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staff:

It’s Tumblr Tuesday! Here’s some Tumblr blogs we hope you’ll enjoy.

The Daily Forlorn
Paul Hornschemeier posts daily drawings of filmmakers, toys, Victorian beasts, authors, work in progress, and character actors from bygone TV, all in an attempt to map his own brain. Above: An internal self-portrait.

SHARK WEEK
The good people at the Discovery Channel love sharks so much that they’re celebrating the 25th anniversary of Shark Week this very moment!

Literary Jukebox
Daily quote from a favorite book, thematically matched with a song.

SciSpotlight: NYSCI News Digest
Updates on events and topics based on science, technology, and learning from the New York Hall of Science.

Contemporary Arts Museum Houston
The Contemporary Arts Museum Houston is a non-collecting institution dedicated to presenting the best and most exciting international, national, and regional art.

For more updates on what’s new, check the official New & Notable Tumblrs blog!

staff:

It’s Tumblr Tuesday! Here’s some Tumblr blogs we hope you’ll enjoy.

The Daily Forlorn
Paul Hornschemeier posts daily drawings of filmmakers, toys, Victorian beasts, authors, work in progress, and character actors from bygone TV, all in an attempt to map his own brain. Above: An internal self-portrait.

SHARK WEEK
The good people at the Discovery Channel love sharks so much that they’re celebrating the 25th anniversary of Shark Week this very moment!

Literary Jukebox
Daily quote from a favorite book, thematically matched with a song.

SciSpotlight: NYSCI News Digest
Updates on events and topics based on science, technology, and learning from the New York Hall of Science.

Contemporary Arts Museum Houston
The Contemporary Arts Museum Houston is a non-collecting institution dedicated to presenting the best and most exciting international, national, and regional art.

For more updates on what’s new, check the official New & Notable Tumblrs blog!

staff:

It’s Tumblr Tuesday! Here’s some Tumblr blogs we hope you’ll enjoy.

The Daily Forlorn
Paul Hornschemeier posts daily drawings of filmmakers, toys, Victorian beasts, authors, work in progress, and character actors from bygone TV, all in an attempt to map his own brain. Above: An internal self-portrait.

SHARK WEEK
The good people at the Discovery Channel love sharks so much that they’re celebrating the 25th anniversary of Shark Week this very moment!

Literary Jukebox
Daily quote from a favorite book, thematically matched with a song.

SciSpotlight: NYSCI News Digest
Updates on events and topics based on science, technology, and learning from the New York Hall of Science.

Contemporary Arts Museum Houston
The Contemporary Arts Museum Houston is a non-collecting institution dedicated to presenting the best and most exciting international, national, and regional art.

For more updates on what’s new, check the official New & Notable Tumblrs blog!

staff:

It’s Tumblr Tuesday! Here’s some Tumblr blogs we hope you’ll enjoy.

The Daily Forlorn
Paul Hornschemeier posts daily drawings of filmmakers, toys, Victorian beasts, authors, work in progress, and character actors from bygone TV, all in an attempt to map his own brain. Above: An internal self-portrait.

SHARK WEEK
The good people at the Discovery Channel love sharks so much that they’re celebrating the 25th anniversary of Shark Week this very moment!

Literary Jukebox
Daily quote from a favorite book, thematically matched with a song.

SciSpotlight: NYSCI News Digest
Updates on events and topics based on science, technology, and learning from the New York Hall of Science.

Contemporary Arts Museum Houston
The Contemporary Arts Museum Houston is a non-collecting institution dedicated to presenting the best and most exciting international, national, and regional art.

For more updates on what’s new, check the official New & Notable Tumblrs blog!

fuckyeahmolecularbiology:

Meet The Neurosphere
A neurosphere is a system composed of free-floating clusters of neural stem cells. Because stem cells cannot be studied in vivo, neurospheres provide a method of investigating neural precursor cells in vitro. To grow a neurosphere, putative neural stem cells are suspended in a medium lacking adherent substrates but containing necessary growth factors, like epidermal growth factor and fibroblast growth factor. This allows the neural cells to form characteristic 3D spheres. 
The clinical applications of neurospheres are still in their infancy, but they have the potential to help treat many diseases. Transplanted neural stem cells are not only able to cross the blood-brain barrier and integrate themselves into the host’s brain without disrupting normal function - they are also incredibly versatile, and have been shown to proliferate and differentiate in various other tissues of the body when transplanted. Researchers are currently exploring the use of neural stem cells obtained from neurospheres to aid in the growth of inner ear neurons and hair cells; the hope is that these cells may be able to restore auditory function in hearing-impaired patients.
The image above is of a neurosphere from Vanderbilt University’s Department of Molecular and Cell Biology.

fuckyeahmolecularbiology:

Meet The Neurosphere

A neurosphere is a system composed of free-floating clusters of neural stem cells. Because stem cells cannot be studied in vivo, neurospheres provide a method of investigating neural precursor cells in vitro. To grow a neurosphere, putative neural stem cells are suspended in a medium lacking adherent substrates but containing necessary growth factors, like epidermal growth factor and fibroblast growth factor. This allows the neural cells to form characteristic 3D spheres. 

The clinical applications of neurospheres are still in their infancy, but they have the potential to help treat many diseases. Transplanted neural stem cells are not only able to cross the blood-brain barrier and integrate themselves into the host’s brain without disrupting normal function - they are also incredibly versatile, and have been shown to proliferate and differentiate in various other tissues of the body when transplanted. Researchers are currently exploring the use of neural stem cells obtained from neurospheres to aid in the growth of inner ear neurons and hair cells; the hope is that these cells may be able to restore auditory function in hearing-impaired patients.

The image above is of a neurosphere from Vanderbilt University’s Department of Molecular and Cell Biology.

fuckyeahmolecularbiology:

Rogue Response: Chemotherapy Undermines Itself

A new study, published in Nature Medicine, has suggested that chemotherapy used to treat metastatic cancers can cause a rogue response in healthy cells, which helps to explain why people become resistant to the treatment. Chemotherapy has been shown to lose effectiveness in a large number of patients (approximately 90%) with secondary cancers - those that started out as solid cancers in areas such as the breast, lung, and colon, and metastasised, or spread to a different area of the body. The new research shows that the cause of this resistance could be hidden in fibroblasts - wound-healing cells around tumours discovered to create a protein that may teach the cancerous cells how to evade the treatment.

Researchers at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle looked at the damage chemotherapy was causing to the fibroblast cells surrounding tumours. Because the radiation caused DNA damage, the fibroblasts produced up to 30 times more of a specific protein, Wnt16B, than they should. The protein fuels cancer cells to invade and attack surrounding tissues and evade chemotherapy treatments.

It was already known that Wnt16B was involved in the development of cancers, but not in treatment resistance. The researchers hope they can put a stop to the protein response, and greatly improve the effectiveness of chemotherapy, especially for those patients with multiple cancers. 

Professor Fran Balkwill, a Cancer Research UK expert on the microenvironment around tumours, said: “This work fits with other research showing that cancer treatments don’t just affect cancer cells, but can also target cells in and around tumours. Sometimes this can be good - for instance, chemotherapy can stimulate surrounding, healthy immune cells to attack tumours. But this work confirms that having healthy cells around the tumour can help the tumour become resistant to treatment. 

“The next step is to find ways to target these resistance mechanisms to help make chemotherapy more effective.”

Top image: A human fibroblast cell. Bottom image: Mouse fibroblast cells.

The original paper was published in Nature Medicine. A brief synopsis, and link to the full paper, can be found here.

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