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Scientists revive activity in frozen mouse brains for the first time

A familiar trope in science fiction is the cryopreserved time traveller, their body deep-frozen in suspended animation, then thawed and reawakened in another decade or century with all of their mental and physical capabilities intact.

Researchers attempting the cryogenic freezing and thawing of brain tissue from humans and other animals — mostly young vertebrates — have already shown that neuronal tissue can survive freezing on a cellular level and, after thawing, a functional one to some extent. But it has not been possible to fully restore the processes necessary for proper brain functioning — neuronal firing, cell metabolism and brain plasticity.

A team in Germany has now demonstrated a method for cryopreserving and thawing mouse brains that leaves some of this functionality intact. The study, published on 3 March in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 3, details the authors’ use of a method called vitrification, which preserves tissue in a glass-like state, along with a thawing process that preserves living tissue.

“If brain function is an emergent property of its physical structure, how can we recover it from complete shutdown?” asks Alexander German, a neurologist at the University of Erlangen–Nuremberg in Germany and lead author of the study. The findings, he says, hint at the potential to one day protect the brain during disease or in the wake of severe injury, set up organ banks and even achieve whole-body cryopreservation of mammals.

Mrityunjay Kothari, who studies mechanical engineering at the University of New Hampshire in Durham, agrees that the study advances the state of the art in cryopreservation of brain tissue. “This kind of progress is what gradually turns science fiction into scientific possibility,” he says. However, he adds that applications such as the long-term banking of large organs or mammals remain far beyond the capabilities of the study.

Article Featured in Nature.


Scientists Identified a Speech Trait That Foreshadows Cognitive Decline

Early signs of Alzheimer’s disease may be hidden in the way a person speaks, but it’s not yet clear which details of our diction are most critical for diagnosis.

A study from 2023 suggests that as we age, how we say something may matter more than what we say. Researchers at the University of Toronto think the pace of everyday speech may be a better indicator of cognitive decline than difficulty finding a word.

“Our results indicate that changes in general talking speed may reflect changes in the brain,” said cognitive neuroscientist Jed Meltzer when the research was published.

The Comb Jelly ‘Brain’ Is Far More Complex Than We Ever Realized

Comb jellies – very simple, gelatinous creatures best-known for their hypnotic underwater light shows – first appeared in Earth’s oceans around 550 million years ago.

For a long time, biologists have kind of considered them the living embodiment of ‘no thoughts, head empty’

But a new study suggests their central sensory organ is far more complex and brain-like than we realized.

Mitochondrial capsule transplantation therapy shows potential for major diseases

Chinese researchers have developed a novel and highly efficient mitochondrial capsule transplantation therapy, achieving the safe and efficient transplantation of healthy mitochondria into cells and tissues for the first time. This new therapy can significantly alleviate symptoms of severe diseases such as Parkinson’s disease.

According to the study, published in the journal Cell, the therapy proposes a brand-new strategy in the field of regenerative medicine, shedding fresh light on intervention in refractory diseases caused by mitochondrial dysfunction, such as mitochondrial genetic diseases and neuron degenerative disorders.

Mitochondria are organelles that refer to specialized subunits with specific functions in cells. Mitochondria function like power plants in cells, continuously converting nutrients into energy for life activities. They are also the only organelles in human cells that possess their own genome.

Scientists discover Alzheimer’s hidden “death switch” in the brain

Scientists have uncovered a hidden “death switch” in the brain that may be driving Alzheimer’s disease—and even found a way to turn it off in mice. The culprit is a toxic pairing of two proteins that, when combined, triggers the destruction of brain cells and fuels memory loss. By using a new compound to break apart this deadly duo, researchers were able to slow disease progression, protect brain cells, and even reduce hallmark amyloid buildup.

Abstract: A new mouse disease model for parkinsonism with psychiatric features 👇

https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI169297 Freja Herborg & team explore the behavioral consequences and dopaminergic dysfunction that arise from patient-derived mutations in the dopamine transporter associated with parkinsonism and co-morbid neuropsychiatric disease, establishing a new mouse disease model.

The images show striatal slices with decreased immunolabeling intensity of both DR1 and DR2 in DAT-I312F/D421N+/+ mice compared with WT mice.


1Molecular Neuropharmacology and Genetics Laboratory, Department of Neuroscience, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.

2CNS Research Group, Department of Pharmacology and Physiology, Department of Neurosciences, Faculty of Medicine, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Quebec, Canada.

3Centre for Neuroscience and Stereology, Copenhagen University Hospital Bispebjerg-Frederiksberg, Copenhagen, Denmark.

The brain region associated with moral inconsistency

Though previous studies have identified brain regions that are involved in moral behavior and moral judgement, little is known about how brain activity underpins moral inconsistency.

To identify brain regions associated with moral inconsistency, the researchers used fMRI imaging to scan people’s brains during a task that required them to weigh honesty and profit. Participants could earn more money by being dishonest, but they were also asked to rate their own behavior on a 10-point scale from “extremely immoral” to “extremely moral.” The team also monitored the participants’ brain activity while they judged the morality of other people undertaking the same task.

In people who were morally consistent—meaning, they judged themselves and others by the same moral standards—the vmPFC was activated similarly during both the behavioral and judgement tasks. However, in morally inconsistent participants—those who judged other people’s cheating as immoral but rated their own cheating more leniently—the vmPFC was less active during the behavioral task and less connected to other brain regions involved in decision making and morality.

To examine whether vmPFC activity plays a causal role in moral inconsistency, the researchers stimulated some participants’ vmPFCs via a non-invasive method called transcranial temporal interference stimulation (tTIS) before they undertook the behavioral and judging tasks. They showed that vmPFC stimulation resulted in higher levels of moral inconsistency compared to participants who received mock stimulation.

These results suggest that people who are morally inconsistent don’t make use of their vmPFC to integrate information when making behavioral decisions, the researchers say. “Individuals exhibiting moral inconsistency are not necessarily blind to their own moral principles; they are just biologically failing to consider and apply them in their own moral behavior,” says the author. ScienceMission sciencenewshighlights https://sciencemission.com/Moral-inconsistency

Rocky Is Weirder Than You Think (ft. Andy Weir!)

Go to http://incogni.com/joescott and you can get 60% off an annual Incogni plan that protects your private info online.

Project Hail Mary opened in theaters last week, introducing the world to Rocky, the alien creature whose friendship with the main character, Ryland Grace, forms the heart of the story. Rocky quickly became a fan favorite of readers of the book, partly because of the extensive research and imagination put into the creature by the author, Andy Weir. In today’s video, I have Andy Weir join me to break down everything you could possibly want to know about Rocky, from his (not so) fictional planet to his crazy anatomy. It’s a masterclass in speculative biology that will amaze amaze amaze you.

Check out the Oldest and Newest Places posters, now on sale!
https://laughsmarter.com/collections/.… to support the channel? Here’s how: Patreon: / answerswithjoe Channel Memberships: / @joescott T-Shirts & Merch: https://laughsmarter.com Book of Mysteries: https://a.co/d/0gRx0qvM Documentary: https://nebula.tv/oldestnewest Check out my 2nd channel, Joe Scott TMI: / @joescott-tmi And my podcast channel, Conversations With Joe: / @conversationswithjoe You can listen to my podcast, Conversations With Joe on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Spotify 👉 https://spoti.fi/37iPGzF Apple Podcasts 👉 https://apple.co/3j94kfq Google Podcasts 👉 https://bit.ly/3qZCo1V Follow me at all my places! Instagram: / answerswithjoe TikTok: / answerswithjoe Facebook: / answerswithjoe Twitter: / answerswithjoe TIMESTAMPS 0:00 — Intro 3:15 — About The Eridani System 7:10 — Morphology 18:04 — Crystal Brain 20:44 — Digestion 24:19 — Circulation/Musculature/Dormancy 28:37 — Communication 35:00 — How They Brought Rocky to Life 38:16 — Sponsor — Incogni.

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Sean M. Carroll

“I like to say that physics is hard because physics is easy, by which I mean we actually think about physics as students.”

Up next, The Multiverse is real. Just not in the way you think it is. ► • The Multiverse is real. Just not in the wa…

Physics seems complicated, until you realize why it works so well, says physicist Sean Carroll, revealing the basis of the field’s greatest successes: Radical simplicity.

Carroll takes us from Newton’s clockwork universe to Laplace’s demon, to Einstein’s spacetime revolution, exploring the historical shockwaves each breakthrough caused. If you’ve wondered how stripping the world down to its simplest parts can reveal deeper truths, this is where that story begins.

00:00:00 Radical simplicity in physics.
00:00:55 Chapter 1: The physics of free will.
00:04:55 Laplace’s Demon.
00:06:27 The clockwork universe paradigm.
00:07:41 Determinism and compatibilism.
00:08:45 Chapter 2: The invention of spacetime.
00:17:30: Einstein’s general theory of relativity.
00:24:27 Chapter 3: The quantum revolution.
00:28:05 The 2 biggest ideas in physics.
00:32:27 Visualizing physics.
00:38:17 Quantum field theory.
00:46:51 The Higgs boson particle.
00:47:28 The standard model of particle physics.
00:52:53 The core theory of physics.
01:02:03 The measurement problem.
01:13:47 Chapter 4: The power of collective genius.
01:16:19 A timeline of the theories of physics.

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