Thursday, January 08, 2026

 

Post-stroke injection protects the brain in preclinical study



Nanomaterial crosses blood-brain barrier, targets harmful inflammation after most common type of stroke




Northwestern University

Post-stroke injection breaks blood-brain barrier, protects the brain 

video: 

This video shows, in real time within the first 24 hours of the injection, immune cells (shown in red) rushing into an area injured by ischemic stroke. The peptide treatment (blue) successfully crosses the blood-brain barrier (red). Microglia (green) become active and surround the treatment, which indicates an elevated immune response. Recorded over five minutes and sped up here 60x.

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Credit: Northwestern University





  • ‘Dancing molecules’ were delivered intravenously without surgery or direct injection into the brain
  • Therapy significantly reduced brain damage and showed no signs of side effects
  • Could one day complement existing stroke treatments by limiting secondary brain injury

CHICAGO --- When a person suffers a stroke, physicians must restore blood flow to the brain as quickly as possible to save their life. But, ironically, that life-saving rush of blood can also trigger a second wave of damage — killing brain cells, fueling inflammation and increasing the odds of long-term disability.

Now, Northwestern University scientists have developed an injectable regenerative nanomaterial that helps protect the brain during this vulnerable window.

In a new preclinical study, the team delivered a single intravenous dose, immediately after restoring blood flow, in a mouse model of ischemic stroke, the most common type of stroke. The therapy successfully crossed the blood-brain barrier — a major challenge for most drugs — to reach and repair brain tissue. The material significantly reduced brain damage and showed no signs of side effects or organ toxicity.

Published Jan. 7 in the journal Neurotherapeutics, the findings suggest the new therapy could eventually complement existing stroke treatments by limiting secondary brain injury and supporting recovery.

“Current clinical approaches are entirely focused on blood flow restoration,” said co-corresponding author Dr. Ayush Batra, associate professor, neurology (neurocritical care) and pathology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, co-director of the NeuroVascular Inflammation Laboratory at Northwestern and a neurocritical care physician with Northwestern Medicine. “Any treatment that facilitates neuronal recovery and minimizes injury would be very powerful, but that holy grail doesn’t yet exist. This study is promising because it’s leading us down a pathway to develop these technologies and therapeutics for this unmet need.”

The injectable therapy is based on supramolecular therapeutic peptides (STPs), a platform developed by Northwestern’s Samuel I. Stupp. A study published in 2021 in the journal Science demonstrated the use of an STP technology — nicknamed “dancing molecules” — because of the highly dynamic nature of its therapeutic agents that could reverse paralysis and repair tissue in mice after a single injection at the site of severe spinal cord injury. The new study found scientists can administer similar dynamic assemblies of molecules intravenously, without requiring surgery or an invasive injection directly into the brain.

“One of the most promising aspects of this study is that we were able to show this therapeutic technology, which has shown incredible promise in spinal cord injury, can now begin to be applied in a stroke model and that it can be delivered systemically,” said Stupp, co-corresponding author and Board of Trustees Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, Chemistry, Medicine and Biomedical Engineering at Northwestern. “This systemic delivery mechanism and the ability to cross the blood-brain barrier is a significant advance that could also be useful in treating traumatic brain injuries and neurodegenerative diseases such as ALS.”

Stupp also is founding director of the Center for Regenerative Nanomedicine. He has appointments in the McCormick School of Engineering, Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences and Feinberg School of Medicine.

Study mimicked real-world stroke treatment

Acute ischemic stroke, which accounts for 80% of all strokes in the U.S., is a devastating condition and is one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide, Batra said. Ischemic strokes occur when a clot blocks blood flow to the brain. Physicians reopen the vessel by administering “clot-busting” drugs or using devices to surgically remove the clot.

Severe strokes can lead to permanent, significant disability that affects a patient’s quality of life and their ability to return to work and engage with their family and society.

“It has not only a significant personal and emotional burden on patients, but also a financial burden on families and communities,” he said. “Reducing this level of disability with a therapy that could potentially help in restoring function and minimizing injury would really have a powerful long-term impact.”

The findings are highly relevant for future clinical applications because the scientists tested the approach in a mouse model that closely mimics real-world ischemic stroke treatment, Batra said. They first blocked blood flow to simulate a major ischemic stroke and then restored it (a process called reperfusion), just as doctors restore blood flow acutely for ischemic stroke patients. 

The scientists monitored the mice for seven days and didn’t observe any significant side effects or biocompatibility issues such as toxicity or immune system rejection. They used advanced imaging techniques, such as real-time intravital intracranial microscopy seen in this video, to confirm the therapy localized to the stroke injury site. Compared to untreated mice, those treated with the “dancing molecules” had significantly less brain tissue damage, reduced signs of inflammation and reduced signs of excessive, damaging immune response.

Stupp said the therapy has pro-regenerative and anti-inflammatory properties, both of which contributed to the positive results.

“You get an accumulation of harmful molecules once the blockage occurs and then suddenly you remove the clot and all those ‘bad actors’ get released into the bloodstream, where they cause additional damage,” Stupp said. “But the dancing molecules carry with them some anti-inflammatory activity to counteract these effects and at the same time help repair neural networks.” 

Dynamic ‘dancing molecules’ can be dialed down in concentration

The secret behind Stupp’s “dancing molecules” breakthrough therapeutic is tuning the collective motion of molecules, so they can find and properly engage constantly moving cellular receptors. The treatment sends signals that encourage nerve cells to repair themselves. For example, it can help nerve fibers (called axons) grow again and reconnect with other nerve cells, restoring lost communication. This process is called plasticity, which means the brain and spinal cord can adapt and rebuild connections after injury. 

In previous studies, scientists injected the dancing molecules as a liquid, and when used to treat spinal cord injury, the therapy immediately gels into a complex network of nanofibers that mimic the dense, extracellular matrix of the spinal cord. By matching the matrix’s structure, mimicking the motion of biological molecules and incorporating signals for receptors, the synthetic materials are able to communicate with cells.

In the new study, the scientists dialed down the concentration of supramolecular peptide assemblies to prevent possible clotting as the therapy enters the bloodstream. Smaller aggregates of peptides easily crossed the blood-brain barrier. Once enough molecules cross, larger nanofiber assemblies can form in brain tissue to produce a more potent therapeutic effect, Stupp said.

“We chose for this stroke study one of the most dynamic therapies we had in terms of its molecular structure so that supramolecular assemblies would have a better probability of crossing the blood-brain barrier,” Stupp said. 

Optimizing therapeutic targeting

The fact that seemingly effective therapies cannot cross the blood-brain barrier has plagued the neuroscience field for decades, Batra said. This new therapy could change that.

When a physician acutely restores blood flow to a region of the brain in a stroke patient, the blood-brain barrier permeability is locally increased, naturally creating a transient opening and opportunity for therapeutic intervention, Batra said.

“Add to that a dynamic peptide that is able to cross more readily, and you’re really optimizing the chances that your therapy is going where you want it to go,” Batra said. 

Next steps

Further studies will need to assess whether this treatment can support longer-term, functional recovery, Batra said. For instance, many stroke patients suffer from significant cognitive decline throughout the subsequent year after a stroke. The new therapy is primed to address that secondary injury, Batra said, but the studies will require a longer follow-up period and more sophisticated behavioral testing. 

In addition, the team is interested in testing whether additional regenerative signals could be incorporated into the therapeutic peptides to produce even better results.

The study is titled, “Toward Development of a Dynamic Supramolecular Peptide Therapy for Acute Ischemic Stroke.” Graduate student Zijun Gao and postdoctoral researcher Luisa Andrade da Silva are co-first authors of the paper. 

Funding for this study was primarily provided by the SQI Synthesizer Grant Program at the Center for Regenerative Nanomedicine.

Peptide animation [VIDEO] 

This animation shows the hypothesized process of the smaller peptide assemblies forming larger nanofibers once they cross the blood-brain barrier. This phenomenon could produce a more potent therapeutic effect.

Credit

Mark Seniw/Northwestern University


 

Exercise to treat depression yields similar results to therapy



Exercise may reduce symptoms of depression to a similar extent as psychological therapy, according to an updated Cochrane review



Cochrane





Exercise may reduce symptoms of depression to a similar extent as psychological therapy, according to an updated Cochrane review. When compared with antidepressant medication, exercise also showed a similar effect, but the evidence was of low certainty.  

Depression is a leading cause of ill health and disability, affecting over 280 million people worldwide. Exercise is low-cost, widely available, and comes with additional health benefits, making it an attractive option for patients and healthcare providers. 

The review, conducted by researchers from the University of Lancashire, examined 73 randomized controlled trials including nearly 5,000 adults with depression. The studies compared exercise with no treatment or control interventions, as well as with psychological therapies and antidepressant medications. 

The results show that exercising can have a moderate benefit on reducing depressive symptoms, compared with no treatment or a control intervention. When compared with psychological therapy, exercise had a similar effect on depressive symptoms, based on moderate-certainty evidence from ten trials. Comparisons with antidepressant medication also suggested a similar effect, but the evidence is limited and of low certainty. Long-term effects are unclear as few studies followed participants after treatment.  

Side effects were rare, including occasional musculoskeletal injuries for those exercising and typical medication-related effects for those taking antidepressants, such as fatigue and gastrointestinal problems.

“Our findings suggest that exercise appears to be a safe and accessible option for helping to manage symptoms of depression,” said Professor Andrew Clegg, lead author of the review. “This suggests that exercise works well for some people, but not for everyone, and finding approaches that individuals are willing and able to maintain is important.” 

The review found that light to moderate intensity exercise may be more beneficial than vigorous exercise, and that completing between 13 and 36 exercise sessions was associated with greater improvements in depressive symptoms.

No single type of exercise was clearly superior, although mixed exercise programmes and resistance training appeared more effective than aerobic exercise alone. Some forms of exercise, such as yoga, qigong and stretching, were not included in the analysis and represent areas for future research. Long-term effects are unclear as few studies followed participants after treatment.

This update adds 35 new trials to previous versions published in 2008 and 2013. Despite the additional evidence, the overall conclusions remain largely unchanged. This is because the majority of trials were small, with fewer than 100 participants, making it difficult to draw firm conclusions.

“Although we’ve added more trials in this update, the findings are similar,” said Professor Clegg. “Exercise can help people with depression, but if we want to find which types work best, for who and whether the benefits last over time, we still need larger, high-quality studies. One large, well-conducted trial is much better than numerous poor quality small trials with limited numbers of participants in each.”

 

Plant-derived phenolic acids revive the power of tetracycline against drug-resistant bacteria



Maximum Academic Press






By boosting antibiotic uptake and disabling bacterial defense systems, these plant-derived molecules act as potent antibiotic adjuvants, restoring the efficacy of an aging but essential antibiotic and offering a promising strategy to combat resistant infections.

As antibiotic resistance increasingly undermines long-standing treatments, extending the lifespan of existing drugs has emerged as a faster and more affordable alternative to developing new antibiotics. New antibiotic discovery typically requires over a decade and more than a billion dollars, while resistance can arise within only a few years, contributing to a sharp decline in newly approved drugs. Antibiotic adjuvants—non-antibiotic compounds that enhance existing therapies—have therefore attracted growing interest, although effective options remain limited. Phenolic acids, small plant metabolites involved in natural defense, exhibit antimicrobial and antioxidant properties but have rarely been systematically evaluated as antibiotic enhancers. In this context, tetracycline—an old yet widely used antibiotic now facing pervasive resistance, especially in E. coli—provides an ideal model for exploring novel adjuvant strategies.

study (DOI:10.48130/biocontam-0025-0013) published in Biocontaminant on 27 November 2025 by Zeyou Chen’s team, Tianjin Chengjian University, demonstrates that plant-derived phenolic acids can act as powerful antibiotic adjuvants by restoring and enhancing tetracycline efficacy against multidrug-resistant bacteria through multi-target disruption of key resistance mechanisms.

Using a combination of in vitro, molecular, and in vivo approaches, this study systematically investigated whether plant-derived phenolic acids can function as antibiotic adjuvants and elucidated the mechanisms underlying their synergistic effects with tetracycline. First, checkerboard broth microdilution assays and time-killing experiments were conducted to evaluate antibacterial synergy between 15 structurally diverse phenolic acids and tetracycline against multidrug-resistant E. coli strains. To determine whether synergy was linked to enhanced antibiotic entry, a genetically engineered tetracycline-responsive whole-cell biosensor was employed to quantify intracellular tetracycline uptake. Transcriptomic analysis and RT-qPCR were then used to assess changes in efflux pump gene expression, while molecular docking explored direct interactions between phenolic acids and efflux proteins. Fluorescent probes were applied to measure membrane permeability, proton motive force (PMF), and reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels. Finally, the therapeutic relevance was tested in a Galleria mellonella infection model and a long-term resistance evolution experiment. These complementary methods revealed that all phenolic acids synergized with tetracycline, markedly enhancing bacterial killing compared with either agent alone, and that similar synergy extended to kanamycin. Biosensor assays showed dose-dependent increases in intracellular tetracycline in the presence of phenolic acids, accompanied by reduced bacterial growth, indicating improved uptake. Mechanistically, phenolic acids downregulated key efflux pump genes (acrB and tetA), bound preferentially to efflux pump proteins, and lost most synergistic activity in an acrB-deleted mutant, confirming efflux inhibition as a central mechanism. In parallel, phenolic acids increased inner membrane permeability and reduced PMF, further promoting antibiotic accumulation, while modestly lowering ROS levels without negating antibacterial efficacy. In vivo, phenolic acid–tetracycline combinations significantly improved survival in infected larvae and suppressed the emergence of new resistant mutants during prolonged exposure. Together, these results demonstrate that phenolic acids potentiate antibiotics through multi-target disruption of bacterial resistance defenses, highlighting their promise as antibiotic adjuvants.

These findings highlight phenolic acids as a new class of antibiotic adjuvants capable of restoring the effectiveness of tetracycline against resistant bacteria. By targeting multiple resistance mechanisms simultaneously—efflux pumps, membrane integrity, and cellular energy—phenolic acids exemplify a multi-target strategy that could slow resistance development. The approach is especially relevant for animal agriculture, where tetracyclines remain widely used and resistance is prevalent. Leveraging plant-derived compounds could improve treatment outcomes while reducing selective pressure for resistance.

###

References

DOI

10.48130/biocontam-0025-0013

Original Source URL

https://doi.org/10.48130/biocontam-0025-0013

Funding information

This work was partly funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 42277386), and the National Key R&D Program of China (Grant Nos 2020YFC1806904 and 2022YFC3704600).

About Biocontaminant

Biocontaminant is a multidisciplinary platform dedicated to advancing fundamental and applied research on biological contaminants across diverse environments and systems. The journal serves as an innovative, efficient, and professional forum for global researchers to disseminate findings in this rapidly evolving field.

Cooperation: A costly affair in bacterial social behaviour?




Indian Institute of Science (IISc)
M. xanthus swarm 

image: 

M. xanthus swarm on soft agar plate

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Credit: Jyotsna Kalathera





Microbes often display cooperative behaviour in which individual cells put in work and sacrifice resources to collectively benefit the group. But sometimes, “cheater” cells in the group may reap the benefits of this cooperation without incurring any cost themselves. Scientists have suggested that in such cases, population bottlenecks – reduction in the total number of individuals – can help stabilise cooperative behaviour in the group.

A new study in PLOS Biology reveals that population bottlenecks can fundamentally reshape how cooperation evolves and persists in complex microbial societies. Researchers at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) explored how repeated bottlenecks affect cooperative traits of Myxococcus xanthus, a model social bacterium known for its remarkable coordinated hunting ability and spore formation inside multicellular fruiting bodies.

“A population bottleneck refers to a drastic and sudden reduction in both the size and diversity of the population. If there are ways to purge out cheaters from the population … this would be one of the ideal ways to do it,” says Jyotsna Kalathera, former PhD student at the Department of Microbiology and Cell Biology (MCB), and first author of the study.

“Floods and forest fires reduce population size massively in the wild. When we talk about macroecosystems of plants, animals, bears, and tigers, it is challenging to test any of these hypotheses; you have to use a more conceptual approach, and you use microorganisms to answer these questions,” explains Samay Pande, Assistant Professor at MCB and corresponding author of the study.

By designing long-term evolution experiments, the team compared Myxococcus populations that underwent stringent bottlenecks (in which very few survive in each successive cycle) versus relaxed bottlenecks (more survivors in each cycle). These bottlenecks were artificially created in the lab by selecting a specific lower number of bacteria to be cultured in each subsequent generation. Across both conditions, four major cooperative traits were studied: sporulation, germination, predation, and growth.

The team found that under stringent bottlenecks, fruiting body formation and growth were favoured, whereas predation and germination declined, producing more homogeneous populations of cooperative individuals. In contrast, relaxed bottlenecks reversed this pattern, which led to an overall increase in competitive fitness or infighting for resources across the organism’s life cycle.

“In this study, we have figured out genetic changes that are associated with how the stringent and relaxed bottlenecks affect cooperative traits, but we have not yet unravelled their molecular basis,” adds Pande.

The findings advance our understanding of how population dynamics influence the evolution of microbial traits and offer new insights into the maintenance of cooperation in natural microbial communities.

“Cooperation is essential in the context of the evolution of life. Multiple genes must work together to form chromosomes, and cells need to collaborate to create multicellular organisms,” adds Pande.