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Scientists Map How HIV Spread In Europe
An international team of scientists has tracked how and when HIV has made its way around Europe. They found that tourists, travellers and
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New System Reveals Whether School Wellness Policies 'Make The Grade'
In an effort to help families and school administrators fight the epidemic of obesity among children, a Yale-led team of researchers has developed a practical coding system to evaluate school wellness policies, which are required of all schools participating in the National School Lunch Program. This coding system was introduced in the July 2009 issue of the Journal of the American Dietetic Association.
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709,000 Arkansans Are In Families That Will Spend More Than 10 Percent Of Their Income On Health Care In 2009
A report released by the consumer health organization Families USA spotlights a growing crisis among insured families, as rising health care costs devour a growing portion of their pre-tax income.
Diagnostics

Extending The Life Of An Appetite-Suppressing Peptide

The peptide alpha-MSH works in a region of the brain known as the hypothalamus to suppress appetite. A team of researchers, at Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, and the University of California Davis, has provided new insight into the way in which levels of the active form of alpha-MSH are regulated in mice. Specifically, genetic and biochemical analysis performed by the team, led by Sabrina Diano and Craig Warden, indicated that the protein PRCP is expressed in the hypothalamus and breaks down the active form of alpha-MSH, generating a slightly smaller peptide that does not suppress food intake. Importantly, administration of PRCP inhibitors to both normal and obese mice reduced their food intake. Further, mice lacking PRCP had increased levels of the active form of alpha-MSH in the hypothalamus and were leaner and shorter than normal mice; they also did not get obese when fed a high-fat diet. The authors suggest that these data are the first step in identifying PRCP as a candidate drug target for the treatment of obesity and obesity-related disorders. Although Richard Palmiter, at the University of Washington, Seattle, also raises this intriguing possibility, he cautions that any drug would need to penetrate the brain. TITLE: Prolylcarboxypeptidase regulates food intake by inactivating alpha-MSH in rodents https://www.the-jci.org/article.php?id=37209 AUTHOR CONTACT: Sabrina Diano Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA. Craig H. Warden University of California Davis, Davis, California, USA. ACCOMPANYING COMMENTARY TITLE: Reduced levels of neurotransmitter-degrading enzyme PRCP promote obesity https://www.the-jci.org/article.php?id=40001 AUTHOR CONTACT: Richard D. Palmiter University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA. Karen Honey Journal of Clinical Investigation


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