Scientists in a lab examining a digital map of the body's hidden sixth sense, funded by NIH award.
Bilde generert av AI

Scientists receive $14.2 million NIH award to map the body’s ‘hidden sixth sense’

Bilde generert av AI
Faktasjekket

A team led by Nobel laureate Ardem Patapoutian at Scripps Research, working with collaborators at the Allen Institute, has secured a five-year, $14.2 million NIH Director’s Transformative Research Award to build what they describe as the first atlas of interoception—the internal sensory system that helps keep breathing, blood pressure and digestion in balance. ([eurekalert.org](https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1101449?utm_source=openai))

Interoception, sometimes called the body’s “hidden sixth sense,” refers to the neural pathways that monitor internal signals such as heart rate, blood pressure, digestion and immune activity—largely outside conscious awareness. The project’s goal is to chart those pathways in unprecedented anatomical and molecular detail, laying groundwork for future studies of how the brain and body stay synchronized. (eurekalert.org)

Scripps Research said the award will support a coordinated effort to produce the first reference atlas of interoceptive circuits. The work is funded through the NIH Common Fund’s High-Risk, High-Reward Research program under the NIH Director’s Transformative Research Award mechanism, which backs unusually innovative, paradigm-shifting projects and was established in 2009. (eurekalert.org)

Patapoutian—Presidential Endowed Chair in Neurobiology at Scripps Research and co-recipient of the 2021 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine—will lead the effort. His team includes Scripps Research professor and HHMI Investigator Li Ye; Bosiljka Tasic, Director of Molecular Genetics at the Allen Institute; and co‑investigator Xin Jin, an associate professor at Scripps Research and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Freeman Hrabowski Scholar. Titles are as reported by the institutions. (eurekalert.org)

“My team is honored that the NIH is supporting the kind of collaborative science needed to study such a complex system,” Patapoutian said in the announcement. Ye added, “We hope our results will help other scientists ask new questions about how internal organs and the nervous system stay in sync.” Jin said, “Interoception is fundamental to nearly every aspect of health, but it remains a largely unexplored frontier of neuroscience.” (eurekalert.org)

According to Scripps Research, the group will label sensory neurons and use whole‑body imaging to trace their routes from the spinal cord into organs, including the heart and gastrointestinal tract, creating high‑resolution 3D maps. In parallel, the team plans genetic profiling to distinguish cell types across tissues such as the gut, bladder and fat. Together, these datasets are intended to form a standardized framework for the body’s internal sensory wiring. (eurekalert.org)

Researchers say disruptions in interoception have been linked in prior work to conditions including autoimmune disorders, chronic pain, neurodegenerative diseases and high blood pressure—connections they hope a comprehensive atlas will help clarify for future diagnostic and therapeutic advances. (eurekalert.org)

Relaterte artikler

University of Sydney researchers examine a detailed fMRI brain scan highlighting pain-control areas in the brainstem, symbolizing advances in non-opioid pain treatments.
Bilde generert av AI

Scientists map brainstem’s pain‑control network, pointing to targeted non‑opioid relief

Rapportert av AI Bilde generert av AI Faktasjekket

Using 7‑Tesla fMRI and a placebo paradigm, University of Sydney researchers mapped how the human brainstem modulates pain by body region. The study, published in Science on August 28, 2025, outlines a somatotopic system centered on the periaqueductal gray and rostral ventromedial medulla and suggests avenues for localized, non‑opioid treatments.

Neuroscientists have identified eight body-like maps in the visual cortex that mirror the organization of touch sensations, enabling the brain to physically feel what it sees in others. This discovery, based on brain scans during movie viewing, enhances understanding of empathy and holds promise for treatments in autism and advancements in AI. The findings were published in Nature.

Rapportert av AI

Researchers have discovered a cluster of sensory neurons that link the brain and heart, triggering an immune response crucial for recovery after a heart attack. This finding reveals a feedback loop involving the nervous and immune systems that could lead to new therapies. Experiments in mice showed that manipulating these neurons speeds up healing and reduces scarring.

Researchers at McMaster University and the Population Health Research Institute report that simple retinal scans, combined with genetic and blood data, may offer a non-invasive window into cardiovascular health and biological aging. An analysis of more than 74,000 people linked simpler eye-vessel patterns to higher heart-disease risk and faster aging. The study, published October 24, 2025, in Science Advances, points to potential early-detection tools that remain under investigation.

Rapportert av AI Faktasjekket

Scientists at The Ohio State University have charted how patterns of brain wiring can predict activity linked to many mental functions across the entire brain. Each region shows a distinct “connectivity fingerprint” tied to roles such as language and memory. The peer‑reviewed findings in Network Neuroscience offer a baseline for studying healthy young adult brains and for comparisons with neurological or psychiatric conditions.

Scientists at Northern Arizona University are developing a non-invasive blood test that could help detect Alzheimer’s disease before symptoms appear by examining how the brain uses glucose through tiny blood-borne microvesicles. Led by assistant professor Travis Gibbons and supported in part by the Arizona Alzheimer’s Association, the project aims to enable earlier diagnosis and intervention, similar to how doctors manage cardiovascular disease.

Rapportert av AI

Recent research shows that body fat is more than a calorie store; it actively regulates immune responses and blood pressure. Scientists have identified specialized fat depots near the intestines that coordinate immunity against gut microbes, while another study links beige fat around blood vessels to vascular health. These findings challenge simplistic views of fat as merely harmful.

 

 

 

Dette nettstedet bruker informasjonskapsler

Vi bruker informasjonskapsler for analyse for å forbedre nettstedet vårt. Les vår personvernerklæring for mer informasjon.
Avvis