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How estrogen could act as the 'beneficial middleman' for brain

Washington, Dec 9 (ANI): Estrogen has been labelled as the middleman in its positive effect on the brain - a finding that raises the possibility that future drugs may bypass the carcinogenic hormone altogether while reaping its benefits.

A split-personality chemical, estrogen is thought to protect neural circuits and boost learning and memory, while at the same time increasing cancer risk when taken in high doses.

In a new study, neuroscientists at USC and the Western University of Health Sciences show that estrogen sometimes acts through another chemical.

They conducted experiments on mice and verified that the hormone stimulates parts of the brain dedicated to learning and memory.

"We show very clearly that it does activate the same machinery that is activated during learning and memory," said Michel Baudry, professor of neurobiology at the USC College of Letters, Arts and Sciences.

However, the researchers also found that estrogen acts through calpain, a protein considered crucial to learning and memory since a seminal paper in 1984 by Baudry and Gary Lynch of the University of California, Irvine on the biochemistry of memory.

He said that estrogen acting through calpain does not work as a slowly diffusing hormone, but as a neurotransmitter with a more powerful and nearly immediate effect on the brain.

He compared estrogen to adrenalin, a substance that acts like a hormone in most of the body but as a neurotransmitter in the brain.

"It's not a hormonal effect. It's a synaptic modulator. It completely changes the way we look at estrogen in the brain," said Baudry.

The change may lead to better drugs against Alzheimer's and other neurodegenerative diseases, according to USC graduate student and lead author Sohila Zadran.

"Estrogen is critically involved in learning and memory," she said, and the study shows that its effects "critically involve calpain."

In the future, drug developers may choose to target calpain directly, which could possibly avoid the risks associated with hormone therapy.

The study was published online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). (ANI)

Mumbai terror attack has raised the bar for Pak to act: Times

London, Dec. 8 (ANI): The militants who killed Hindus, Christians and Jews in Mumbai have evidently seen the attack as a part of a struggle connecting India with Kashmir, America, Afghanistan and Britain, reports The Times.The paper is of the view that the Mumbai outrage has raised the bar, again on the requirements for proof of Pakistan's commitment to counter terrorism on or from its territory."For it to meet this challenge and concur with Western and Indian demands to.....
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