiser Family Foundation analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data.

Newswise: Cheap and effective monitoring of glacier discharge
Released: 23-May-2023 12:05 AM EDT
Cheap and effective monitoring of glacier discharge
Hokkaido University

Acoustic signals can be effectively used for monitoring glacial runoff and provide a cheaper and more accessible alternative to existing methods.

Newswise: Grant Funds Tree Planting on Campus in Honor of Felled Silver Maple
Released: 22-May-2023 5:45 PM EDT
Grant Funds Tree Planting on Campus in Honor of Felled Silver Maple
University of Northern Colorado

The grounds of the University of Northern Colorado received a welcome living, breathing facelift last week. As part of Arbor Day and Earth Day celebrations this year, students, faculty and staff picked up shovels and got their hands dirty planting 122 new trees across the university’s 250-acre campus.

Newswise: Scientists at Wake Forest University School of Medicine Discover Metabolic Sensor May Play Role in Alzheimer’s Disease
Released: 22-May-2023 1:05 PM EDT
Scientists at Wake Forest University School of Medicine Discover Metabolic Sensor May Play Role in Alzheimer’s Disease
Wake Forest University School of Medicine

Scientists at Wake Forest University School of Medicine have uncovered a novel mechanism that shows increased sugar intake and elevations in blood glucose are sufficient to cause amyloid plaque buildup in the brain, which increases the risk of Alzheimer’s disease.

Newswise: Windgate Foundation Supports Teacher Education with $3.5 Million Grant
Released: 22-May-2023 10:05 AM EDT
Windgate Foundation Supports Teacher Education with $3.5 Million Grant
University of Arkansas at Little Rock

The University of Arkansas at Little Rock has received a $3.5 million grant from the Windgate Foundation to endow the directorship of its School of Education. This gift will support the transformation of teacher education at UA Little Rock in its quest to become a premier provider of teachers in the state.

Released: 19-May-2023 7:50 PM EDT
New study finds common autism screening tool is effective but has limitations
UC Davis MIND Institute

A UC Davis MIND Institute analysis of 13 studies finds that a common autism screening tool is useful, but a clinician’s judgment is still needed.

Newswise: Georgia Tech to Lead NASA Center on Lunar Research and Exploration
Released: 19-May-2023 10:05 AM EDT
Georgia Tech to Lead NASA Center on Lunar Research and Exploration
Georgia Institute of Technology

Georgia Tech researchers have been selected by NASA to lead a $7.5 million center that will study the lunar environment, and explore the generation and properties of volatiles and dust.

Released: 19-May-2023 7:05 AM EDT
Uniformed Services University Receives $404K for WIC Military Outreach Program
Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USU)

The Uniformed Services University (USU) has been awarded a $404,703 grant to implement a WIC Community Innovation and Outreach Project (WIC CIAO), designed to increase WIC enrollment in active duty military families.

Newswise: Discovery of Skin Cell Function Could Open Doors to Improved Burn Healing
Released: 18-May-2023 3:25 PM EDT
Discovery of Skin Cell Function Could Open Doors to Improved Burn Healing
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering

Tissue engineering research has shown that a skin cell type could be a new therapeutic target to accelerate the healing of burns and possibly other wounds.

Released: 18-May-2023 2:15 PM EDT
Mount Sinai Brooklyn Expands Cancer Services, Infusion Center in $4 Million Project
Mount Sinai Health System

The Mount Sinai Health System today held a grand opening of the expansion of the Mount Sinai Brooklyn Ambulatory Infusion Center, a cancer treatment center that brings innovative cancer therapy and clinical trials to residents of southern Brooklyn.

Newswise: Finger on the pulse of drug delivery
Released: 18-May-2023 2:15 PM EDT
Finger on the pulse of drug delivery
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering

Researchers from Rice University have created drug-filled microparticles that can be engineered to degrade and release their therapeutic cargo days or weeks after administration. By combining multiple microparticles with different degradation times into a single injection, the researchers could develop a drug formulation that delivers many doses over time.

   
Released: 17-May-2023 6:25 PM EDT
Morning Lark or Night Owl: Baylor Researchers Highlight the Influence of Behavior on the Circadian Preferences of College Students
Baylor University

A new study from researchers with Baylor University’s Sleep Neuroscience and Cognition Laboratory shows that chronotypes are more flexible than originally thought.

Newswise: Upstate 2.0 Wins $1 Million NSF Award to Transform Economy
Released: 17-May-2023 12:55 PM EDT
Upstate 2.0 Wins $1 Million NSF Award to Transform Economy
SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry

The SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry (ESF) is pleased to announce Upstate 2.0, a partnership between ESF and Cornell University that aims to bolster economic development in upstate New York, has received a $1 million development award from the National Science Foundation’s Regional Innovation Engines.

Released: 17-May-2023 12:55 PM EDT
Higher blood sugar linked to faster loss of brain power in stroke survivors
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Surviving a stroke can bring many long-term effects – including a much higher risk of dementia. But a study suggests that blood sugar may play a key role in that risk.

Released: 17-May-2023 12:25 PM EDT
Studying brain activity of swallowing helps researchers understand aging, disease
Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology

Researchers at the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology, Carle Hospital, and Purdue University teamed up to develop a new imaging tool that will improve our understanding of how the brain controls swallowing in both healthy patients and those experiencing a swallowing-related disorder. Their work will be funded by a five-year grant expected to total $2.8 million from the National Institute on Aging of the National Institutes of Health.

Newswise: Illinois researchers create 3D images of C4 plant cellular components
Released: 17-May-2023 8:05 AM EDT
Illinois researchers create 3D images of C4 plant cellular components
College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

A team from the University of Illinois has quantified the plant cell properties in two C4 species, including cell shape, chloroplast size, and distribution of cell-to-cell connections called plasmodesmata, providing information that can change how people model photosynthesis thanks to their 3D reconstructions.

Newswise: UTHealth Houston researcher awarded over $5M to study and improve the diagnostic process in clinics to prevent errors
Released: 16-May-2023 2:45 PM EDT
UTHealth Houston researcher awarded over $5M to study and improve the diagnostic process in clinics to prevent errors
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Improving the diagnostic process and preventing errors are the focus of two studies funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and led by Eric Thomas, MD, associate dean for health care quality with McGovern Medical School at UTHealth Houston.

Newswise: Insight into brain’s waste clearing system may shed light on brain diseases
Released: 16-May-2023 2:35 PM EDT
Insight into brain’s waste clearing system may shed light on brain diseases
Washington University in St. Louis

Impairments in the lymphatic system may contribute to brain diseases, such as neurodegenerative diseases and stroke. Researchers have found a noninvasive and nonpharmaceutical method to influence glymphatic transport using focused ultrasound, opening the opportunity to use the method to further study brain diseases and brain function.

16-May-2023 11:00 AM EDT
A potential new weapon in the war against superbugs
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

For nearly 25 years, Dr. James Kirby has worked to advance the fight against infectious diseases by finding and developing new, potent antimicrobials, and by better understanding how disease-causing bacteria make us sick. In a recent paper published in PLOS Biology, Kirby and colleagues investigated a naturally occurring antimicrobial agent discovered more than 80 years ago.

Newswise: Engineers building tools to improve quality, production of disease-fighting cells
Released: 16-May-2023 12:05 PM EDT
Engineers building tools to improve quality, production of disease-fighting cells
Iowa State University

Iowa State University engineers are developing advanced tools for cell manufacturing that could improve the cost and availability of therapeutic cells capable of fighting diseases such as cancers, heart disease, lupus and other autoimmune diseases.

   
15-May-2023 2:40 PM EDT
MD Anderson awarded over $5.7 million from Break Through Cancer to support AML research
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center was awarded more than $5.7 million in grants from Break Through Cancer to support collaborative research teams working to discover novel molecular targets to eradicate minimal residual disease in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and to treat clonal hematopoiesis, a precursor to AML.

Newswise: UVM Earns $20M Research Grant to ‘Harness the Data Revolution’
Released: 15-May-2023 2:30 PM EDT
UVM Earns $20M Research Grant to ‘Harness the Data Revolution’
University of Vermont

A groundbreaking data science effort to better understand and harness the power of stories has earned the University of Vermont a $20 million research capacity building award from the National Science Foundation (NSF) through its Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (EPSCoR).

Released: 12-May-2023 3:05 PM EDT
Task-specific modulation of corticospinal neuron activity during motor learning in mice (Nature Communications)
Burke Neurological Institute

Corticospinal activity is temporally coded with precise prehension movements in mice. Disrupting this patterned activity impairs movements, highlighting the critical role of corticospinal network modulation in the execution of precision movements.

Released: 12-May-2023 12:45 PM EDT
Rutgers is Part of NSF-funded Consortium to Advance Photonics Research and Workforce Development
Rutgers University's Office for Research

Rutgers is part of a new federally funded regional collaboration to drive economic and technological advancements in photonics, the National Science Foundation (NSF) announced. The consortium, which includes researchers from Rutgers-Newark and Rutgers-New Brunswick, awarded a development grant from the NSF’s Regional Innovation Economic Engine consortium, led by Princeton University and co-led by Rowan University, with partners throughout New Jersey and neighboring states Delaware, Pennsylvania and New York.

Newswise: TTUHSC El Paso Researchers Receive Over $1.5 Million in Cancer Research Grants
Released: 12-May-2023 10:00 AM EDT
TTUHSC El Paso Researchers Receive Over $1.5 Million in Cancer Research Grants
Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso

At TTUHSC El Paso, addressing health disparities remains at the forefront of our mission.

Newswise: Kentucky, Tennessee GAME Change team wins NSF Engines Development Award
Released: 11-May-2023 3:45 PM EDT
Kentucky, Tennessee GAME Change team wins NSF Engines Development Award
University of Kentucky

The University of Kentucky, as lead organization, together with partners across Kentucky and Tennessee, has been awarded $1 million from the U.S. National Science Foundation’s Regional Innovation Engines, or NSF Engines, program. This team’s proposal, “Advancing carbon centric circular economy technologies for advanced manufacturing solutions (KY, TN),” is led by a coalition named Generate Advanced Manufacturing Excellence for Change (GAME Change).

Newswise: Second gene implicated in malaria parasite resistance evolution to chloroquine
Released: 11-May-2023 1:40 PM EDT
Second gene implicated in malaria parasite resistance evolution to chloroquine
Texas Biomedical Research Institute

How malaria parasites evolved to evade a major antimalarial drug has long been thought to involve only one key gene. Now, thanks to a combination of field and lab studies, an international research team has shown a second key gene is also involved in malaria’s resistance to the drug chloroquine.

Newswise: Van Andel Institute, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis to lead genome center under $140M NIH initiative
Released: 11-May-2023 1:10 PM EDT
Van Andel Institute, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis to lead genome center under $140M NIH initiative
Van Andel Institute

Van Andel Institute’s Hui Shen, Ph.D., and Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis’s Ting Wang, Ph.D., will co-lead a collaborative project supported by the Somatic Mosaicism across Human Tissues (SMaHT) Network, a new $140 million National Institutes of Health-led effort to better understand the genetic differences between individual cells and tissues in the body.

   
Newswise: ‘Making things that matter…but making them smarter and greener;
Released: 11-May-2023 11:05 AM EDT
‘Making things that matter…but making them smarter and greener;"
Case Western Reserve University

A regional collaboration led by Case Western Reserve University has won a $1 million grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) --the only award in Ohio--to plan economic, environmental and manufacturing growth across the 18-county Northeast Ohio region.

Newswise: SpaceMarkers Novel AI Method Identifies Locations, Interactions Among Genes in and Around Tumors
Released: 11-May-2023 11:00 AM EDT
SpaceMarkers Novel AI Method Identifies Locations, Interactions Among Genes in and Around Tumors
Johns Hopkins Medicine

SpaceMarkers, a new machine learning software developed by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Convergence Institute and the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center, can identify molecular interactions among distinct types of cells in and around a tumor.

Newswise: RPI Researchers To Develop New Market for Farm Waste
Released: 11-May-2023 8:05 AM EDT
RPI Researchers To Develop New Market for Farm Waste
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)

There are more than 80,000 sheep and lambs living on over 2,000 farms in New York State. Their wool has many uses including clothing, carpets, furniture, bedding, insulators, fertilizers, and more. However, about 10-15% of wool is wasted during the sorting and cleaning processes. Researchers from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute are aiming to turn that waste into a new profit source for farmers, and produce an eco-conscious, high-performance yarn in the process.

Released: 10-May-2023 5:05 PM EDT
Three-drug combination slows progression of advanced kidney cancer
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

A targeted kinase inhibitor added to a two-drug immunotherapy combination slowed the progression of advanced kidney cancer in previously untreated patients, according to research published in The New England Journal of Medicine and led by an oncologist from Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.

Newswise:Video Embedded a-journey-to-the-origins-of-multicellular-life-long-term-experimental-evolution-in-the-lab
VIDEO
Released: 10-May-2023 11:35 AM EDT
A Journey to the Origins of Multicellular Life: Long-Term Experimental Evolution in the Lab
Georgia Institute of Technology

Over 3,000 generations of laboratory evolution, Georgia Tech researchers watched as their model organism, “snowflake yeast,” began to adapt as multicellular individuals. In new research, the team shows how snowflake yeast evolved to be physically stronger and more than 20,000 times larger than their ancestor. Their study is the first major report on the ongoing Multicellularity Long-Term Evolution Experiment (MuLTEE), which the team hopes to run for decades.

Newswise: UNC Charlotte to help carry on Mebane Foundation legacy through historic gift
Released: 10-May-2023 10:30 AM EDT
UNC Charlotte to help carry on Mebane Foundation legacy through historic gift
University of North Carolina at Charlotte

UNC Charlotte’s Cato College of Education, a leader in literacy instruction and research, has been selected by the Mebane Foundation to help continue its legacy of supporting innovation in literacy education in North Carolina and beyond through a five-year grant and potential endowment of up to $23 million.

Newswise: Research Identifies New Cause of Heart Failure Condition in Children
Released: 10-May-2023 10:05 AM EDT
Research Identifies New Cause of Heart Failure Condition in Children
University of Maryland School of Medicine

In an effort to determine the cause behind a rare condition that causes heart failure in children, University of Maryland School of Medicine researchers have identified new gene mutations responsible for the disorder in an infant patient. They were then able to learn how the mutation works and used a drug to reverse its effects in heart muscle cells derived from stem cells from the patient.

Released: 10-May-2023 8:00 AM EDT
Rutgers Experts Aim to Uncover Barriers to Conducting HIV Research in Africa
Institute for Health, Health Care Policy and Aging Research at Rutgers University

Rutgers Institute for Health researcher, Dr. Ashley Grosso, receives grant from NIH to conduct study on barriers to HIV research in Africa.

Newswise: NSF awards Iowa researchers $20 million to build advanced biomanufacturing capacity
Released: 9-May-2023 4:50 PM EDT
NSF awards Iowa researchers $20 million to build advanced biomanufacturing capacity
Iowa State University

The National Science Foundation's program to build research capacity across the country has awarded a $20 million grant to support Iowa researchers working to make the state a leader in advanced biomanufacturing. The researchers will use microbes to produce plastics for 3D printing, fibers for flexible and rigid materials and proteins for medical diagnostics and therapeutics.

Newswise: UAH space science faculty advances modelling of energetic neutral atoms to better understand solar flares and coronal mass ejections
Released: 9-May-2023 4:15 PM EDT
UAH space science faculty advances modelling of energetic neutral atoms to better understand solar flares and coronal mass ejections
University of Alabama Huntsville

Solar flares and coronal mass ejections (CME) are two of the most energetic processes in the solar system, showering the Earth’s magnetic field with billions of tons of highly energetic plasma gas, potentially disrupting power grids, satellites and communications networks.

Released: 9-May-2023 3:05 PM EDT
Getty Foundation awards exhibition grant to UC Irvine’s Beall Center for Art + Technology
University of California, Irvine

IThe Beall Center for Art + Technology at the University of California, Irvine has received a $200,000 exhibition grant from the Getty Foundation to present “Future Tense: Art, Complexity and Predictability,” a thematic show and artist residency program. The Beall Center is among more than 45 Southern California awardees participating in the third collaboration of Getty’s Pacific Standard Time initiative.

Released: 9-May-2023 1:45 PM EDT
Change in breast density over time linked to cancer risk
Washington University in St. Louis

Repeated mammograms contain data on changes in breast density over time that could help identify women at high risk of breast cancer and even reveal which breast is likely to be affected, according to a study by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.

Released: 9-May-2023 8:30 AM EDT
Fentanyl, Heroin Use Substantially Decline In Patients Receiving Methadone Treatment For Opioid Use Disorder During First Year
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

A new study led by a Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health researcher found that the percent of patients treated for opioid use disorder with methadone significantly decreased their use of fentanyl during a year of treatment. The percent who tested positive for fentanyl declined on average from 21.8 percent in week one to 17.1 percent in week 52.

Released: 8-May-2023 2:40 PM EDT
Department of Energy Announces $45 Million for Inertial Fusion Energy (IFE)
Department of Energy, Office of Science

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, at the celebration ceremony of the historic achievement of fusion ignition at the National Ignition Facility (NIF), the U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm announced a plan to provide up to $45 million to support Inertial Fusion Energy (IFE) research and development.

Newswise: A Key Biological Pathway for Multiple Sclerosis Is Uncovered by Mount Sinai Researchers
3-May-2023 11:30 PM EDT
A Key Biological Pathway for Multiple Sclerosis Is Uncovered by Mount Sinai Researchers
Mount Sinai Health System

Findings reveal a previously unknown way in which the brain and immune system talk to each other and may identify a new therapeutic target for MS and other brain disorders.

Newswise: Is BCAA Catabolism a Driver of Acute Kidney Injury?
Released: 8-May-2023 7:05 AM EDT
Is BCAA Catabolism a Driver of Acute Kidney Injury?
Stony Brook University

Sian Piret, PhD, in the Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University, has received a $1.4 million grant from the National Institute of Health’s National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases to investigate a certain metabolic process called BCAA catabolism that is known to occur with acute kidney injury, but its exact role remains unknown.

Newswise: FAU Lands $2 Million for ‘Center for Equitable Transit-Oriented Communities’
Released: 4-May-2023 3:00 PM EDT
FAU Lands $2 Million for ‘Center for Equitable Transit-Oriented Communities’
Florida Atlantic University

The center will focus on “Preserving the Environment,” to support the U.S. DOT’s climate solution and sustainability goals. The center will promote transit access, multimodal infrastructure, compact and efficient land use patterns, as well as resilience and climate mitigation and adaptation.



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