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LifeFuel for Richcels wanting to improve their progeny's iq

Shaktiman

Shaktiman

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A pill to make you smarter? Drug grows brain cells​

By Maggie Fox, Health, Science Editor
4 MIN READ
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Researchers have found a drug that can help the brain grow new cells and said their study may lead to ways to improve experimental Alzheimer’s drugs.
The researchers’ work, done on rodents, builds on findings that all mammals, including humans, make brain cells throughout their lives. Most of these die, but this drug helps more of the baby cells survive and grow to become functioning brain cells.
“We make new neurons every day in our brain,” Andrew Pieper of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas who worked on the study, said in a telephone interview. “What our compound does in allow more of them to survive.”
The compound is called P7C3 for now, and the researchers have already started tweaking it to make it more effective. They said it seems safe and appears to work even when taken as a pill.
The compound is similar to Medivation Inc and Pfizer Inc’s experimental Alzheimer’s drug, Dimebon, and may provide ways to improve its effects, Pieper and colleagues reported in the journal Cell.
It is also similar to some compounds owned by Serono, the researchers said.
Dimebon, originally a Russian-made antihistamine also known as latrepirdine, failed in a clinical trial for Alzheimer’s disease in March.
“For the sake of patients suffering from Alzheimer’s disease, it is hoped that the apparently marginal clinical utility of Dimebon might be enhanced by improvements in both its potency and ceiling of proneurogenic, neuroprotective efficacy,” the researchers wrote.
“If so, our work offers concrete assays for the development of improved versions of these neuroprotective drugs.”
Alzheimer’s gradually destroys the brain and affects 26 million people globally. Drugs, such as Pfizer’s Aricept, improve symptoms only minimally.

OLD RATS, NEW TRICKS​

The researchers went through 1,000 representative compounds from 300,000 chemicals, pooled them and administered them to mice. They then dissected the brains to see whether any of the mice had made new cells in the hippocampus, a region of the brain associated with learning and memory.
They eventually narrowed the field to P7C3.
When they gave it to old rats for two months, the elderly rodents did far better than other old rats in learning their way around a water maze.
When dissected, the treated rats turned out to have three times the usual number of newborn neurons in a brain region called the dentate gyrus.
They made a derivative of P7C3 called A20 that worked even better.
When the researchers tested Dimebon and the Serono compounds, they found these drugs also stimulated the growth of new brain cells. Being able to target their effects could lead to better drugs to treat Alzheimer’s and perhaps other diseases that destroy brain cells like strokes and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also know as ALS or Lou Gehrig’s disease.
“This striking demonstration of a treatment that stems age-related cognitive decline in living animals points the way to potential development of the first cures that will address the core illness process in Alzheimer’s disease,” said Dr. Thomas Insel, director of the National Institute on Mental Health, which helped pay for the study.
 
No pills for height
 
Over for IQ/money maxxers. Soon all STEM jobs will be low paid with Indians/Abos being given these pills to make them smart engineers then paying them minimum wage. The only good jobs will be manager-style jobs which will be chad only as height + face trumps IQ for that.
 

Evidence for specificity of polygenic contributions to attainment in English, maths and science during adolescence.

Donati G et al. 2021
Researchers performed genome-wide association studies of standardised national English, maths and science tests using data from the UK-based Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) to assess whether there exist academic subject-specific molecular genetic contributions. The performance in the three academic subjects were assessed using National Curriculum-based Standardized Assessment tests (SATs) at 11 and 14 years of age. The academic attainment scores for English (N = 5983), math (N = 6017) and science (N = 6089) were calculated by summing age- and sex-regressed SAT scores from these two time points for each academic subject. After the genotyping, one genome-wide significant single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) was identified for attainment in science, but none for attainment in English or math. Further 26 independent SNPs showed suggestive evidence of association with science, 38 for math and 16 for English. Rs11264236 in the Natriuretic Peptide Receptor 1 (NPR1) gene and rs10905791 in the Ankyrin Repeat And SOCS Box Containing 13 (ASB13) gene showed suggestive evidence of association with science. The A allele of rs11264236 and the T allele of rs10905791 showed tendencies to increase academic scores in science. In addition, phenotypic correlation analysis revealed that science was significantly more correlated with English and maths than these were with each other.

www.pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33594131/

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