Curated News: National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)

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Released: 21-Aug-2023 2:05 PM EDT
Research aims to uncover genetic and environmental risk factors of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease
Wayne State University Division of Research

A $3 million, five-year award from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences of the NIH aims to discover and validate the gene Х heavy metal (GXM) interactions in human livers and to understand their role in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease

Newswise: Nanozymes drive tumor-specific drug delivery while minimizing toxicity
Released: 9-Aug-2023 10:35 AM EDT
Nanozymes drive tumor-specific drug delivery while minimizing toxicity
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering

Nanozymes—artificial enzymes that can carry out pre-determined chemical reactions—could selectively activate a cancer drug within a tumor while minimizing damage to healthy tissue in a mouse model of triple negative breast cancer.

Newswise: Transcription Factors Contribute to Subtypes of Colorectal Cancers
Released: 27-Jul-2023 11:05 AM EDT
Transcription Factors Contribute to Subtypes of Colorectal Cancers
Johns Hopkins Medicine

New research in colorectal cancers directed by investigators at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center suggests that expression of transcription factors — proteins that help turn specific genes on or off by binding to nearby DNA — may play a central role in the degree of DNA methylation across the genome, contributing to the development of different subtypes of these cancers. Methylation is a process in which certain chemical groups attach to areas of DNA that guide genes’ on/off switches.

Released: 19-Jul-2023 12:00 PM EDT
Why Ongoing Worker Safety Training Is Critical to Effective Disaster Response
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Rutgers is part of a national network of institutions tasked with ensuring workers have the knowledge and skills to stay safe on the job.

   
Newswise: Women treated for breast cancer may age faster than cancer-free women
Released: 19-Jul-2023 10:05 AM EDT
Women treated for breast cancer may age faster than cancer-free women
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)

Women diagnosed and treated for breast cancer have increased biological aging compared to women who remain free of breast cancer, according to a new study by researchers at the National Institutes of Health and their collaborators. Among women diagnosed with breast cancer, the association with faster biological aging was most pronounced for those who received radiation therapy, while surgery showed no association with biological aging. This finding suggests that developing cancer is not what increases the aging effect.

Newswise:Video Embedded proteins-predict-significant-step-toward-development-of-diabetes
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28-Jun-2023 3:00 PM EDT
Proteins Predict Significant Step Toward Development of Diabetes
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Scientists have taken an important step forward in predicting who will develop Type 1 diabetes months before symptoms appear.

Released: 27-Jun-2023 9:00 AM EDT
Mount Sinai Institute for Exposomics Research Awarded $8.45 Million Grant to Study Environmental Health
Mount Sinai Health System

New five-year award will focus on the effects of environmental exposures on health across the lifespan

   
Released: 14-Jun-2023 1:30 PM EDT
UC Irvine receives grant to study lead exposure effects on children’s learning, behavior
University of California, Irvine

The Program in Public Health at the University of California, Irvine has received a five-year, $2.7 million grant from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences to research the connection between low-level lead exposure during pregnancy and early childhood and children’s school performance and behavior in Santa Ana, California.

Released: 7-Jun-2023 8:00 PM EDT
Exposure to “forever chemicals” during pregnancy linked to increased risk of obesity in kids
Brown University

The risks of exposure to “forever chemicals” start even before birth, a new study confirms, potentially setting up children for future health issues.

Released: 5-Jun-2023 2:35 PM EDT
Fetal exposure to PCBs affects hearing health later in life
Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology

Researchers at the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology found that early exposure to an environmental chemical called polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs, made it more difficult for mice to recover from sound-related trauma sustained later in life.

Released: 10-May-2023 2:45 PM EDT
Air pollution worsens movement disorder after stroke
Hiroshima University

Air pollution has been shown to have a negative effect on the prognosis of ischemic stroke, or stroke caused by reduced blood flow to the brain, but the exact mechanism is unknown. A team of researchers recently conducted a study to determine whether or not increased inflammation of the brain, also known as neuroinflammation, is the main culprit.

   
30-Mar-2023 11:05 AM EDT
Higher lithium levels in drinking water may raise autism risk
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Pregnant women whose household tap water had higher levels of lithium had a moderately higher risk of their offspring being diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder, researchers reported in JAMA Pediatrics.

Newswise: Black, Latinx Californians face highest exposure to oil and gas wells
Released: 24-Mar-2023 4:25 PM EDT
Black, Latinx Californians face highest exposure to oil and gas wells
University of California, Berkeley

More than 1 million Californians live near active oil or gas wells, potentially exposing them to drilling-related pollution that can contribute to asthma, preterm births and a variety of other health problems.

   
Released: 8-Mar-2023 12:40 PM EST
New Study: Abatacept Therapy Offers Promising Results Treating Juvenile Dermatomyositis
George Washington University

Juvenile dermatomyositis, a rare but often severe and chronic systemic autoimmune disease, includes a large number of patients who are treatment resistant, requiring long term immunosuppressive therapy. A small open-label study published in Arthritis and Rheumatology shows promise using a targeted biologic therapy called abatacept to treat such patients.

Released: 6-Mar-2023 12:35 PM EST
Exposure to green space linked to reduced risk of postpartum depression
University of California, Irvine

In an analysis of more than 415,00 electronic health records of healthy, full-term births in Southern California, a team of researchers led by the University of California, Irvine determined that exposure to green space and tree coverage was associated with a decreased risk of postpartum depression among mothers.

Not for public release

This news release is embargoed until 17-Feb-2023 2:00 PM EST Released to reporters: 16-Feb-2023 9:00 AM EST

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Released: 15-Feb-2023 11:05 AM EST
PFAS Can Suppress White Blood Cell’s Ability to Destroy Invaders
North Carolina State University

In a new study, researchers found that the PFAS chemical GenX suppresses the neutrophil respiratory burst – the method white blood cells known as neutrophils use to kill invading pathogens.

27-Jan-2023 9:45 AM EST
Clemson scientists identify enzyme that reduces diet-induced obesity in humans
Clemson University

Clemson University researchers have identified an enzyme and its products in humans that reduce diet-induced obesity.

Released: 20-Dec-2022 6:10 PM EST
Exposure to toxic blue-green algae, exacerbated by climate change, shown to cause liver disease in mouse models
University of California, Irvine

Algal blooms or cylindrospermopsin, exacerbated by climate change, shown to have a connection with several adverse health effects.

   
Released: 12-Dec-2022 4:15 PM EST
Molecules found in mucus could prevent cholera infection
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)

MIT researchers have identified molecules found in mucus that can block cholera infection by interfering with the genes that cause the microbe to switch into a harmful state.



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