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Sunday, August 12, 2012

Neuroscientists find brain stem cells that may be responsible for higher functions, bigger brains




Scientists from The Scripps Research Institute have identified a new stem cell population that may be responsible for giving birth to the neurons responsible for higher thinking. The finding also paves the way for scientists to produce these neurons in culture—a first step in developing better treatments for cognitive disorders, such as schizophrenia and autism, which result from disrupted connections among these brain cells.
Published in the August 10, 2012 issue of the journal Science, the new research reveals how neurons in the uppermost layers of the cerebral cortex form during embryonic brain development.
"The cerebral cortex is the seat of higher brain function, where information gets integrated and where we form memories and consciousness," said the study's senior author Ulrich Mueller, a professor and director of the Dorris Neuroscience Center at Scripps Research. "If we want to understand who we are, we need to understand this area where everything comes together and forms our impression of the world."
In the new study, Mueller's team identified a neural stem cell in mice that specifically gives rise to the neurons that make up the upper layers of the cerebral cortex. Previously, it was thought that all cortical neurons—those making up both the lower and upper layers—came from the same type of stem cell, called a radial glial cell, or RGC. A neuron's fate was thought to be determined by the timing of its birth date. The Scripps Research team, however, showed that there is a distinct stem cell progenitor that gives rise to upper layer neurons, regardless of birth date or place.
"Advanced functions like consciousness, thought, and creativity require a lot of different neuronal cell types and a central question has been how all this diversity is produced in the cortex," said Santos Franco, a senior research associate in Mueller's laboratory and first author of the paper. "Our study shows this diversity already exists in the progenitor cells."
Peeling Back the Onion Layers
In mammals, the cortex is made up of six distinct anatomic layers holding different types of excitatory neurons. They are not the uniform layers of a cake, but rather, they are more like the layers wrapped around an onion. The smaller lower layers, on the inside, host neurons that connect to the brain stem and spinal cord to help regulate essential functions such as breathing and movement. The larger upper layers, closer to the outer surface of the brain, contain neurons that integrate information coming in from the senses and connect across the two halves of the brain.
The upper layers are a "relatively young invention," evolutionarily speaking, having been greatly expanded during primate evolution, said Mueller. They give humans in particular the unique abilities to think abstractly, plan for the future and problem-solve.
For the last two decades, scientists have believed that the fate of cerebral cortex neurons was determined by their birth date because each layer is formed in a time-dependent manner. The lower layer neurons form in the center of the "ball" first, and then the cells that will become the upper layers form last, migrating through the lower layers.
"So the model was that there is a stem cell in the center of the ball that generates the different types of neurons in successive waves," said Mueller. "What we now show is that there are at least two different populations of RGCs and potentially more."
Following Fate
Franco first created a line of mice in which he could track upper-layer neurons as they were born and migrated. The team followed a marker gene called Cux2, which was previously reported to be expressed only by upper-layer neurons. By linking a gene for an enzyme called Cre to the Cux2 gene, the scientists could watch any cell expressing Cux2 under the microscope, because the Cre enzyme flips on another gene that glows fluorescent red.
Surprisingly, the team observed Cux2 already turned on in some of the RGCs, even at the earliest points in brain development—embryonic day nine or ten—before any upper-layer neurons exist. Following this population of glowing stem cells through development, the team showed that the cells almost exclusively generated upper-layer neurons. In contrast, the subgroup of RGCs not expressing Cux2 became lower-layer neurons.
Next, the team removed these Cux2-positive precursor cells from their niche in the embryonic brain to see how they would develop in a lab dish. When they cultured both types of RGCs, again only Cux2-expressing RGCs developed into upper-layer neurons.
In developing brains, these Cux2-positive stem cells first self-renew and proliferate before differentiating later into neurons. So, the team wanted to know if a neuron's birth date determined its fate. To test this, the researchers delivered a TCF4 molecule in utero that forced the Cux2-positive RGCs to prematurely differentiate. Even though it was too early in normal development, the Cux2-positive RGCs still produced upper-layer neurons.
In other words, regardless of position or timing, the Cux2-positive RGCs are destined to become upper-layer neurons. Mueller and colleagues concluded that these stem cells have some intrinsic property that determines their fate from the start.
The work also shows that this RGC subset is responsible for the huge proliferation of cells necessary to create the larger upper-layer cortex found in primate brains. "If we want to understand how the human brain evolved, how we are different from an amphibian, then this one precursor cell may have been important," said Mueller.
But, bigger brains came with a risk, making humans more prone to disorders when upper-layer neurons don't form connections properly. Up until now, researchers trying to reproduce human cortical neurons in the lab from stem cells have only generated lower-layer-type neurons. "This opens a door now to try to make the upper-layer neurons, which are frequently affected in psychiatric disorders," said Mueller.
More information: "Fate-restricted neural progenitors in the mammalian cerebral cortex," Science, August 10, 2012.
Provided by Scripps Research Institute
"Neuroscientists find brain stem cells that may be responsible for higher functions, bigger brains." August 9th, 2012.http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-08-neuroscientists-brain-stem-cells-responsible.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

Depression linked with increased risk of peripheral artery disease




(Medical Xpress) -- Depression was linked with an increased risk of peripheral artery disease (PAD) in a study of more than 1,000 men and women with heart disease conducted by researchers at the San Francisco VA Medical Center and the University of California, San Francisco.
PAD is a circulatory problem in which narrowed arteries reduce blood flow to the limbs – usually the legs and feet – resulting in pain, reduced mobility and, in extreme cases, gangrene and amputation.
The study was published electronically on July 26 in the Journal of the American Heart Association.
Marlene Grenon, MD, CM, a vascular surgeon at SFVAMC and an assistant professor of Surgery at UCSF, led the analysis of data from 1,024 participants in the Heart and Soul Study, a prospective study of men and women with coronary artery disease who were followed for an average of approximately seven years.
“We discovered that there was an association between depression and PAD at baseline, and also found that the patients who were depressed at the beginning of the study had a higher likelihood of developing PAD during follow-up at seven years,” said Grenon.
“These findings add to the growing body of research showing the importance of depression in both the development and progression of PAD,” said senior author Beth Cohen, MD, MAS, a physician at SFVAMC and an assistant professor of medicine at UCSF. “This also emphasizes the need for medical providers to be attentive to the mental health of their patients who have developed, or who are at risk for, PAD.”
The authors found that some of the risk for PAD was partly explained by modifiable risk factors such as smoking and reduced physical activity.
“We still don’t know which comes first,” said Grenon. “Is it that patients with PAD become depressed because their mobility is impaired, or that people who are depressed engage in unhealthy behaviors such as smoking and lack of exercise, and are thus more at risk of developing PAD? Or might it be a vicious cycle, where one leads to the other?”
Further research is needed to tease out cause and effect, she said.
The study authors suggest that whatever the initial cause, lifestyle modifications such as being more physically active, eating better, quitting smoking and managing stress more effectively might reduce the risk for the association, as well as potentially address symptoms of both PAD and depression.
“These lifestyle changes would be considered healthy for anyone, and would also help overall cardiovascular health,” said Grenon.
“As providers, we can help patients recognize the connections between mental and physical health,” added Cohen. “This may help reduce the stigma of mental health diagnosis and encourage patients to seek treatment for problems such as depression.”
Provided by University of California, San Francisco
"Depression linked with increased risk of peripheral artery disease." August 9th, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-08-depression-linked-peripheral-artery-disease.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

Friday, August 10, 2012

PALM READING


Palm reading—also called palmistry—is the practice of interpreting the lines, shape, and features of the hand to understand a person’s character, life patterns, and potential future trends ✋🔍
It’s been used for thousands of years in India, Sri Lanka, China, Greece, and the Middle East.

The basic idea

Your hands reflect:

  • How you think

  • How you feel

  • How you act

  • And the patterns that tend to repeat in your life

Palmistry doesn’t claim to “fix” the future—it looks at tendencies and directions, not fate carved in stone.


Main parts of palm reading

1. Palm shape

  • Earth hand (square, firm): practical, grounded

  • Air hand (square + long fingers): analytical, communicative

  • Fire hand (long palm, short fingers): energetic, leadership-oriented

  • Water hand (long palm + fingers): sensitive, intuitive

2. Major lines

  • Life line: vitality and life energy (not lifespan)

  • Head line: thinking style and decision-making

  • Heart line: emotions, love, and relationships

  • Fate line: career direction and life responsibilities (not everyone has it)

3. Mounts (raised areas)
Each mount relates to a planet and a trait:

  • Venus: love, vitality

  • Jupiter: ambition, leadership

  • Saturn: discipline, wisdom

  • Sun (Apollo): creativity, recognition

  • Mercury: communication, business

4. Fingers & thumb

  • Show willpower, logic, independence, and balance between emotion and reason

Which hand is read?

  • Right hand: current life and choices

  • Left hand: inborn traits and potential
    (Some traditions reverse this for women.)

Is palm reading scientific?

No—it’s a traditional and interpretive art, not a science. Many people use it for: