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Super fruit fly may lead to healthier humans
06-07-2007 · EurekAlert!Researchers at USC and Caltech slow aging dramatically in fruit flies with a new technique that shows general promise in pharmaceutical development.
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Similar news on "Super fruit fly may lead to healthier humans":
- Insight on fruit fly immune system could lead to new types of vaccines, Stanford researchers say
03-08-2007 · EurekAlert!
Researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine have found for the first time that flies' primitive immune systems may develop long-term protection from infection, an ability previously thought impossible for insects.The findings could have implications for new ways of developing human vaccines, especially for people with compromised immune systems.
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- Zebrafish to shed light on human mitochondrial diseases
09-13-2007 · EurekAlert!
Zebrafish can now be used to study COX deficiencies in humans, a discovery that gives scientists an unprecedented window to view the earliest stages of mitochondrial impairments that lead to potentially fatal metabolic disorders, according to researchers at the University of Oregon.
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- 'Drunk' fruit flies could shed light on genetic basis of human alcohol abuse
10-19-2006 · EurekAlert!
Fruit flies get "drunk," just like humans, when exposed to large amounts of alcohol and may in future help to explain why some people are genetically predisposed to alcohol abuse. Humans and fruit flies respond to alcohol in a very similar way at the gene level, according to a study published today in the open access journal Genome Biology.
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- Run amok enzyme causes same problems in both humans and fruit flies
12-18-2006 · EurekAlert!
An enzyme found at elevated levels in several human cancers has been linked to abnormal tumor growth in fruit flies, a discovery that provides a new model for understanding the link between stem cell biology and cancer, according to researchers at the University of Oregon.
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- UGA researchers discover how human body fights off African parasite
09-06-2007 · EurekAlert!
A team of researchers led by biochemists at the University of Georgia propose that T. b. brucei actually does infect humans but that the infection triggers release of hemoglobin from red blood cells. Hemoglobin appears to "arm" the human innate immune system by binding to a small fraction of high density lipoprotein (HDL), or "good cholesterol." The hemoglobin-HDL complex then becomes a super toxin and clears the body of trypanosomes.
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- Fruit fly gene research may shed light on human disease processes
03-27-2007 · EurekAlert!
Those small fruit flies buzzing around your bananas are more than pests -- they may be allies in a fruitful search for clues to human diseases caused when genes malfunction.
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- Evolution and fly genomics
11-07-2007 · EurekAlert!
New work on fruit fly genomics suggests new ways to look at the much larger human genome, and gives insights into the role of adaptation in evolution.
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- Find yields further insight into causes of Parkinson's disease
02-01-2007 · EurekAlert!
In the fruit fly Drosophila, the mutated parkin gene causes motor dysfunction and may be key to understanding the cause of familial Parkinson's in humans.
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- Lush or lightweight?
10-31-2007 · EurekAlert!
Some fruit flies can drink others under the table. Now, scientists at North Carolina State University have a few more genetic clues behind why some flies are more sensitive to alcohol than others. And the results might lead to more knowledge about alcoholism in humans.
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- Cancer cures could work for canines and humans
07-12-2007 · EurekAlert!
One of the major issues associated with longer life expectancy in man and his best friend is an increase in the incidence of cancer. Even though they cannot talk, it seems dogs might be able to tell us why and how certain cancers develop. In turn that could lead to better treatments for both canine and human cancer patients.
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