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  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Coordinated brain network activity during emotional arousal may explain vivid, lasting memories

    Past psychology studies suggest that people tend to remember emotional events, such as their wedding, the birth of a child or traumatic experiences, more vividly than neutral events, such as a routine professional meeting. While this link between emotion and the recollection of past events is well-established, the neural mechanisms via which emotional states strengthen memories remain poorly understood.

    So researchers now carried out a study aimed at better understanding these mechanisms. Their findings, published in Nature Human Behaviour, suggest that emotional states facilitate the encoding of memories by increasing communication between networks of brain regions.

    Emotional experiences tend to be 'sticky,' meaning that they endure in our memories and shape how we interpret the past, engage with the present, and anticipate the future. 

    The primary objective of the recent study 's to study the neural processes that make emotional memories become more persistent. To do this, they used brain imaging techniques combined with computational models that can analyze and generate texts, known as natural language processing (NLP) models.

    The analyses carried out by the researchers revealed that when participants were emotionally aroused, the activity of various brain networks was more coordinated than when they were in neutral or mild emotional states. Notably, this greater coordination between brain networks was found to predict how well participants remembered the scenes that they viewed during the experiment.

    It is more like an orchestra, where different sections work together to create a unified performance, with arousal serving as a conductor that coordinates their activity. This perspective suggests that whether we remember an emotional memory depends not only on the strength of activity in any single region, but also on how effectively different systems communicate and share information.

    Overall, the results of this research team's analyses suggest that emotions strengthen the synchronization between brain networks, which in turn supports the encoding of memories. Their paper thus introduces a new way of thinking about emotional memories, suggesting that it is supported by the coordinated activity of various brain regions.

     Jadyn S. Park et al, Emotional arousal enhances narrative memories through functional integration of large-scale brain networks, Nature Human Behaviour (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41562-025-02315-1.

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Urolithin A nudges aging immune cells toward a youthful profile in 28 days

    An international research team focused on aging reports that urolithin A at 1,000 mg per day shifted human immune profiles toward a more naive-like, less exhausted CD8+ state and increased fatty acid oxidation capacity, with additional functional gains.

    Urolithin A is a metabolite produced by gut bacteria after breaking down ellagic acid from certain foods, such as pomegranates and walnuts. While produced naturally through microbial digestion, it is in much smaller quantities than available as a supplement or used in the study.

    Aging bodies face reduced production of mature T cells, shrinking naive T cell pools and chronic low-grade inflammation. Mitochondrial dysfunction and waning autophagy sit at the core of these shifts, with mitophagy failure linked to immune dysregulation and disease.

    Preclinical evidence identified urolithin A as a potent inducer of mitophagy, clearing out damaged mitochondria, in rodents and humans. Previous clinical trials have reported improved physical performance following supplementation.

    Improving mitochondrial quality control with a positive influence on immune function would represent a turning back of the aging biological clock, if it can have a meaningful and prolonged effect in humans.

    Conclusion: Short-term urolithin A supplementation modulated human immune cell composition and metabolism and improved selected functional responses, supporting the body's potential to counteract age-related immune decline.

    Dominic Denk et al, Effect of the mitophagy inducer urolithin A on age-related immune decline: a randomized, placebo-controlled trial, Nature Aging (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s43587-025-00996-x

    A natural compound revitalizes the aging human immune system, Nature Aging (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s43587-025-01012-y

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Good Social Interactions Slow Cancer Via an Anxiety-Reducing Neural Circuit

    Just an hour of socializing per day helped mice fight tumors. Now scientists have traced the brain circuitry that turns companionship into a cancer-fighting signal.

    In the 1970s and ‘80s, scientists began noticing that people who had few or poor social relationships had a higher risk of developing illnesses and all-cause mortality. A slew of follow-up studies suggested that social support could protect people from pathological conditions like arthritis, alcoholism, depression, and even death. This link holds true for cancer as well. Upon analyzing disease progression and survival rates in thousands of breast cancer patients, researchers observed a negative impact of social isolation and a positive impact of interpersonal connections on prognosis.

    One of the popular theories explaining these effects states that being social eases anxiety, a well-established driver of tumor growth, and consequently inhibits cancer progression. But how exactly does the body sense these stimuli and pump the brakes on cancer?

    In a recent study published in Neuron, researchers uncovered the neural circuitry that drives the therapeutic effects of social connections on cancer, in mice. It demonstrates a real biological pathway by which this nebulous subject of social interaction can influence cancer.

    That means that now it's technically targetable, by drugs or by neuromodulation techniques, when before, we wouldn't even know what to target or if there was something to target.

     These findings establish a new paradigm for how psychosocial factors influence cancer via neural circuits and could potentially lead to therapies that complement existing treatments.

    Wen HZ, et al. Social interaction in mice suppresses breast cancer progression via... Neuron. 2025;113(20)3374-3389.e9.