Growth hormone influences regulation of anxiety via a specific group of neurons
Peer-Reviewed Publication
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 26-Jul-2025 03:10 ET (26-Jul-2025 07:10 GMT/UTC)
Researchers at the University of São Paulo identified in mice the neurons associated with the anxiolytic effect of growth hormone. Their discovery paves the way for the development of novel classes of medications for neuropsychiatric disorders.
Researchers at São Paulo State University tested the action of nanoparticles loaded with antibiotics and other antimicrobial compounds on cells infected by the bacillus that causes tuberculosis. The results suggest the strategy can overcome multidrug bacterial resistance.
The map is derived from a study conducted by researchers at Brazil’s space research institute and collaborators, and combined airborne laser scanning, satellite imagery and forest inventories. The results will support planning, conservation and sustainable management decisions.
The study is the first-ever demonstration of the anatomical substrate for the cardiac arrhythmias that occur in human yellow fever. The YF virus affects the liver most of all; other organs besides the liver, however, are also affected, including the kidneys, brain, lungs, spleen, pancreas and heart.
Brazilian researchers tested a photocatalyst based on zinc oxide and found it to perform well in degrading sertraline, an emerging pollutant.The sertraline molecule is not degraded by conventional water treatment methods.
In the global push for nature-based solutions to mitigate climate change, forest restoration in the tropics often takes the spotlight, but a new study shows the complexity behind it, and how smart economic solutions are critical.
Brazilian researchers analyzed air pollution in metropolitan São Paulo in 2019-20 when mobility restrictions and social distancing applied in the southern hemisphere’s largest city. Even so, the daily average exceeded the World Health Organization’s air quality standard on 75 days.
A review article by Brazilian researchers lists recent discoveries on this chronic inflammatory skin disease, which affects around 10% of adults and 25% of children.
A study conducted at the University of São Paulo’s Optics and Photonics Research Center in Brazil showed a change in the bacterium’s sensitivity after five applications.The research group analyzed patient samples containing Staphylococcus aureus, a bacterium that causes a range of diseases from skin infections to pneumonia.
Researchers at the University of São Paulo’s São Carlos Institute of Physics developed the technique, which can be used in information processing and cell marking, among many other applications.