Connect with us

Published

on

Scientists at New York University (NYU) have revealed research indicating that memory functions may not be exclusive to brain cells, with findings showing that non-brain cells in the body can also store memories. The study demonstrated that cells outside the brain, specifically kidney and nerve tissue cells, possess memory-like qualities typically associated with neurons. These findings have implications for advancing the understanding of memory processes and could inform new treatments for memory-related conditions.

Memory Gene Activation in Non-Neural Cells

The study was published in the journal Nature Communications. As per the study, the research team examined non-brain cells’ response to chemical signal patterns in laboratory settings. By emulating the neurological “massed-spaced effect,” the team sought to test whether the spacing of signal patterns—analogous to spaced learning intervals in humans—would influence these cells’ ability to “remember.” The study further revealed that exposing kidney and nerve cells to these intervals resulted in the activation of a “memory gene,” a process previously thought to be unique to neurons.

To track this activation, the cells were engineered to produce a glowing protein whenever the memory gene was turned on, providing visible markers of memory processing. Notably, the non-neural cells showed a stronger and longer-lasting gene response when the chemical signals were spaced, rather than delivered in a single extended pulse.

Implications for Health and Understanding Memory

This study introduces a fresh perspective on cellular memory, potentially shifting future research to consider non-brain cells as integral to memory storage and function. Kukushkin, alongside Professor Thomas Carew from NYU’s Center for Neural Science, suggests that understanding non-neural memory could be instrumental in developing innovative approaches to enhance learning or address health issues such as glucose management and cancer cell response to treatment.

The research adds a new dimension to the study of memory, indicating that memory functions could be a general cellular property rather than a feature limited to brain cells alone.

Continue Reading

Science

Massive Fireball Streaks Across Southern Japan, Lighting Up the Night Sky

Published

on

By

On Aug. 19, residents of southern Japan witnessed a brilliant fireball streaking across the night sky, lighting up cities from Kagoshima to Osaka. The meteor appeared at 11:08 p.m. local time, glowing green-blue with flashes so bright they rivaled the moon before bursting into orange-red fragments above the Pacific Ocean. Security and dashcam cameras captured the dazz…

Continue Reading

Science

Ursa Major III May Be a Star Cluster, Not a Dark-Matter Dwarf Galaxy

Published

on

By

Astronomers have long thought Ursa Major III, also called UNIONS 1, was a dark-matter-packed dwarf galaxy. But new simulations suggest it may instead be a compact star cluster bound by black holes and neutron stars. Located 30,000 light-years away, Ursa Major III contains just ~60 visible stars yet shows puzzlingly high stellar velocities. The new analysis explains th…

Continue Reading

Science

James Webb Telescope Discovers Tiny New Moon Orbiting Uranus

Published

on

By

A team from the Southwest Research Institute has discovered a tiny new moon orbiting Uranus using NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope. The moon, called S/2025 U1, is just 6 miles (10 kilometers) wide, too small for Voyager 2 to detect during its 1986 flyby. This discovery brings Uranus’s total known moons to 29, with S/2025 U1 orbiting 35,000 miles from the planet…

Continue Reading

Trending