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@biostackdev

Longevity engineer. Translating biology into scalable system 👨‍💻🧬

شامل ہوئے Haziran 2016
83 فالونگ197 فالوورز
پن کیا گیا ٹویٹ
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d.@biostackdev·
If you had an idea that was going to outrage society, would you keep it to yourself?
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David Sinclair
David Sinclair@davidasinclair·
Legacy media turns cautious scientific findings & statements into sensational headlines, then seeks out quotes from critics calling it hype It’s not journalism. It’s business
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Christoph Burch
Christoph Burch@ChristophBurch·
Skeletal muscle metabolism in health and disease: Mechanisms, interventions, and clinical perspectives cell.com/iscience/fullt…
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Michael Levin
Michael Levin@drmichaellevin·
New preprint, memory in Xenobots! First round of our efforts to understand behavioral properties of novel beings (Xenobots, Anthrobots, and more). @pai_vaibhav , James A. Traer, Megan M. Sperry, Yuxin Zheng biorxiv.org/content/10.648… "Behavioral, Physiological, and Transcriptional Mechanisms of Memory in a Synthetic Living Construct" "Synthetic living constructs, which lack the long histories of selection in ecological contexts that shape behaviors of conventional organisms, offer an important complement to traditional studies of learning. Could novel biobots exhibit sensing and memory of experiences? Here, we investigated the effects of chemical stimuli on basal Xenobots – autonomously motile entities derived from Xenopus embryonic ectodermal explants (with no additional sculpting or bioengineering). We quantified and characterized the coordinated ciliary activity that generates fluid flow fields guiding the trajectory of Xenobot motion. We also show distinct and specific changes in Xenobot behavior after brief exposure to Xenopus embryonic cell extract and to ATP. These two experiences produced distinct, long-term, stimulus-specific memories, detectable through both transcriptional and physiological signatures. Exposure to specific environmental stimuli induced alterations in the spatiotemporal patterns of calcium signaling across Xenobots. Together, these data lay a foundation for characterizing the capabilities of synthetic cellular collectives to sense and discriminate among stimuli, as well as store functional information in a non-neural context. Understanding behavioral competencies in novel, non-neural systems have broad implications across evolutionary biology, behavioral science, bioengineering, and bio/hybrid robotics."
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Luiz Pessoa
Luiz Pessoa@PessoaBrain·
𝗪𝗵𝗮𝘁'𝘀 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗿𝗲𝗹𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻𝘀𝗵𝗶𝗽 𝗯𝗲𝘁𝘄𝗲𝗲𝗻 𝗺𝗮𝗻𝗶𝗳𝗼𝗹𝗱𝘀 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝗿𝗲𝗰𝘂𝗿𝗿𝗲𝗻𝘁 𝗻𝗲𝘁𝘄𝗼𝗿𝗸𝘀 𝗶𝗻 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗯𝗿𝗮𝗶𝗻? This looks like a must read (suppl material bursting with goodies). doi.org/10.1016/j.neur…
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SciTech Era
SciTech Era@SciTechera·
Longevity begins where DNA repair outruns DNA damage. Scientists at the University of Rochester discovered that bowhead whales, which can live over 200 years, produce extremely high levels of a DNA-repair protein called CIRBP (Cold-Inducible RNA-Binding Protein). This protein improves the repair of dangerous DNA double-strand breaks, one of the main sources of mutations, cancer, and aging. When researchers introduced the whale version of CIRBP into human cells, DNA repair became more efficient. In fruit flies, increasing CIRBP levels extended lifespan and improved resistance to radiation damage. The findings suggest that strengthening DNA repair mechanisms could help slow aging and potentially extend healthy human lifespan in the future.
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good papers
good papers@paperperday·
From peptides to DNA: All required steps can be catalyzed "reverse translation" pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pn…
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Jason Sheltzer
Jason Sheltzer@JSheltzer·
AI is cool and all... but a new paper in @ScienceMagazine kind of figured out the origin of life? The paper reports the discovery of a simple 45-nucleotide RNA molecule that can perfectly copy itself.
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William A. Wallace, Ph.D.
William A. Wallace, Ph.D.@WilliamWallace·
Your body is running a micronutrient-powered energy grid that keeps every cell alive. Most people think carbs, fats, and protein become energy on their own. But this diagram shows something far more important: Without micronutrients, none of your macronutrients can be used at all. Inside every cell, vitamins and minerals are: ⚙️ Activating enzymes that break down carbs, fats, and amino acids ⚙️ Converting food into acetyl-CoA, the gateway to ATP ⚙️ Driving the Krebs cycle and electron transport chain ⚙️ Recycling lactate back into usable fuel ⚙️ Supporting detox pathways like the urea cycle ⚙️ Protecting mitochondria from oxidative stress so energy stays stable And all of it is happening continuously. Thousands of reactions per second. Looking closer at what this single diagram reveals: 🔹 Glucose → Pyruvate → Acetyl-CoA Every step requires B-vitamins (B1, B2, B3, B5), magnesium, and lipoic acid. No micronutrients → no carbohydrate metabolism. 🔹 Fatty acids → β-oxidation → Acetyl-CoA This depends on B2, B3, B5 and carnitine to move fats into mitochondria. If you’re low here, fat oxidation simply slows. 🔹 Amino acids feed directly into energy pathways B6, manganese, magnesium, biotin, and iron convert amino acids into Krebs-cycle intermediates and neurotransmitter precursors. 🔹 The Krebs cycle only turns if micronutrients are present B2, B3, B5, magnesium, manganese, iron, cysteine, glutathione - all essential. Without them, ATP production drops even with enough calories. 🔹 Electron transport chain = the final step Requires B2, B3, B5, B6, B7, B9, vitamin C, CoQ10, zinc, iron, copper. This is where oxygen becomes usable energy - or where it fails if cofactors are missing. This is why micronutrients influence EVERYTHING: energy, fatigue, metabolism, mood, focus, exercise capacity, mitochondrial health, aging. Your macros are fuel. Your micronutrients are the keys, the wiring, and the ignition system that make that fuel burn cleanly. You’re not just eating food. You’re feeding the biochemistry that powers your entire life.
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William A. Wallace, Ph.D.
William A. Wallace, Ph.D.@WilliamWallace·
Your body has a master clock hidden deep in the brain, and it quietly controls almost everything you feel during the day. This chart shows what that clock is actually doing, and why your sleep, hunger, hormones, energy, and mood follow the same 24-hour rhythm every single day. Here’s the simple breakdown: ⏰ The “master clock” lives in the "SCN" (as its abbreviated) Located in the hypothalamus, it takes in light from your eyes and uses it to reset your entire system. • Light in the morning tells your brain: wake up, raise cortisol, increase alertness. • Darkness at night flips the switch: make melatonin, lower body temperature, prepare for sleep. 🌙 Melatonin rises only when the SCN says it’s dark The pineal gland releases melatonin to start the sleep process. If light hits your eyes at night (phones, TVs, bright LEDs), that signal can shut off or slow down. 😴 Serotonin and melatonin are linked During the day, serotonin helps regulate mood and alertness. At night, the system converts part of that serotonin into melatonin to drive sleep timing. 🧠 Your organs follow the brain’s schedule Every major organ has its own “clock genes,” and they all sync to the SCN. That’s why timing matters: Daytime: • Muscle: glycolytic metabolism and strength performance peak • Liver: glycogen and cholesterol synthesis • Pancreas: insulin secretion • Fat: lipogenesis and adiponectin production Nighttime: • Muscle: oxidative metabolism and repair • Liver: gluconeogenesis and mitochondrial biogenesis • Pancreas: glucagon secretion • Fat: lipid breakdown and leptin release (signals satiety) In other words: Your biology isn’t the same at 8 AM as it is at 8 PM. 🍽️ Food and activity act as “secondary clocks” Eating late, irregular sleep, shift work, or inconsistent light exposure can confuse these clocks and throw off hormones, metabolism, and mood. This is why: • Morning light improves sleep • Regular mealtimes stabilize metabolism • Late-night eating increases glucose spikes • Consistent sleep strengthens hormone rhythms • Exercise timing can shift circadian signals Your circadian rhythm isn’t just about sleep. It’s a full-body timing system coordinating hormones, temperature, digestion, metabolism, and repair. Get your light, food, and sleep aligned… And the rest of your biology starts working with you instead of against you. Graphic citation: Unknown Research citation: PMID: 11584554
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David Sinclair
David Sinclair@davidasinclair·
Aging is now widely considered a druggable biological process, not an inevitability
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