Health
Concern over rising HIV infections among Sri Lankan youth

More awareness for young people is needed.
- Read more
- 378 reads
Cancer Patients Vulnerable to Complications From Flu

- Read more
- 386 reads
Food Safety Counts, Especially During the Holiday Season

- Read more
- 340 reads
Take Talk of Weight Off the Holiday Menu

- Read more
- 354 reads
Big Strides in Battle Against Pediatric AIDS

- Read more
- 346 reads
Behavioral Therapy Might Ease Kids' Migraine Symptoms

- Read more
- 335 reads
Experts Lay Out Options for Menopause Symptoms

- Read more
- 400 reads
Enzyme that produces melatonin originated 500 million years ago, NIH study shows

After analyzing DNA from sea creatures thought to resemble early vertebrates, researchers have pieced together a theory of pertaining to the origin of melatonin, which regulates the body’s 24 hour daily rythms. The AANAT enzyme, or timezyme, is essential for producing melatonin. One form of AANAT is found only in non-vertebrates, and appears to detoxify potentially hazardous compounds. The researchers contend that a second copy of the gene for producing AANAT appeared about 500 million years ago, when the original gene was duplicated. As vertebrate animals evolved, the second copy of the AANAT gene evolved, eventually specializing in producing melatonin. The theory also holds that the original copy of the AANAT gene later disappeared, and its function was taken over by other genes. In support of their theory, the researchers discovered that two animals thought to be like early vertebrates, the elephant shark and the ratfish, produce both the non-vertebrate and vertebrate forms of AANAT. Two other animals thought to have originated later in vertebrate evolution, the catshark and the sea lamprey, had only the vertebrate AANAT gene.
- Read more
- 348 reads
Keeping Healthy During Holiday Travel

- Read more
- 424 reads
Human Rights
Fostering a More Humane World: The 28th Eurasian Economic Summi

Conscience, Hope, and Action: Keys to Global Peace and Sustainability

Ringing FOWPAL’s Peace Bell for the World:Nobel Peace Prize Laureates’ Visions and Actions

Protecting the World’s Cultural Diversity for a Sustainable Future

Puppet Show I International Friendship Day 2020


