Scientists have identified a previously unknown brain circuit that appears to drive chronic pain, separate from the pathways responsible for immediate, protective pain responses.
Organoids are miniature, simplified versions of an organ. Over the past two decades, scientists have developed them for the gut, lung, liver, mammary gland, brain, and more. Now, researchers at Yale School of Medicine (YSM) have organoid-ized the pineal gland, a small structure in the brain that regulates sleep patterns through its production of the hormone melatonin.
In a study published in Cell Stem Cell, the researchers demonstrate how pineal gland organoids can be used to study sleep dysfunction in conditions like Angelman syndrome, autism, and depression.
“In a number of neuropsychiatric conditions, severe sleep problems are a major symptom,” says In-Hyun Park, Ph.D., associate professor of genetics at YSM and senior author of the study. “With pineal gland organoids, we may be able to uncover the causes of those sleep disturbances and possibly identify treatments.”
The hair cells lining the inner ear are among the most sophisticated structures in the human body: capable of detecting sounds as faint as a whisper, while helping to maintain our sense of balance. Through new models detailed in PRX Life, a team led by Roman Belousov at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory has revealed for the first time how oscillating bundles attached to these cells operate in different thermodynamic regimes—offering a new framework for understanding how our hearing works at a fundamental level.
Within the inner ear, each hair cell hosts a hair “bundle”: a cluster of tiny, bristle-like projections that vibrate in response to incoming sound waves. The mechanical energy from these oscillations is then converted into electrical signals which travel to the brain. Rather than being passive receivers, these bundles actively oscillate —driven by molecular motors within the cell that allow them to amplify faint signals and tune in to specific frequencies.
But despite decades of study, researchers are still unclear on the connection between this active oscillation and the hair bundle’s response to external sound. Existing models tended to treat bundles as if they were moving spontaneously, without accounting for what happens when they actually interact with sound.
The ability of different genetic variants—changes to one or more building blocks of DNA—to cause disease, and to what extent, has historically been opaque. Geneticist and Crick group leader Greg Findlay has pioneered a new method in the hope of changing this. Called “saturation genome editing,” the new technique involves mapping every single variant in a given gene to work out what it does and pinpoint which changes are responsible for specific disorders.
While Greg was refining these experiments, Nicky Whiffin, associate professor at the University of Oxford, had identified that mutations in a tiny gene were behind a rare inherited neurodevelopmental disorder, known as ReNU syndrome, which impacts brain function, development and motor skills. Children develop this syndrome if a single copy of the RNU4-2 gene is mutated in a specific way.
Nicky initially found that several distinct mutations in a critical region of the gene caused the condition, and she was keen to understand if some of these genetic variants led to more severe disease.
The pro-Alzheimer’s allele APOE4 makes hippocampal neurons in mice smaller and hyperexcitable. This effect, which resembles epilepsy and accelerated aging, can be mitigated by manipulating a neuronal protein [1].
Before symptoms arise
Alzheimer’s disease begins long before symptoms appear, building silently for decades. The single strongest genetic risk factor for the common, late-onset form of Alzheimer’s is the ε4 variant of the apolipoprotein (APOE) gene, APOE4. Carrying a single copy of this variant (being heterozygous) roughly triples your Alzheimer’s risk; having two copies increases it about 12-fold.
Researchers at the Gladstone Institute have uncovered the molecular mechanism by which APOE4 — the most significant genetic risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease, present in roughly a quarter of the population — begins damaging neural circuits well before any cognitive symptoms emerge. Studying young mice carrying the APOE4 variant, the team found that the gene triggers overproduction of the protein Nell2, which causes neurons to shrink and become hyperactive. Crucially, the degree of early neuronal hyperactivity predicted the severity of memory impairment later in life, even in animals that still showed normal learning and memory at the time of measurement. Strikingly, targeting Nell2 therapeutically was able to reverse these changes even in adult animals, demonstrating that the neurodegeneration is not irreversible and that a window for intervention may exist even after the disease process has begun. The team is currently continuing preclinical testing of this therapeutic strategy.
New findings on the APOE4 gene variant point to a potential therapeutic target for Alzheimer’s disease. From left to right, Gladstone scientists Misha Zilberter, Yadong Huang, and Dennis Tabuena examine findings from their research, which is published in the journal Nature Aging.
For the millions of people who carry the gene APOE4, the strongest known genetic risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease, their brain activity may begin changing long before any memory problems appear. Now, researchers at Gladstone Institutes have uncovered a precise chain of molecular events behind those early changes and identified a potential way to reverse them.
Published in the journal Nature Aging, their new study in mouse models reveals how APOE4 triggers increased production of the protein Nell2, which makes neurons shrink and become hyperactive. The more hyperactive the neurons were in early life, the more severe were the memory problems the mice developed later in life.
How pancreatic cancer survives ferroptosis?
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) tumors harboring KRAS mutations exhibit relative resistance to iron-dependent form of cell death, ferroptosis, compared with other tumor types but the mechanisms remain unclear.
The researchers reveal that hypoxia and pancreatic tumor interstitial fluid cooperate to suppress ferroptosis in pancreatic cancer through HIF-2 activity.
HIF-2 enables tumor survival by regulating glutathione metabolism through upregulating the expression of both components of the system Xc− cystine transporter and transsulfuration pathway enzymes CBS and CTH to increase intracellular cysteine levels.
HIF-2 also induces the Parkin mitophagy factor and suppresses mitochondrial function and reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation and thus survives metabolically hostile environments, defining a tissue-specific role in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. sciencenewshighlights ScienceMission https://sciencemission.com/HIF-2-and-PDAC
Hubbi et al. reveal that hypoxia and pancreatic tumor interstitial fluid cooperate to suppress ferroptosis in pancreatic cancer through HIF-2 activity. By transcriptionally regulating glutathione metabolism and mitochondrial function, HIF-2 enables tumor survival in metabolically hostile environments, defining a tissue-specific role in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma.
Optogenetics, Biohybrid Implants And The Future Of Brain-Computer Interfaces — Dr. Alan Mardinly Ph.D. — CSO & Co-Founder, Science
What if we could restore vision, communicate directly with the brain, and even extend human life—not with machines alone, but with living, engineered biology?
Dr. Alan Mardinly, Ph.D. is the Chief Scientific Officer and Co-Founder of Science Corp. (https://science.xyz/), a neurotechnology company developing next-generation brain interfaces and biohybrid neural implants aimed at restoring human function.
Dr. Mardinly leads the company’s biohybrid program, focused on combining genetically engineered cells with advanced optical hardware to create optogenetic therapies for vision restoration and new types of brain-machine interfaces.
Dr. Mardinly has spent more than 15 years working at the intersection of neuroscience, genetics, and neural engineering.