Tag: pH

  • Researchers elucidate how gene mutation mechanism causes autism

    Researchers elucidate how gene mutation mechanism causes autism

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    Researchers show how mutations of gene transcription and chromatin regulation-related genes cause autism.

    The loss-of-function mutation of KMT2C, a gene involved in histone modification, leads to the development of autism and other neurodevelopmental deficits. However, the precise mechanism of the disease progression is still unknown. Now, researchers from Japan have developed an animal model and elucidated the mechanism by which mutation in genes involved in chromatin modification causes autism. They have also discovered a drug that can be used in the treatment of autism.

    Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) encompasses neurodevelopmental conditions where patients display repetitive behavior and impaired sociality. Genetic factors have been shown to influence the development of ASD. Additionally, recent studies have shown that the genes involved in chromatin modification and gene transcription are involved in the pathogenesis of ASD. Among the many genes implicated in this process, the gene KMT2C (lysine methyltransferase 2c), which codes for a catalytic unit of H3K4 (histone H3 lysine 4) methyltransferase complex, has been identified to be associated with the development of autism and other neurodevelopmental disorders. Previous studies have shown that haploinsufficiency (a condition where, of the two copies of the gene, only one remains functional) of KMT2C is a risk factor for ASD and other neurodevelopmental disorders. However, the molecular mechanism through which the loss-of-function mutation in KMT2C leads to these conditions remains unclear.

    To address this knowledge gap, researchers from Juntendo University, RIKEN, and the University of Tokyo in Japan aimed to provide answers to these questions in a benchmark study published in the journal Molecular Psychiatry on 26 March 2024. The research team included Professor Tadafumi Kato from the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science at Juntendo University Graduate School of Medicine, Dr. Takumi Nakamura and Dr. Atsushi Takata from the RIKEN Center for Brain Science, and Professor Takashi Tsuboi from Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo.

    To get to the bottom of KMT2C‘s role in ASD pathogenesis, the team developed and analyzed genetically engineered strain mice (Kmt2c+/fs) having a frameshift mutation that models the KMT2C haploinsufficiency. They then performed various behavioral analyses, in which they observed that the mutant mice exhibited lower sociality, inflexibility, auditory hypersensitivity, and cognitive impairments, which are all ASD-related symptoms.

    Next, they performed transcriptomic and epigenetic profiling to understand the basis of the molecular changes observed in the mutant mice. What they discovered was remarkable: the genes associated with increased ASD risk showed higher expression in these mutant mice.

    This was somewhat unexpected. KMT2C mediates H3K4 methylation, which is thought to activate gene expression, and thereby KMT2C haploinsufficiency was expected to cause reduced expression of target genes.”


    Dr. Atsushi Takata, RIKEN Center for Brain Science

    To gain mechanistic insights into their finding, the researchers carried out chromatin immunoprecipitation, a technique to determine the location on the DNA where the protein interacts with it. They found an overlap between KMT2C and the differentially expressed genes exhibiting reduced expression, suggesting that KMT2C haploinsufficiency leads to ASD-related transcriptomic changes through an indirect effect on gene expression.

    Further, to identify the cell types that contribute more to the pathological changes seen in the mutant mice, the researchers performed single-cell RNA sequencing of newborn mice brains. They observed that the altered genes associated with ASD risk were predominant in undifferentiated radial glial cells. However, a gross change in the cell composition was not observed, implying that the transcriptomic dysregulation does not severely impact cell fate.

    Finally, the researchers tested the effects of vafidemstat, a brain penetrant inhibitor of LSD1 (lysine-specific histone demethylase 1A), that could ameliorate histone methylation abnormalities. They found that vafidemstat improved the social deficits in the mutant mice and had an exceptional rescuing effect by changing the expression levels of the differentially expressed genes to their normal expression level. This finding showed that vafidemstat is a valid drug for mutant mice and can potentially help restore the normal transcriptomic state.

    What sets this discovery apart is that it challenges the commonly held belief that ASD disability may not be cured and demonstrates the efficacy of vafidemstat in improving ASD-like phenotypes. The results open doors to future research to strengthen the foundation for the pharmacologic treatment of ASD and other neurodevelopmental disorders. Prof. Kato concludes, “Our research shows that drugs similar to vafidemstat may be generalizable to multiple categories of psychiatric disorders.”

    Source:

    Journal reference:

    Nakamura, T., et al. (2024). Transcriptomic dysregulation and autistic-like behaviors in Kmt2c haploinsufficient mice rescued by an LSD1 inhibitor. Molecular Psychiatry. doi.org/10.1038/s41380-024-02479-8.

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  • UC San Diego researchers discover genetic connections to alcohol consumption

    UC San Diego researchers discover genetic connections to alcohol consumption

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    A research group centered at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine has drilled deep into a dataset of over 3 million individuals compiled by the direct-to-consumer genetics company 23andMe, Inc., and found intriguing connections between genetic factors influencing alcohol consumption and their relationship with other disorders.

    The study was recently published in the Lancet eBioMedicine.

    Sandra Sanchez-Roige, Ph.D., corresponding author and associate professor at UC San Diego School of Medicine Department of Psychiatry, explained that the study used genetic data to broadly classify individuals as being European, Latin American and African American. Such classifications “are needed to avoid a statistical genetics pitfall called population stratification,” noted co-author Abraham A. Palmer, Ph.D., professor and vice chair for basic research in the psychiatry department.

    The researchers analyzed genetic data from the 3 million 23andMe research participants, focusing on three specific little snippets of DNA known as single-nucleotide polymorphisms, or SNPs. Sanchez-Roige explained that variants, or alleles, of these particular SNPs are “protective” against a variety of alcohol behaviors, from excessive alcohol drinking to alcohol use disorder.

    One of the alcohol-protective variants they considered is very rare: the most prevalent among the three alleles found in the study showed up in 232 individuals of the 2,619,939 European cohort, 29 of the 446,646 Latin American cohort and in 7 of the 146,776 African American cohort; others are much more common. These variants affect how the body metabolizes ethanol -; the intoxicating chemical in alcoholic beverages.

    The people who have the minor allele variant of the SNP convert ethanol to acetaldehyde very rapidly. And that causes a lot of negative effects.”


    Sandra Sanchez-Roige, Ph.D., corresponding author and associate professor at UC San Diego School of Medicine Department of Psychiatry

    She went on to say that the resulting nausea eclipses any pleasurable effects of alcohol -; think of a bad hangover that sets in almost immediately.

    “These variants are primarily associated with how much someone may consume alcohol,” she said. “And they also tend to prevent alcohol use disorder, because these variants are primarily associated with the quantity of alcohol someone may drink.”

    Sanchez-Roige explained that the SNP variants’ influence on alcohol consumption are well researched, but her group took a “hypothesis-free” approach to the 23andMe dataset, which contains survey data on thousands of traits and behaviors. The researchers wanted to find out if the three SNP variants might have any other effects beyond alcohol consumption.

    Sanchez-Roige and Palmer noted that their group has developed a 10-year partnership with 23andMe that has focused on numerous traits, especially those with relevance for addiction. This work is the basis of an academic collaboration through the 23andMe Research Program. 

    They data-mined the analyses of DNA from saliva samples submitted by consenting 23andMe research participants, as well as the responses to the surveys of health and behavior available from the 23andMe database, and found a constellation of associations, not necessarily connected with alcohol. Individuals with the alcohol-protecting alleles had generally better health, including less chronic fatigue and needing less daily assistance with daily tasks.

    But the paper notes individuals with the alcohol-protective alleles also had worse health outcomes in certain areas: more lifetime tobacco use, more emotional eating, more Graves’ disease and hyperthyroidism. Individuals with the alcohol-protective alleles also reported totally unexpected differences, such as more malaria, more myopia and several cancers, particularly more skin cancer and lung cancer, and more migraine with aura. 

    Sanchez-Roige acknowledged that there is a chicken-and-egg aspect to their findings. For example: Cardiovascular disease is just one of a number of maladies known to be associated with alcohol consumption. “So is alcohol consumption leading to these conditions?” she asks. Palmer finishes the thought: “Or do these genetic differences influence traits like malaria and skin cancer in a manner that is independent of alcohol consumption?”

    Sanchez-Roige said that such broad, hypothesis-free studies are only possible if researchers have access to very large sets of data. Many datasets, including the one used in the study, rely heavily on individuals with European ancestry.

    “It is important to include individuals from different ancestral backgrounds in genetic studies because it provides a more complete understanding of the genetic basis of alcohol behaviors and other conditions, all of which contributes to a more inclusive and accurate understanding of human health,” she said. “The study of only one group of genetically similar individuals (for example, individuals of shared European ancestry) could worsen health disparities by aiding discoveries that will disproportionately benefit only that population.”

    She said their study opens numerous doors for future research, chasing down possible connections between the alcohol-protective alleles and conditions that have no apparent connection with alcohol consumption.

    “Understanding the underlying mechanisms of these effects could have implications for treatments and preventative medicine,” Sanchez-Roige noted. 

    Co-authors on the paper from the University of California San Diego School of Medicine Department of Psychiatry are Mariela V. Jennings, Natasia S. Courchesne-Krak, Renata B. Cupertino and Sevim B. Bianchi. Sandra Sanchez-Roige is also associated with the Department of Medicine, Division of Genetic Medicine, Vanderbilt University.

    Other co-authors are: José Jaime Martínez-Magaña, Department of Psychiatry, Division of Human Genetics, Yale University School of Medicine; Laura Vilar-Ribó, Psychiatric Genetics Unit, Group of Psychiatry, Mental Health and Addiction, Vall d’Hebron Research Institute, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain; Alexander S. Hatoum, Department of Psychology & Brain Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis; Elizabeth G. Atkinson, Department of Molecular and Human Genetics, Baylor College of Medicine; Paola Giusti-Rodriguez, Department of Psychiatry, University of Florida College of Medicine; Janitza L. Montalvo-Ortiz, Department of Psychiatry, Division of Human Genetics, Yale University School of Medicine, National Center of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, VA CT Healthcare Center; Joel Gelernter, VA CT Healthcare Center, Department of Psychiatry, West Haven CT; and Departments of Psychiatry, Genetics & Neuroscience, Yale Univ. School of Medicine; María Soler Artigas, Psychiatric Genetics Unit, Group of Psychiatry, Mental Health and Addiction, Vall d’Hebron Research Institute, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain; Department of Mental Health, Hospital Universitari Vall d’Hebron, Barcelona; Biomedical Network Research Centre on Mental Health (CIBERSAM), Madrid; and Department of Genetics, Microbiology, and Statistics, Faculty of Biology, Universitat de Barcelona; Howard J. Edenberg, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Indiana University School of Medicine; and the 23andMe Inc. Research Team, including Sarah L. Elson and Pierre Fontanillas.

    The study was funded, in part, by Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program grants T32IR5226 and 28IR-0070, National Institute of Health (NIH) National Institute of Drug Abuse (NIDA) DP1DA054394, and NIH National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) R25MH081482. 

    Source:

    Journal reference:

    Jennings, M. V., et al. (2024) A phenome-wide association and Mendelian randomisation study of alcohol use variants in a diverse cohort comprising over 3 million individuals. Lancet eBioMedicine. doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2024.105086.

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  • SRF announces grant to support research on SynGAP-Related Disorder in adults

    SRF announces grant to support research on SynGAP-Related Disorder in adults

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    The SynGAP Research Fund 501(c) today announced a grant to Dr. Danielle Andrade, Dr. Miles Thompson, Dr. Ryan Yuen, Dr. Rogier Kerssebook, and Dr. Anatoljevna Anna Kattentidt to support research on SynGAP-Related Disorder (SRD) in adults. SRD is a rare neurodevelopmental disorder that causes severe intractable epilepsy, and intellectual disability, and is one of the leading genetic causes of autism. 

    Dr. Andrade’s team recently published the only research on SRD in adults in Neurology Genetics, Rong 2023 which SRF was instrumental in encouraging and supporting via recruitment. See Dr. Andrade’s readout on this work at the 2022 SRF SYNGAP1 Conference here. The grant SRF is announcing today will build on that groundbreaking work. 

    Dr. Andrade, MD, the principal investigator for this work says “This research holds deep significance not just for the adults in this study but also for children affected by SYNGAP1. As children become adults, investigating the outcomes of SYNGAP1 is pivotal in empowering families and clinicians alike, equipping them to screen for, diagnose, and manage manifestations seen in adults. Also, findings of this study will be important to guide precision therapies as well as evaluate their efficacy.”

    Michael Graglia, Managing Director of SRF, and father to a child with SRD says “Dr. Andrade is the world’s leading expert in adults with DEEs, the SYNGAP1 community is very fortunate to have her attention focused on our disease. She and her colleagues are world-class.”

    Dr. Marta Dahiya, MD, SRF’s Head of Clinical and mother to an adult with SRD says, “While many patients today are not yet adults, they will all become adults and this research will inform and support their care and created the opportunity for adult patients to be included in therapeutic studies. Every family should be thrilled about this work.”

    It is exciting to see this transatlantic cooperation where the large number of adults with SYNGAP1 Related Disorders in the Netherlands are able to be studied and included in this essential work.”


    Katrien Deckers, head of SRF-Europe 

    How to sign up

    Families with a loved one with SYNGAP1 Related Disorder age 16 or older can join the accessible online study by emailing [email protected], more information is available in the study flyer

    About the project

    The primary goal is to comprehensively understand the adult phenotypes and natural history of SRD patients, as well as the differences between those with and without epilepsy, in order to promote optimal care among adult patients. 

    They will investigate the presence of seizures and their severity, movement abnormalities, adaptive skills, behavior, gastrointestinal symptoms, sleep difficulties, and comorbidities among patients at our Adult Genetic Epilepsy (AGE) clinic in Canada, at the adult SYNGAP1 clinic in the Netherlands and externally through patient organizations such as the SynGAP Research Fund.

    They will also determine the genotype/phenotype correlations between SYNGAP1 patients with and without epilepsy. This will be achieved via WGS sequencing to search for rare variants with large effect size that influences the phenotype, and the contribution of common variants to individual features of the phenotype, through calculating the polygenic risk score (PRS) for different comorbidities. This research will provide valuable insight into the unique experiences and clinical outcomes of adult patients with SRF while promoting dialogue on the importance of precise and timely diagnosis and treatment of adult patients.

    About the team

    Dr. Danielle Andrade, MD, MSc, FRCPC, is the Medical Director of the Epilepsy Program at University Health Network and founder and Director of Krembil Neuroscience Institute Adult Genetic Epilepsy (AGE) Program. Dr. Miles Thompson, Ph.D., GCGCVI Scientific Associate, is with Krembil Research Institute, Toronto Western Hospital, and University Health Network. Dr. Ryan Yuen, Ph.D. is the Senior Scientist, Genetics & Genome Biology Program, at The Hospital for Sick Children – Toronto, Canada. Dr. Rogier Kerssebook, MD, Ph.D. is a Consultant in Clinical Genetics, at Erasmus Medical Centre, Rotterdam, The Netherlands. Dr. Anatoljevna Anna Kattentidt, MD, is a Clinical Geneticist and Physician, at Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands. 

    University Health Network, Toronto, Canada – https://www.uhn.ca

    The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Canada – https://www.sickkids.ca 

    Erasmus Medical Centre, Rotterdam, the Netherlands – https://www.erasmusmc.nl/nl-nl/ 

    About SYNGAP1-related intellectual disability (SRD)

    SYNGAP1-related intellectual disability (US ICD-10 F78.A1 / Global ICD-11 LD90.Y) is a rare genetic disorder caused by variants on the SYNGAP1 gene that reduce SynGAP protein levels. This protein acts as a regulator in the synapses (where neurons communicate with each other). When SynGAP protein levels are too low, we see an increase in excitability in the synapses making it difficult for neurons to communicate effectively. This leads to many neurological issues seen in SynGAP patients.

    Symptoms of SYNGAP1 include intellectual disability; epilepsy; hypotonia (low muscle tone); gross and fine motor skill delays; autism spectrum disorder; gastro-intestinal issues; sleep and behavior disorders and visual abnormalities. 

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  • Wastewater study sheds light on tracking cannabis use challenges

    Wastewater study sheds light on tracking cannabis use challenges

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    In a recent study published in the journal Water Research, researchers discussed the progress in wastewater-based surveillance (WBS) of cannabis use.

    Cannabis is the most used drug globally, and its frequent use is associated with anxiety, depressive disorders, brain development interference, and social/legal consequences. Moreover, cannabis consumption can strain healthcare systems and legal frameworks. Notwithstanding these concerns, cannabis is being increasingly legalized for recreational and medicinal purposes.

    Making waves: Wastewater-based surveillance of cannabis use. Image Credit: SpiritArt / ShutterstockMaking waves: Wastewater-based surveillance of cannabis use. Image Credit: SpiritArt / Shutterstock

    Preliminary signs/results of this legalization indicate increased daily intake and tax revenues and decreased arrest rates. This has also enabled the implementation of harm-reduction strategies. Thus, continuous monitoring of cannabis use is crucial to gain insights into spatiotemporal trends and assess the impact of new enforcement measures, legal status, and harm reduction initiatives. WBS and wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) have become popular for public health monitoring.

    WBE monitors changes and spatial differences in drug use, complementing established indicators. Thus, it is a vital source of information on community-level drug consumption. Nevertheless, there have been uncertainties with WBE-derived estimates of cannabis use than other drugs. The present study discussed the progress in WBS of cannabis use and existing challenges.

    Analytical barriers

    The analytical techniques in WBS involve determining diverse biomarkers, where 11-nor-9-carboxy-Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC-COOH), the primary urinary metabolite of the principal psychoactive compound in cannabis, tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), is just one of the analytes to be measured. A single analysis of multiple analytes is time-saving, economical, and more efficient, albeit a compromise of experimental conditions is required. Furthermore, analyzing THC-COOH requires pH adjustment.

    At acidic pH, the hydrophobic molecular form of THC-COOH favors adsorption to sampling/processing material surfaces or particulate matter. Thus, a best-practice analytical protocol was proposed to avoid acidification. Nevertheless, the lipophilic features of cannabinoids impede analytical determination. As such, more specific techniques have been introduced to detect THC and its metabolites in influent wastewater solids.

    Challenges due to in-sewer and sample dynamics

    Quantification of THC and metabolites in suspended solids and aqueous phase of influent wastewater showed their partitioning in the two phases of the influent. Further, it is speculated that fecal matter from non-users and users may impact the total load in the aqueous phase. These insights have opened additional inquiries, unveiling knowledge gaps warranting further analyses on the impact of influent composition, sampling uncertainty related to the collection of solids, and partitioning dynamics during in-sewer transport.

    Pharmacokinetic barriers

    Interestingly, WBS can estimate drug consumption via a back-calculation using influent mass loads, pharmacokinetic excretion factors, and molar mass ratio of parent/metabolite. Distinct excretion correction factors (36.4 and 182) derived from urinary levels of THC-COOH have been proposed for cannabis. While these correction factors accounted for uncertainty, they do not consider (other) metabolites excreted in feces. As such, more investigations are required to corroborate and increase knowledge of urinary and fecal excretion (of THC-COOH).

    Administration routes

    Different administration routes of cannabis yield distinct excretion rates, affecting back-calculations. Although smoked cannabis is the most common route, the use of vaping and edible cannabis has been increasing. In 2020, more than one-fifth of 12th-grade students tried vaping cannabis, which is twice the estimate from five years ago.

    Such changes can vary by country and time and could be related to cannabis legalization. This can also lead to changes in the type of cannabis used; for instance, cannabidiol has increasingly become popular. Therefore, there is a need for techniques that can distinguish between analytes when other cannabis types become prevalent.

    Current state of WBS of cannabis

    WBS is an instrumental tool that can report high-resolution trends and changes. However, currently, careful interpretation of WBS data is necessary to evaluate cannabis consumption. Some researchers have described how best to utilize these data. Caution should be exercised for spatial comparisons of excreted quantities of THC and metabolites in the influent.

    Influent wastewater and sewer catchments exhibit variations across locations; consequently, spatial trends may be susceptible to greater uncertainty. Further, cannabis use trends derived from WBS have an inherent temporal value when catchment demographics remain unchanged. The relative scale of drug use is often essential to identify problem areas and make policy decisions.

    Concluding remarks

    Taken together, the study highlighted the current barriers to accurate cannabis consumption estimates. The authors propose that future research should better understand administration and clearance routes, integrate fecal data into correction factors, and develop a consensus for a common approach to report estimates from WBS data. They also suggest caution while drawing conclusions from WBS data until these challenges are addressed.

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  • Women’s skin study shows distinct chemical changes in response to psychological stress

    Women’s skin study shows distinct chemical changes in response to psychological stress

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    In a recent study published in Scientific Reports, researchers investigated the volatile organic compounds (VOCs) generated by the skin in response to psychological stress.

    Study: Effects of psychological stress on the emission of volatile organic compounds from the skin. Image Credit: Geinz Angelina/Shutterstock.comStudy: Effects of psychological stress on the emission of volatile organic compounds from the skin. Image Credit: Geinz Angelina/Shutterstock.com

    Background

    The volatilome is a collection of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) generated by plants, microbes, or animals that contribute to the skin’s olfactory profile and constitute part of the odor print.

    The human volatilome contains thousands of VOCs released by various sources, including exhaled breath, saliva, blood, urine, milk, feces, and skin emissions.

    These VOCs are not only associated with clinical conditions; they can also be exogenous, resulting from environmental exposure or product usage. Eccrine, sebaceous, and apocrine glands generate most endogenous skin volatiles in conjunction with naturally present microorganisms.

    Psychological stress can disrupt the skin barrier and modify inflammatory responses of the skin, although its effect on VOC emission from human skin is unclear.

    About the study

    In the present study, researchers examined the effects of stress on VOC emissions from the skin.

    The primary goal was to investigate volatile organic compounds secreted by forehead skin following stress induction among middle-aged women by performing cognitive tasks such as problem-solving and word scrambling to identify VOC stress markers.

    The secondary purpose was to examine the impact of skin sebum concentration, pH, and transepidermal water loss (TEWL) on VOC release.

    The research was comprised of 35 nonsmoking women aged 24 to 40 (mean age 35). The researchers sampled VOCs from the forehead prior to and post-stress induction with a silicon polymer. They evaluated the sample device linearity using four VOCs: heptanal, 2-phenylethanol, isoamyl acetate, and 2,3-dimethylpyrazine.

    Three measurements were taken concurrently inside the calibration curve’s linearity domain, using a reference solution of 15 ng/µL to evaluate technique repeatability.

    The team induced cognitive stress through timed exercises utilizing customized software, including a clock for semantic and arithmetic tasks, and confirmed using physiological and clinical data.

    They assessed stress levels using a State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) questionnaire, verbal expression analysis, and clinical assessments.

    The researchers identified and quantified VOCs using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). Stress induction was substantiated by a substantial rise in state anxiety as measured by the questionnaire, changes in electrodermal activity (EDA) measures, and verbatim stress expressions.

    The researchers also assessed sebum production and skin pH. They analyzed the data qualitatively and quantitatively to determine VOC expression before and after the psychological stress tests.

    The RSD was determined for every volatile chemical using the average relative abundance values for two to three predominant ions.

    To examine the durability of adsorbed VOCs on the silicon polymer, the researchers performed assessments on day 3.0 and day 12 following the sample phase, simulating the delay between invoicing and GC-MS assessment.

    They derived three parameters from the EDA signals collected throughout the adaptation and stress induction phases. The first parameter was the average SCL (µS). The second parameter was the frequency (peaks/min), while the third was the average amplitude (µS) of the NS-SCRs.

    Results

    The study found 198 VOCs with a higher concentration of straight-chain alkanes, alcohols, esters, cyclic alkanes, nitrogen compounds, and ketones. Among the chemicals, 69 originated from cosmetic components, 49 from food, 37 from human or microbial metabolisms, and 33 from the environment.

    Three VOCs (2-hydroxyethyl acetate, 3-methylpentadecane, and 2-hydroxyethyl propanoate) were associated with stress induction, and 14 compounds were statistically significant.

    The VOCs were primarily from the alkane family, with fatty acyls produced from lipids and ethylbenzenes being the most common. In addition, the researchers characterized a nitrogen molecule (N, N-dibutylformamide).

    The least represented molecule was detected at 3.6 ng/µL (2-hydroxyethyl propanoate), while the most prevalent were geranyl acetone and butylated hydroxytoluene at concentrations of 121 ng/µL and 177 ng/µL, respectively.

    The average abundance of primary ions in volatile standards increased dramatically during storage, with RSD values ranging from 1.3 to 3.1% on day 0 and 9.9% on day 3.

    The trait-anxiety scores and state-anxiety levels rose significantly by 7.90% and 34%, respectively, between the no-stress and stress periods.

    During the stress phase, all three EDA measures rose. SCL increased from 0.5 to 1.9 µS, and NS-SCRs increased to 4.0 from 0.04 peaks per minute. 71% of participants’ verbatims included deception/failure, stress/pressure, and difficulty/complicated.

    After stress induction, the sebum level on the foreheads increased by 37%, while the skin pH dropped by 14%.

    Conclusion

    Overall, the study findings highlighted the impact of psychological stress on the modulation of cutaneous VOC emission. The relative measurement of these chemicals demonstrated a production range throughout the stress period.

    They are components of lipid metabolism, oxidative stress, air pollution, and cosmetic applications. Some were previously known as disease biomarkers, but only one is stress-related. Future studies could examine the possible impact of modulating these VOC expressions on skin physiology.

    Another approach to this research may be to investigate their influence on human communication by understanding chemosignaling.

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  • AI-powered method predicts protein dynamics to accelerate drug discovery

    AI-powered method predicts protein dynamics to accelerate drug discovery

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    Understanding the structure of proteins is critical for demystifying their functions and developing drugs that target them. To that end, a team of researchers at Brown University has developed a way of using machine learning to rapidly predict multiple protein configurations to advance understanding of protein dynamics and functions.

    A study describing the approach was published in Nature Communications on Wednesday, March 27.

    The authors say the technique is accurate, fast, cost-effective and has the potential to revolutionize drug discovery by uncovering many more targets for new treatments.

    In targeted cancer therapy, for example, treatments are designed to zero in on proteins that control how cancer cells grow, divide and spread. One of the challenges for structural biologists has been understanding cell proteins thoroughly enough to identify targets, said study author Gabriel Monteiro da Silva, a Ph.D. candidate in molecular biology, cell biology and biochemistry at Brown.

    Monteiro da Silva uses computational methods to model protein dynamics and looks for ways to improve methods or find new methods that work best for different situations. For this study, he partnered with Brenda Rubenstein, an associate professor of chemistry and physics, and other Brown researchers to experiment with an existing A.I.-powered computational method called AlphaFold 2.

    While Monteiro da Silva said that the accuracy of AlphaFold 2 has revolutionized protein structure prediction, the method has limitations: It allows scientists to model proteins only in a static state at a specific point in time.

    During most cellular processes, proteins will change shape dynamically. In order to match protein targets to drugs to treat cancer and other diseases, we need a more accurate understanding of these physiological changes. We need to go beyond 3D shapes to understanding 4D shapes, with the fourth dimension being time. That’s what we did with this approach.”


    Gabriel Monteiro da Silva, Ph.D. candidate in molecular biology, cell biology and biochemistry at Brown University

    Monteiro da Silva used the analogy of a horse to explain protein models. The arrangement of the horse’s muscles and limbs create different shapes depending on whether the horse is standing or galloping; protein molecules conform into different shapes due to the bonding arrangements of their constituent atoms. Imagine that the protein is a horse, Monteiro da Silva said. Previous methods were used to predict a model of a standing horse. It was accurate, but it didn’t tell much about how the horse behaved or how it looked when it wasn’t standing.

    In this study, the researchers were able to manipulate the evolutionary signals from the protein to use AlphaFold 2 to rapidly predict multiple protein conformations, as well as how often those structures are populated. Using the horse analogy, the new method allows researchers to quickly predict multiple snapshots of a horse galloping, which means they can see how the muscular structure of the horse would change as it moved, and then compare those structural differences.

    “If you understand the multiple snapshots that make up the dynamics of what’s going on with the protein, then you can find multiple different ways of targeting the proteins with drugs and treating diseases,” said Rubenstein, whose research focuses whose research focuses on electronic structure and biophysics.

    Rubenstein explained that the protein on which the team focused in this study was one that had different drugs developed for it. Yet for many years, no one could understand why some of the drugs succeeded or failed, she said.

    “It all came down to the fact that these specific proteins have multiple conformations, as well as to understanding how the drugs bind to the different conformations, instead of to the one static structure that these techniques previously predicted; knowing the set of conformations was incredibly important to understanding how these drugs actually functioned in the body,” Rubenstein said.

    Accelerating discovery time

    The researchers noted that existing computational methods are cost- and time-intensive.

    “They’re expensive in terms of materials, in terms of infrastructure; they take a lot of time, and you can’t really do these computations in a high throughput kind of way -; I’m sure I was one of the top users of GPUs in Brown’s computer cluster,” Monteiro da Silva said. “On a larger scale, this is a problem because there’s a lot to explore in the protein world: how protein dynamics and structure are involved in poorly understood diseases, in drug resistance and in emerging pathogens.”

    The researchers described how Monteiro da Silva previously spent three years using physics to understand protein dynamics and conformations. Using their new A.I.-powered approach, the discovery time decreased to mere hours.

    “So you can imagine what a difference that would make in a person’s life: three years versus three hours,” Rubenstein said. “And that’s why it was very important that the method we developed should be high-throughput and highly efficient.”

    As for next steps, the research team is refining their machine learning approach, making it more accurate as well as generalizable, and more useful for a range of applications.

    The study was supported by the Blavatnik Family Foundation, which funds a graduate fellowship in biology and medicine at Brown University. Eight Blavatnik Family Fellows were selected in Fall 2023 based on outstanding academic achievement and demonstrated potential for producing research that advances scientific knowledge and understanding in the basic and clinical life sciences. Monteiro da Silva is one of the inaugural fellows, as is co-author Jennifer Cui, who is analyzing the structure and function of proteins involved in inflammation and cell signaling with fellow co-author George Lisi, a professor of molecular biology, cell biology and biochemistry.

    Source:

    Journal reference:

    Monteiro da Silva, G., et al. (2024). High-throughput prediction of protein conformational distributions with subsampled AlphaFold2. Nature Communications. doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-46715-9.

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  • Sexual harassment prevalent among new doctors in their first year, study reveals

    Sexual harassment prevalent among new doctors in their first year, study reveals

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    More than half of all new doctors face some form of sexual harassment in their first year on the job, including nearly three-quarters of all new female doctors and a third of males, a new study finds.

    That’s actually down somewhat from the percentage of new doctors who experienced the same five or six years before, according to the paper published in JAMA Health Forum by a team from the University of Michigan Medical School and Medical University of South Carolina.

    And today’s new doctors are more likely than their predecessors to recognize that what they experienced qualifies as harassment, whether it was gender-biased comments or jokes, persistent unwanted romantic overtures, or pressure to engage in sexual activity for job-related reasons.

    But the new study and another paper published recently in JAMA Network Open suggest that medical schools and hospitals need to do more to educate about, and address, all forms of sexual harassment. Some institutions and specific medical specialties have more work to do than others, the research shows.

    That’s especially true for profession-related sexual coercion, which increased across the six years studied, though it was much rarer than gender-based verbal or work environment harassment.

    In all, more than 5% of female first-year residents, also called interns, said in 2023 that they had been in a situation where they felt pressured to engage in a sexual activity in order to get favorable professional treatment. That was more than double the percentage who said so in 2017. The rate in men stayed the same, at less than 2%.

    The overall decrease in sexual harassment incidence over recent years suggests a move in the right direction, however rates of sexual harassment experienced by physician trainees are still alarmingly high.”


    Elena Frank, Ph.D., lead author of the new study and assistant research scientist at the Michigan Neuroscience Institute

    The findings come from surveys of thousands of doctors who took part in the Intern Health Study, based at the institute. Each summer, the study enrolls thousands of recent medical school graduates who volunteer to take a variety of smartphone-based surveys and wear activity trackers for their entire intern year.

    Recognizing harassment

    The new JAMA Health Forum study includes data from nearly 4,000 doctors who finished intern year in 2017, 2018 or 2023. In addition to being asked a general question about whether they had experienced sexual harassment, they were also asked whether and how often they had had specific experiences that qualify as gender-based harassment, unwanted sexual attention and sexual coercion.

    That allowed the researchers to measure interns’ recognition of what constitutes sexual harassment. To do so, they analyzed how many interns said they had had at least one of those specific experiences, and compared that with each person’s answer on the general question of whether they’d experienced sexual harassment.

    In all, 55% of the interns in the 2023 group had experienced at least one form of sexual harassment. But only about 18% of that group recognized that they had experienced sexual harassment, and there was a big gap between women and men in recognition.

    Recognition of what constitutes sexual harassment has improved, the study shows; in 2017 less than 9% of those who had a sexual harassment experience recognized it as such. Recognition improved fivefold in surgical specialties.

    “The persistent gap between the experience and recognition of sexual harassment identified in our study illustrates the importance of looking beyond policy compliance, to challenge the deeply entrenched cultural norms that have enabled sexual and gender-based harassment to continue largely unquestioned in medicine for so long,” said Frank, who directs the Intern Health Study team. The society-wide #MeToo movement for sexual harassment awareness and prevention has likely made a difference too.

    Variation in experiences

    The team explored differences between types and locations of medical training in their JAMA Network Open paper, which is based on 2,000 interns who finished intern year at 28 institutions in 2017.

    Interns training in surgery and emergency medicine were 20% more likely than those training in pediatrics or neurology to have experienced sexual harassment in 2017. And interns at some hospitals were 20% more likely to have experienced sexual harassment than those at hospitals with the lowest number of interns reporting any sexual harassment.

    Elizabeth Viglianti, M.D., M.P.H., M.Sc., lead author of the JAMA Network Open study and an assistant professor of internal medicine at U-M, notes that the variation between specialties and institutions seen in the study she led suggests that residency programs and hospitals play a key role in combating harassment.

    She notes that surgical training programs, which include general surgery and specialties that include surgical training such as gynecology, urology, otolaryngology, neurosurgery, plastic surgery and orthopedic surgery, have the most work to do.

    “Until administrators, faculty, and trainees truly understand that sexual harassment is not and should not be an expected or accepted part of the training experience, an equitable and safe learning environment for physicians cannot be achieved,” Frank said.

    In addition to Frank and Viglianti, the authors of the two papers include Intern Health Study co-investigator Constance Guille, M.D., of the Medical University of South Carolina; Intern Health Study principal investigator Srijan Sen, M.D., Ph.D., who is also the director of the Eisenberg Family Depression Center and a professor of psychiatry and neuroscience at U-M; other U-M faculty Amy Bohnert, Ph.D., M.H.S., Andrea Oliverio, M.D., M.Sc., and Lisa Meeks, Ph.D. as well as Intern Health Study team members Zhuo Joan Zhao, M.S., Yu Fang, M.S.E., Jennifer Cleary, a doctoral student in psychology at U-M, and Karina Pereira-Lima, a Ph.D. student at the University of Sao Paolo.

    The Intern Health Study is funded by the National Institute of Mental Health (MH101459). Additional NIH funding was also used for the two studies.

    Source:

    Journal reference:

    Frank, E., et al. (2024). Trends in Sexual Harassment Prevalence and Recognition During Intern Year. JAMA Health Forum. doi.org/10.1001/jamahealthforum.2024.0139.

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  • Climate change heats up fungal threats worldwide

    Climate change heats up fungal threats worldwide

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    In a recent review article published in The Lancet Microbe, researchers synthesized what is currently known about fungal adaptations to rises in global temperatures.

    Their conclusions indicate that fungi may become more thermotolerant and adapt to erstwhile inhospitable environments even as climate change promotes the emergence of novel pathogens. The effects of these changes will be felt most by socially vulnerable groups, and mitigation requires targeted and sustained collective effort.

    Review: Impact of climate change and natural disasters on fungal infections. Image Credit: Sepp Photography / ShutterstockReview: Impact of climate change and natural disasters on fungal infections. Image Credit: Sepp Photography / Shutterstock

    Climate change and infectious diseases

    Pathogenic fungal species have adapted quickly to increasing temperatures and show signs of greater potency and virulence. While most fungi have a low thermal tolerance, which prevents them from surviving mammalian body temperatures, new pathogens like Candida auris are heat tolerant and adapt to human body temperatures.

    Concurrently, a decrease in average body temperatures among people in the United States has been observed, possibly due to reduced chronic infections and inflammation alongside better living standards. Thus, climate change may increase fungal pathogenicity in humans by aligning the temperature preferences of fungi and prospective human hosts.

    Modifications to fungal ecosystems

    Climate change’s shifts in weather patterns continue to disrupt ecological systems and shift the global distributions of disease reservoirs, pathogens, and hosts. Models predict that changes to fungal communities will favor the expansion of saprotrophic fungi.

    As pathogenic fungi adapt to one environmental stressor, like rising temperatures, they can withstand others, like heavy metals, radioactive isotopes, and pH stress. This allows them to spread through acidic environments and polluted wastelands. The evolutionary pressures exerted by the heat-island effect in urban areas appear to promote faster fungal adaptation.

    Contaminated water bodies may be a source of fungal infections and threaten healthcare systems. Many fungi can degrade plastic while being pathogenic to humans, including Aspergillus and some species of mucormycetes. Thus, microplastic accumulation could encourage fungal growth and resistance to antifungals.

    Previously, endemic fungal diseases like histoplasmosis and coccidioidomycoses have increased their geographical ranges. Plant pathogens are also increasing and represent a significant threat to food security. While the use of fungicides has increased in farming, there have been reported cases of antifungal resistance.

    Fungal outbreaks after natural disasters

    Climate change has increased the intensity and frequency of natural disasters worldwide, which may, in turn, trigger fungal disease outbreaks. This can take place through multiple pathways.

    Since disasters damage urban areas and natural habitats, they create settings conducive to the growth of fungi and increase the possibility of exposure to fungal pathogens. For example, injuries like lacerations caused during disasters create points of entry for pathogenic fungi, and wounds can be contaminated, leading to infection by mold. Wildfires can also alter pH values in soil and communities of microbes, increasing cases of eye irritation, asthma, fungal disease, and respiratory symptoms.

    Fire plumes and storms can carry fungal spores over large distances, leading to the colonization of novel environments. These can lead to increases in respiratory infections, asthma, and inflammation if they are inhaled. Flooding has also been associated with increases in invasive molds and severe fungal infection outbreaks.

    However, there are concerns that fungal outbreaks after natural disasters could be underreported. Preventing and mitigating these issues requires ensuring that living areas are adequately ventilated and that affected areas are intensively cleaned.

    Affected communities must be educated so that they can avoid persistent exposure to mycotoxins and mold spores. Adequate resources are needed to identify vulnerable populations and provide them with the necessary protection, and funds must also be set aside for continued research and documentation.

    Conclusions

    As the effects of climate change are felt around the world, mycologists and public health researchers are raising concerns that rising temperatures promote the emergence of novel pathogenic fungi and modify the distribution and spread of diseases.

    Some fungi are more thermotolerant than before and are now pathogenic to humans. Other fungal pathogens were confined to specific areas but are increasing their range due to temperature shifts or the dispersal of spores by winds or fire plumes. Traumatic injuries caused by natural disasters can increase fungal infections.

    Fungal pests show signs of increased resistance to fungicides even as fungicide use increases to protect agriculture – this threatens public health and agriculture.

    This article represents a call to action. Funding is required to mitigate vulnerable communities’ risks, launch effective public awareness campaigns, strengthen healthcare systems, and improve access to healthcare. Research and collaborative action are key to identifying ways to manage existing and emerging challenges in a quickly changing world.

    Journal reference:

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  • SARS-CoV-2-associated ARDS can damage the heart without direct infection

    SARS-CoV-2-associated ARDS can damage the heart without direct infection

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    SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, can damage the heart even without directly infecting the heart tissue, a National Institutes of Health-supported study has found. The research, published in the journal Circulation, specifically looked at damage to the hearts of people with SARS-CoV2-associated acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), a serious lung condition that can be fatal. But researchers said the findings could have relevance to organs beyond the heart and also to viruses other than SARS-CoV-2.

    Scientists have long known that COVID-19 increases the risk of heart attack, stroke, and Long COVID, and prior imaging research has shown that over 50% of people who get COVID-19 experience some inflammation or damage to the heart. What scientists did not know is whether the damage occurs because the virus infects the heart tissue itself, or because of systemic inflammation triggered by the body’s well-known immune response to the virus.

    This was a critical question and finding the answer opens up a whole new understanding of the link between this serious lung injury and the kind of inflammation that can lead to cardiovascular complications. The research also suggests that suppressing the inflammation through treatments might help minimize these complications.”


    Michelle Olive, Ph.D., Associate Director, Basic and Early Translational Research Program at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)

    To reach their findings, the researchers focused on immune cells known as cardiac macrophages, which normally perform a critical role in keeping the tissue healthy but can turn inflammatory in response to injury such as heart attack or heart failure. The researchers analyzed heart tissue specimens from 21 patients who died from SARS-CoV-2-associated ARDS and compared them with specimens from 33 patients who died from non-COVID-19 causes. They also infected mice with SARS-CoV-2 to follow what happened to the macrophages after infection.

    In both humans and mice, they found the SARS-CoV-2 infection increased the total number of cardiac macrophages and also caused them to shift from their normal routine and become inflammatory.

    When macrophages are no longer doing their normal jobs, which includes sustaining the metabolism of the heart and clearing out harmful bacteria or other foreign agents, they weaken the heart and the rest of the body, said Matthias Nahrendorf, M.D., Ph.D., professor of Radiology at Harvard Medical School and senior author on the study.

    The researchers then designed a study in mice to test whether the response they observed happened because SARS-CoV-2 was infecting the heart directly, or because the SARS-CoV-2 infection in the lungs was severe enough to render the heart macrophages more inflammatory. This study mimicked the lung inflammation signals, but without the presence of the actual virus. The result: even in the absence of a virus, the mice showed immune responses strong enough to produce the same heart macrophage shift the researchers observed both in the patients who died of COVID-19 and the mice infected with SARS-CoV-2 infection.

    “What this study shows is that after a COVID infection, the immune system can inflict remote damage on other organs by triggering serious inflammation throughout the body – and this is in addition to damage the virus itself has directly inflicted on the lung tissue,” said Nahrendorf. “These findings can also be applied more generally, as our results suggest that any severe infection can send shockwaves through the whole body.”

    The research team also found that blocking the immune response with a neutralizing antibody in the mice stopped the flow of inflammatory cardiac macrophages and preserved cardiac function. While they have yet to test this in humans, Nahrendorf said a treatment like this could be used as a preventive measure to help COVID-19 patients with pre-existing conditions, or people who are likely to have more severe outcomes from SARS-CoV-2 associated ARDS.

    Source:

    Journal reference:

    Grune, J., et al. (2024) Virus-induced ARDS causes cardiomyopathy through eliciting inflammatory responses in the heart. Circulation. doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.123.066433.

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  • Regular intake of sugary drinks, fruit juices tied to higher Type 2 diabetes risk in boys

    Regular intake of sugary drinks, fruit juices tied to higher Type 2 diabetes risk in boys

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    A small, long-term study of almost 500 children in Massachusetts has found that regularly drinking sugary drinks and 100% fruit juices during childhood and adolescence may be linked to a higher risk of developing Type 2 diabetes among boys than girls, according to preliminary research to be presented at the American Heart Association’s Epidemiology and Prevention│Lifestyle and Cardiometabolic Scientific Sessions 2024, March 18- 21, in Chicago. The meeting offers the latest science on population-based health and wellness and implications for lifestyle.

    While these findings are preliminary, they support the existing evidence about the potential relationship between beverages with added sugar and long-term risk of Type 2 diabetes in children. Pediatricians and other health care professionals should caution young patients and their parents about sugary drinks and fruit juices when discussing healthy eating habits.”


    Soren Harnois-Leblanc, Ph.D., lead investigator, registered dietitian and postdoctoral researcher in the department of population medicine at Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute and Harvard Medical School

    According to a 2022 American Heart Association fact sheet about sugary drinks, nearly two-thirds of children and adolescents in the U.S. consume at least one sugary drink, such as soda, lemonade or an energy drink, each day. It also notes that in addition to weight gain, eating too many foods with added sugars, especially from sugary drinks, raises the risk of developing heart disease, high blood pressure, Type 2 diabetes and tooth decay.

    Using data from Project Viva, an ongoing long-term study of women and their children in eastern Massachusetts that began in 1999, researchers explored whether drinking sugary drinks, 100% fruit juices and eating fresh fruits were associated with markers for developing Type 2 diabetes. Researchers calculated the average consumption of sugary drinks, 100% fruit juices, and fresh fruits over childhood and adolescence based on dietary records and assessed their potential associations to three markers of Type 2 diabetes: insulin resistance, fasting blood glucose level and HbA1c levels. These markers were measured by a single blood test while fasting in late adolescence (approximately age 17).

    The analysis found:

    • Each daily serving of sugary drinks (approx. 8 ounces) during childhood and adolescence among boys was associated with a 34% increase in insulin resistance; a 5.6 milligrams per deciliter (mg/dl) increase in fasting glucose levels; and a 0.12% increase in HbA1c levels in late adolescence.
    • Drinking 100% fruit juice throughout childhood and adolescence was linked to a 0.07% increase in HbA1c levels in late adolescence per daily serving of 100% fruit juice among the boys in the study, with only a slight increase in girls of 0.02%.
    • Eating fresh fruit during childhood and adolescence did not appear to have a positive or negative effect on the risk of developing Type 2 diabetes among the boys or girls in the study, according to Harnois-Leblanc.

    The associations between regularly drinking sugar-sweetened beverage and insulin resistance, fasting blood glucose levels and elevated HbA1c levels among boys persisted when other health, family and social factors were considered. These factors included socioeconomic status; child’s and mother’s body mass index; mother’s age at time of child’s birth; maternal and paternal history of Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes; overall diet quality and other lifestyle behaviors.

    “Although several aspects of biology and behaviors differ between boys and girls, I would have expected to also find an association between sugar-sweetened beverages and fruit juice intake and the increases in insulin resistance, glycemia and HbA1c levels in late-adolescent girls. I was also surprised that eating whole fruits did not reduce the levels of these markers of Type 2 diabetes,” Harnois-Leblanc said.

    “The next steps are to use more advanced statistical tools to enable us to better understand the potential causal role of sugary drinks and fruit juices, and to examine whether the relationships may also differ among children by race and/or ethnicity.”

    Study background and details:

    • Researchers analyzed data of children of the 2,128 pregnant women who had children while enrolled in Project Viva. 972 of the children met criteria for inclusion in this study (parent-completed questionnaires at the child’s age-3 examination and no personal or parental history of Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes, assessed separately from parental history of Type 2 diabetes). Of the 972 children, 455 had a fasting blood sample collected at a research visit in late adolescence, Harnois-Leblanc noted.
    • 240 of the children in the study were girls and 215 were boys.
    • Project Viva is a long-term study of women and their children in eastern Massachusetts that began enrollment in 1999. The study is focused on improving maternal and child health by examining the potential impact of various life and health factors during and after pregnancy on the mother’s health and their children’s health, including a review of diet and nutrition. Children were followed from birth to late adolescence, up to age 20 at most recent follow-up.
    • Researchers evaluated the frequency of drinking sugary drinks, fruit juices and eating fresh fruit (based on standard serving sizes) from questionnaires completed by the parent at the child’s age of approximately 3, 8 and 13 years old; and measured fasting blood glucose, insulin and HbA1c levels in late adolescence (average age of 17.4 years).

    The study had several limitations. Although it found an association between regularly drinking sugary drinks and fruit juices and the development of markers for Type 2 diabetes, it could not prove that the drinks caused Type 2 diabetes. Additionally, the relatively small number of study participants may have affected the strength of the association found between sugary drinks and fruit juices and the increased risk of developing Type 2 diabetes.

    “Diet and cardiometabolic health are complex, with many factors varying over time and interacting in different ways, and this study represents one small piece of this puzzle,” Harnois-Leblanc said.

    American Heart Association nutrition committee member Penny M. Kris-Etherton, Ph.D., R.D., FAHA, said, “This study has shown that greater sugar sweetened beverage intake, including fruit juice, throughout childhood and adolescents is associated with higher markers of diabetes risk in late adolescents in boys but not girls. It is striking that many measures of Type 2 diabetes risk were increased in boys at such an early age.”

    Kris-Etherton, an emeritus professor of nutritional sciences at Penn State University, was also a co-author of the Association’s 2018 science advisory on low-calorie sweetened beverages and cardiometabolic health.

    “Importantly, although fruit intake did not appear to be protective, it nonetheless was not associated with increased Type 2 diabetes risk,” she said. “These findings support the current dietary recommendations of the Association, and many organizations, to limit or eliminate drinking sugar sweetened beverages and instead consume whole fruits, which are high in so many nutrients especially the shortfall nutrients in the average American diet.” (Shortfall nutrients are the vitamins and nutrients that people are missing each day from the foods they eat; long-term deficiencies in some vitamins and nutrients have been linked to adverse health outcomes.)

    The health care resource called Know Diabetes by Heart, developed by the American Heart Association and the American Diabetes Association, provides information about preventing heart disease and stroke while living with Type 2 diabetes. The initiative aims to raise awareness and understanding of the link between Type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease, provide resources and support to help people better manage their risk for heart disease and stroke, support health care professionals by sharing the latest clinical guidelines and science and engage health systems to improve quality of care for people with Type 2 diabetes.

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