#biochemistry

nowisthetime@pod.automat.click

#tissuesalts

https://vigilante.tv/w/c9NcSiRafmwW1xM5Q6G3bP

tissue salts
(You can skip to 1:55:41 for the detailed talk on which dis-eases are caused by which mineral salt deficiencies, which salts cure which dis-eases and which star signs are prone to which deficiencies and diseases...if you've seen my cell salt talks before...we've never covered this part)

Lisa Strbac, #Homeopath, author and host of Raw Rebel Health Podcast and Steve discuss #homeopathy vs #allopathy, the energetic workings of the #mineral tissue #salts of #salvation, the philosopher's stone, the #zodiac and #medical #astrology or "
#esoteric #biochemistry" and all of the other things described above.See less

Healing with Homeopathy & Tissue Salts of Salvation

waynerad@diasp.org

Exercise in a pill. At least that's the idea. "A molecule in the blood that is produced during exercise and can effectively reduce food intake and obesity in mice" has been identified.

"Yong Xu, professor of pediatrics, nutrition, and molecular and cellular biology at Baylor University, Jonathan Long, assistant professor of pathology at Stanford Medicine and an Institute Scholar of Stanford Chemistry, Engineering & Medicine for Human Health, and their colleagues conducted comprehensive analyses of blood plasma compounds from mice following intense treadmill running. The most significantly induced molecule was a modified amino acid called Lac-Phe. It is synthesized from lactate (a byproduct of strenuous exercise that is responsible for the burning sensation in muscles) and phenylalanine (an amino acid that is one of the building blocks of proteins)."

"In mice with diet-induced obesity (fed a high-fat diet), a high dose of Lac-Phe suppressed food intake by about 50% compared to control mice over a period of 12 hours without affecting their movement or energy expenditure. When administered to the mice for 10 days, Lac-Phe reduced cumulative food intake and body weight (owing to loss of body fat) and improved glucose tolerance."

On the flip side, mice lacking an enzyme involved in making Lac-Phe called CNDP2 didn't lose weight as easily.

That's mice. The researchers also found elevated Lac-Phe in humans and racehorses.

"Data from a human exercise cohort showed that sprint exercise induced the most dramatic increase in plasma Lac-Phe, followed by resistance training and then endurance training."

The benefits of exercise in a pill? Science is closer to that goal

#discoveries #biology #biochemistry #obesity #fitness

waynerad@pluspora.com

"We might not know half of what's in our cells, new AI technique reveals." "Multi-Scale Integrated Cell (MuSIC) revealed approximately 70 components contained within a human kidney cell line, half of which had never been seen before. In one example, the researchers spotted a group of proteins forming an unfamiliar structure. Working with UC San Diego colleague Gene Yeo, PhD, they eventually determined the structure to be a new complex of proteins that binds RNA. The complex is likely involved in splicing, an important cellular event that enables the translation of genes to proteins, and helps determine which genes are activated at which times."

The system works by taking a combination of images of cells from microscope images with florescent tags with biophysical associations that come from pulling specific proteins out of cells and seeing what else is attached to it, and feeding both into an AI system. This was just a "pilot" study and only looked at 661 proteins and one cell type.

We might not know half of what's in our cells, new AI technique reveals

#solidstatelife #ai #biology #microscopy #proteins #biochemistry