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Brain Injury

A New Pathway to Pain Relief: Researchers Discover Safer Alternative to Opioids

Scientists have helped identify a novel drug compound that selectively activates pain-altering receptors in the body, offering a potentially safer alternative to conventional pain medications.

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In a groundbreaking study published in Nature Communications, University of Florida scientists have identified a novel drug compound that selectively activates pain-altering receptors in the body, offering a potentially safer alternative to conventional pain medications. This breakthrough discovery could revolutionize the way we treat pain, providing relief without the dangerous side effects commonly associated with opioids.

The human body relies on three kinds of opioid receptors to regulate pain, similar to traffic control systems on a busy highway. Understanding these pathways is key to developing safer pain treatments. While most current pain medications target the mu receptor, which can lead to respiratory depression and addiction, researchers are pioneering a new strategy focused on the delta opioid receptor.

“Delta receptors are located throughout the body on pathways and neurons that transmit pain signals to the brain,” explained Jay McLaughlin, Ph.D., a professor of pharmacodynamics in the UF College of Pharmacy. “Unlike mu receptors, activating delta receptors does not cause respiratory depression. If we can develop drugs that safely target the delta receptor, we might achieve effective pain relief without the lethal concerns.”

The need for safer pain treatments is urgent. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, nearly a quarter of U.S. adults experienced chronic pain in 2023, with almost one in 10 suffering from pain severe enough to limit daily activities. Studies estimate that the economic burden of chronic pain exceeds $600 billion annually.

For the past three years, a team of scientists at UF, Washington University in St. Louis, and the University of Southern California has been studying how opioid receptors work and applying those insights to develop better and safer pain medications. They discovered a way around the potential for seizures associated with delta receptors by modifying an existing drug to target a specific area of the delta receptor.

“Our novel compound demonstrated pain-relieving effects in mouse models without major opioid-related side effects like respiratory depression,” McLaughlin said. “This is a significant advance in science, because if we can design safer medications using this approach, it could extend beyond pain relief to treating heart disease, blood pressure, and other conditions regulated by receptors with similar functional features.”

Additional research and clinical trials are needed to validate the safety and effectiveness of targeting delta opioid receptors for treating pain. However, this discovery represents a crucial step towards developing more effective and safer treatments for chronic pain sufferers.

Brain Injury

The Hidden Glitch Behind Hunger: Scientists Uncover the Brain Cells Responsible for Meal Memories

A team of scientists has identified specialized neurons in the brain that store “meal memories” detailed recollections of when and what we eat. These engrams, found in the ventral hippocampus, help regulate eating behavior by communicating with hunger-related areas of the brain. When these memory traces are impaired due to distraction, brain injury, or memory disorders individuals are more likely to overeat because they can’t recall recent meals. The research not only uncovers a critical neural mechanism but also suggests new strategies for treating obesity by enhancing memory around food consumption.

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The Hidden Glitch Behind Hunger: Scientists Uncover the Brain Cells Responsible for Meal Memories

Imagine forgetting about lunch and suddenly feeling extremely hungry. It’s a common phenomenon that can lead to overeating and disordered eating behaviors. Researchers have now identified a specific group of brain cells called “meal memory” neurons in laboratory rats that could explain why people with memory problems often overeat.

These specialized cells, found in the ventral hippocampus region of the brain, become active during eating and form what scientists call “meal engrams” – sophisticated biological databases that store information about food consumption experiences. An engram is essentially the physical trace a memory leaves behind in the brain, making it possible for us to recall specific details about our meals.

The discovery has significant implications for understanding human eating disorders. Patients with memory impairments, such as those with dementia or brain injuries that affect memory formation, may often consume multiple meals in quick succession because they cannot remember eating. Furthermore, distracted eating – such as mindlessly snacking while watching television or scrolling on a phone – may impair meal memories and contribute to overconsumption.

Researchers used advanced neuroscience techniques to observe the brain activity of laboratory rats as they ate, providing the first real-time view of how meal memories form. They found that meal memory neurons are distinct from other types of brain cells involved in memory formation. When these neurons were selectively destroyed, lab rats showed impaired memory for food locations but retained normal spatial memory for non-food-related tasks.

The study revealed that meal memory neurons communicate with the lateral hypothalamus, a brain region long known to control hunger and eating behavior. When this hippocampus-hypothalamus connection was blocked, the lab rats overate and could not remember where meals were consumed.

The findings have immediate relevance for understanding human eating disorders and could eventually inform new clinical approaches for treating obesity and weight management. Current weight management strategies often focus on restricting food intake or increasing exercise, but the new research suggests that enhancing meal memory formation could be equally important.

“We’re finally beginning to understand that remembering what and when you ate is just as crucial for healthy eating as the food choices themselves,” said Scott Kanoski, professor of biological sciences at the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences and corresponding author of the study.

In addition to understanding human eating disorders, this research could also inform new strategies for treating obesity and weight management. Current approaches often focus on restricting food intake or increasing exercise, but the new findings suggest that enhancing meal memory formation could be equally important.

By uncovering the brain cells responsible for meal memories, scientists have taken a significant step towards understanding the complex relationships between our brains, bodies, and eating habits. The discovery of these specialized neurons offers new hope for developing effective treatments and interventions to help individuals manage their weight and improve their overall health.

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Brain Injury

Krakencoder Breakthrough: Predicting Brain Function 20x Better Than Past Methods

Scientists at Weill Cornell Medicine have developed a new algorithm, the Krakencoder, that merges multiple types of brain imaging data to better understand how the brain s wiring underpins behavior, thought, and recovery after injury. This cutting-edge tool can predict brain function from structure with unprecedented accuracy 20 times better than past models and even estimate traits like age, sex, and cognitive ability.

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The breakthroughs in brain mapping technology have brought us closer than ever before to understanding how our minds work. Researchers at Weill Cornell Medicine have developed an algorithm called the Krakencoder, which can accurately predict individual’s functional connectome about 20 times better than previous approaches. This study, published in Nature Methods, utilized imaging data from the Human Connectome Project to align neural activity with its underlying circuitry.

The brain’s wiring and activity patterns are crucial for understanding behavior, identifying biomarkers of disease, predicting outcomes in neurological disorders, and designing personalized interventions. Dr. Amy Kuceyeski, a senior author of the study, explains that regions “wired together” don’t always “fire together.” This patchwork approach to examining the brain has led scientists to develop different methods for processing raw images, resulting in various maps of the brain’s networks.

To overcome this limitation, Dr. Kuceyeski and her team built a tool that can take multiple views of the brain’s underlying system and collapse them into one unified interpretation. This autoencoder program, known as the Krakencoder, compresses and reconstructs more than a dozen different “flavors” of input data.

The researchers trained the Krakencoder on data from over 700 subjects who participated in the Human Connectome Project. They found that the Krakencoder allowed them to take an individual’s structural connectome and correctly predict their functional connectome about 20 times more accurately than previously published approaches.

The combined and compressed representation also predicted an individual’s age, sex, and cognitive performance scores received on tests administered along with imaging scans. This breakthrough has significant implications for understanding how anatomy and physiology give rise to our behaviors and abilities.

In the future, Dr. Kuceyeski and her colleagues plan to combine the Krakencoder with a network modification tool called NeMo that will allow them to examine the connectomes of people whose brains have been damaged by diseases. This approach could identify brain network connections associated with improved cognitive or motor performance and boost the activity of damaged circuits through transcranial magnetic stimulation, potentially hastening recovery.

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Autism

The Brain’s Hidden Patterns: Uncovering the Secret to Flexibility and Stability

A new study challenges a decades-old assumption in neuroscience by showing that the brain uses distinct transmission sites — not a shared site — to achieve different types of plasticity.

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The Brain’s Hidden Patterns: Uncovering the Secret to Flexibility and Stability

For decades, scientists believed that the brain used a single, shared transmission site for all types of plasticity. However, a groundbreaking study from researchers at the University of Pittsburgh has challenged this assumption, revealing that the brain employs distinct transmission sites to achieve different types of plasticity.

The study, published in Science Advances, offers a deeper understanding of how the brain balances stability with flexibility – a process essential for learning, memory, and mental health. By uncovering the hidden patterns of the brain’s transmission sites, researchers hope to shed light on the underlying mechanisms that govern our thoughts, emotions, and behaviors.

Neurons communicate through synaptic transmission, where one neuron releases chemical messengers called neurotransmitters from a presynaptic terminal. These molecules travel across a microscopic gap called a synaptic cleft and bind to receptors on a neighboring postsynaptic neuron, triggering a response.

Traditionally, scientists believed that spontaneous transmissions (signals that occur randomly) and evoked transmissions (signals triggered by sensory input or experience) originated from one type of canonical synaptic site and relied on shared molecular machinery. However, the research team led by Oliver Schlüter discovered that the brain instead uses separate synaptic transmission sites to carry out regulation of these two types of activity.

The study focused on the primary visual cortex, where cortical visual processing begins. The researchers expected spontaneous and evoked transmissions to follow a similar developmental trajectory, but instead found that they diverged after eye opening.

As the brain began receiving visual input, evoked transmissions continued to strengthen. In contrast, spontaneous transmissions plateaued, suggesting that the brain applies different forms of control to the two signaling modes. To understand why, the researchers applied a chemical that activates otherwise silent receptors on the postsynaptic side, causing spontaneous activity to increase while evoked signals remained unchanged.

This division likely enables the brain to maintain consistent background activity through spontaneous signaling while refining behaviorally relevant pathways through evoked activity. This dual system supports both homeostasis and Hebbian plasticity – the experience-dependent process that strengthens neural connections during learning.

“Our findings reveal a key organizational strategy in the brain,” said Yue Yang, a research associate in the Department of Neuroscience and first author of the study. “By separating these two signaling modes, the brain can remain stable while still being flexible enough to adapt and learn.”

The implications could be broad. Abnormalities in synaptic signaling have been linked to conditions like autism, Alzheimer’s disease, and substance use disorders. A better understanding of how these systems operate in the healthy brain may help researchers identify how they become disrupted in disease.

“Learning how the brain normally separates and regulates different types of signals brings us closer to understanding what might be going wrong in neurological and psychiatric conditions,” said Yang.

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