Category: 3. Business

  • Do Hormones Explain Why Women Experience More Gut Pain?

    Do Hormones Explain Why Women Experience More Gut Pain?

    Women are dramatically more likely than men to suffer from irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), a chronic condition causing abdominal pain, bloating, and digestive discomfort. Now, scientists at UC San Francisco have discovered why.

    Estrogen, the researchers report in Science, activates previously unknown pathways in the colon that can trigger pain and make the female gut more sensitive to certain foods and their breakdown products. When male mice were given estrogen to mimic the levels found in females, their gut pain sensitivity increased to match that of females.

    The findings not only explain the female predominance in gut pain disorders but also point to potential new ways to treat the conditions.

    “Instead of just saying young women suffer from IBS, we wanted rigorous science explaining why,” said Holly Ingraham, PhD, the Herzstein Professor of Molecular and Cellular Pharmacology at UCSF and co-senior author of the study. “We’ve answered that question, and in the process identified new potential drug targets.”

    The research also suggests why low-FODMAP diets — which eliminate certain fermentable foods, such as onions, garlic, honey, wheat, and beans — help some IBS patients, and why women’s gut symptoms often fluctuate with their menstrual cycles.

    “We knew the gut has a sophisticated pain-sensing system, but this study reveals how hormones can dial that sensitivity up by tapping into this system through an interesting and potent cellular connection,” said co-senior author David Julius, PhD, the Morris Herzstein Chair in Molecular Biology and Medicine and chair of Physiology. Julius won the 2021 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his work on pain sensation.

    A zoomed in image of the lining of the colon. Cells that produce the hormone  PYY (peptide YY) are in green. Cells that produce the neurotransmitter serotonin are in magenta. PYY triggers the release of serotonin, which activates pain-sensing nerve fibers. Image by Archana Venkataraman/UCSF

    Search for estrogen

    Previous research had hinted that estrogen was to blame for higher rates of IBS in females, but not why. To understand how estrogen might be involved, Ingraham’s and Julius’s teams first needed to see exactly where the hormone was working in the gut.

    “At the time I started this project, we didn’t know where and how estrogen signaling is set up in the female intestine,” said Archana Venkataraman, PhD, a postdoc in Ingraham’s lab and co-first author of the research. “So, our initial step was to visualize the estrogen receptor along the length of the female gut.”

    The team expected to see estrogen receptors in enterochromaffin (EC) cells, which were already known to send pain signals from the gut to the spinal cord. Instead, they got a surprise: estrogen receptors were clustered in the lower part of the colon and in a different cell type known as L-cells.

    The scientists pieced together a complex chain reaction that occurs when estrogen binds to the L-cells. First, estrogen causes L-cells to release a hormone called PYY (peptide YY). PYY then acts on neighboring EC cells, triggering them to release the neurotransmitter serotonin, which activates pain-sensing nerve fibers. In female mice, removing the ovaries or blocking estrogen, serotonin, or PYY dramatically reduced the high gut pain observed in females.

    For decades, scientists believed PYY primarily suppressed appetite — drug companies even tried developing it as a weight-loss medication. But those clinical trials failed due to a troubling side effect that was never fully explained; participants experienced severe gut distress. The new findings mesh with this observation and suggest a completely new role for PYY.

    “PYY had never been directly described as a pain signal in the past,” said co-first author Eric Figueroa, PhD, a postdoc in Julius’ lab. “Establishing this new role for PYY in gut pain reframes our thinking about this hormone and its local effects in the colon.”

    This video shows what happens to the enterochromaffin (EC) cells in the colon when they are treated with PYY. Upon PYY treatment, calcium activity increases in the EC cell, causing it to fluoresce more brightly as it releases serotonin that is detected by nearby pain-sensing nerve fibers. Video by Eric Figueroa/UCSF

    A link between IBS and diet

    Increased PYY wasn’t the only way that L-cells responded to estrogen. Levels of another molecule, called Olfr78, also went up in response to the hormone. Olfr78 detects short-chain fatty acids — metabolites produced when gut bacteria digest certain foods. With more Olfr78 receptors, L-cells become hypersensitive to these fatty acids and are more easily triggered to become active, releasing more PYY.

    “It means that estrogen is really leading to this double hit,” said Venkataraman. “First it’s increasing the baseline sensitivity of the gut by increasing PYY, and then it’s also making L-cells more sensitive to these metabolites that are floating around in the colon.”

    The observation may explain why low-FODMAP diets help some IBS patients. FODMAPs (fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides, and polyols) are carbohydrates that gut bacteria ferment into those same fatty acids sensed by Olfr78. By eating fewer FODMAPs, patients may be preventing the activation of Olfr78, and, in turn, keeping L-cells from churning out more of the pain signaling PYY.

    While men have this same cellular pathway, their lower estrogen levels keep it relatively quiet. However, the pathway could engage in men taking androgen-blocking medications, which block the effects of testosterone and can elevate estrogen in some cases, potentially leading to digestive side-effects.

    The new work suggests potential ways to treat IBS in women and men alike.

    “Even for patients who see success with a low-FODMAP diet, it’s nearly impossible to stick to long term,” Ingraham said. “But the pathways we’ve identified here might be leveraged as new drug targets.”

    The researchers are now studying how such drugs might work, as well as asking questions about what other hormones, such as progesterone, might play a role in gut sensitivity and how pregnancy, lactation, and normal menstrual cycles affect intestinal function.

    Authors: Other UCSF authors are Fernanda M. Castro Navarro and Deepanshu Soota, PhD.

    Funding: NIH Training Grant T32 DK007418; NIGMS K12GM081266-17l; NIDDK R01; DK135714; NINDS R35 NS105038; NHMRC of Australia Investigator Leadership Grant APP2008727; NHMRC Development Grant APP2014250; NHMRC Ideas Grant APP2029332.

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  • Link light rail will be suspended between Capitol Hill and Stadium from 11 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 20 until 10 a.m. Sunday, Dec. 21

    Buses will replace 1 Line trains between Capitol Hill and Stadium stations between 11 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 20 and 10 a.m. Sunday, Dec. 21, to accommodate the installation of advanced signaling in the Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel. Passengers should plan ahead and expect around 30 minutes of increased travel time.

    During the work, 1 Line trains will continue operating through normal service hours, with trains running every 15 minutes between Lynnwood and Capitol Hill and every 10-15 minutes between Stadium and Federal Way.  

    1 Line shuttle buses will operate every 10-15 minutes between Capitol Hill and Stadium, making all intermediate stops. Shuttle buses will match Link operating hours, running from 11 p.m. to 1 a.m. on Saturday and from 5:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. Sunday morning.  

    Sound Transit remains committed to working closely with its partners to continue serving the public. Efforts will continue to prioritize serving riders who depend on Sound Transit’s services, including seniors, people with disabilities, Title VI-protected populations (race, color, national origin), passengers with low-incomes, and those with limited proficiency in English.  

    A language line is available to provide translation assistance for passengers with limited proficiency in English at (800) 823-9230. 

    Riders can sign up to receive automatic email service alerts for Link light rail, ST Express bus routes, the T Line, and the Sounder N Line and S Line. Rider alerts provide information about schedule changes and help riders plan trips around inclement weather. Just go to Service alerts | Sound Transit.  

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  • Goldman Sachs Updated Conference Call Number for 4Q25 and 2026 Earnings Results

    Goldman Sachs Updated Conference Call Number for 4Q25 and 2026 Earnings Results

    NEW YORK, December 18, 2025 – The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (NYSE: GS) announces an update to the dial in details for the firm’s Earnings calls taking place on the following dates:

    • Fourth quarter 2025 – Thursday, January 15, 2026
    • First quarter 2026 – Monday, April 13, 2026
    • Second quarter 2026 – Tuesday, July 14, 2026
    • Third quarter 2026 – Tuesday, October 13, 2026
    • Fourth quarter 2026 – Tuesday, January 19, 2027

    Our financial results will be announced at approximately 7:30 am (ET) on the dates noted above in a press release, which will also be available on the firm’s website, https://www.goldmansachs.com.

    A conference call to discuss the firm’s financial results, outlook and related matters will be held at 9:30 am (ET) on the dates noted above. The calls will be open to the public, and will also be accessible as an audio webcast through the Investor Relations section of our website, https://www.goldmansachs.com/investor-relations.

    Members of the public who would like to listen to the conference call should dial +1-800-330-6730 (in the U.S.) and +1-646-769-9500 (outside the U.S.) passcode number 7042022. Please note the change in phone number and password compared to previous quarters. There is no charge to access the call. For those unable to listen to the live broadcast, a replay will be available on our website beginning approximately three hours after the event. Any changes to the above dates or conference call details will be announced in a subsequent press release.

    Please direct any questions regarding obtaining access to the conference call to Goldman Sachs Investor Relations, via e-mail, at gs-investor-relations@gs.com.

    Goldman Sachs is a leading global financial institution that delivers a broad range of financial services to a large and diversified client base that includes corporations, financial institutions, governments and individuals. Founded in 1869, the firm is headquartered in New York and maintains offices in all major financial centers around the world.

    # # #

    Media Contact:

    Tony Fratto

    Tel: +1 212 902 5400

    Investor Contact:

    Jehan Ilahi

    Tel: +1 212 902 0300

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  • Renewable energy surge named Science journal’s 2025 Breakthrough of the Year-Xinhua

    LOS ANGELES, Dec. 18 (Xinhua) — U.S. academic journal Science on Thursday named the renewable energy surge as the 2025 Breakthrough of the Year, noting that this global transition is being led by China.

    Since the Industrial Revolution, human society has run on ancient solar energy — captured by plants hundreds of millions of years ago, stored in fossil fuels, and dug and drilled from the earth, the journal said.

    In 2025, however, a notable shift occurred as renewable energy, mostly generated from solar and wind sources, began to overtake conventional energy on multiple fronts, according to Science.

    Renewable energy expanded rapidly enough to cover the entire increase in global electricity use in the first half of the year and surpassed coal as a source of electricity worldwide this year, it said.

    “China’s mighty industrial engine is the driver. After years of patiently nurturing the sector through subsidies, China now dominates global production of renewable energy technologies,” Science said.

    China makes 80 percent of the world’s solar cells, 70 percent of its wind turbines, and 70 percent of its lithium batteries, at prices no competitor can match, it said.

    And solar panel imports in Africa and South Asia have soared, as people in those regions realized rooftop solar can cheaply power lights, cellphones and fans. To many, the continued growth of renewables now seems unstoppable — a prospect that has led Science to name the renewable energy surge its 2025 Breakthrough of the Year, according to the journal.

    China’s burgeoning exports of green tech are transforming the rest of the world, too. Europe is a longtime customer, but countries in the Global South are also rushing to buy China’s solar panels, batteries and wind turbines, spurred by market forces and a desire for energy independence, the journal said.

    This year renewables helped bring the growth of greenhouse emissions to a virtual standstill in China and put a global carbon peak within reach. But to meaningfully cut emissions, the world needs to treat the thresholds crossed this year as just a starting point, it said.

    Other runner-up breakthroughs named by Science this year include custom gene editing, two new drugs for gonorrhea, a new type of telescope that can gather more optical data than all other telescopes, large language models applied to scientific research, and heat-tolerant rice.

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  • Renewable energy surge named Science journal’s 2025 Breakthrough of the Year-Xinhua

    LOS ANGELES, Dec. 18 (Xinhua) — U.S. academic journal Science on Thursday named the renewable energy surge as the 2025 Breakthrough of the Year, noting that this global transition is being led by China.

    Since the Industrial Revolution, human society has run on ancient solar energy — captured by plants hundreds of millions of years ago, stored in fossil fuels, and dug and drilled from the earth, the journal said.

    In 2025, however, a notable shift occurred as renewable energy, mostly generated from solar and wind sources, began to overtake conventional energy on multiple fronts, according to Science.

    Renewable energy expanded rapidly enough to cover the entire increase in global electricity use in the first half of the year and surpassed coal as a source of electricity worldwide this year, it said.

    “China’s mighty industrial engine is the driver. After years of patiently nurturing the sector through subsidies, China now dominates global production of renewable energy technologies,” Science said.

    China makes 80 percent of the world’s solar cells, 70 percent of its wind turbines, and 70 percent of its lithium batteries, at prices no competitor can match, it said.

    And solar panel imports in Africa and South Asia have soared, as people in those regions realized rooftop solar can cheaply power lights, cellphones and fans. To many, the continued growth of renewables now seems unstoppable — a prospect that has led Science to name the renewable energy surge its 2025 Breakthrough of the Year, according to the journal.

    China’s burgeoning exports of green tech are transforming the rest of the world, too. Europe is a longtime customer, but countries in the Global South are also rushing to buy China’s solar panels, batteries and wind turbines, spurred by market forces and a desire for energy independence, the journal said.

    This year renewables helped bring the growth of greenhouse emissions to a virtual standstill in China and put a global carbon peak within reach. But to meaningfully cut emissions, the world needs to treat the thresholds crossed this year as just a starting point, it said.

    Other runner-up breakthroughs named by Science this year include custom gene editing, two new drugs for gonorrhea, a new type of telescope that can gather more optical data than all other telescopes, large language models applied to scientific research, and heat-tolerant rice.

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  • Australia’s resources and energy export earnings set to remain at high levels despite forecast falls – Department of Industry Science and Resources

    1. Australia’s resources and energy export earnings set to remain at high levels despite forecast falls  Department of Industry Science and Resources
    2. Australia Lifts Commodity Export Outlook on Iron Ore, Gold Price  Bloomberg.com
    3. Surging Gold Prices Drive Upward Revision in Australia’s Export Outlook  TradingPedia
    4. Gold bonanza as Australia revises resource export earnings up 4%  MSN

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  • Government fails to bring forward draft leasehold legislation: Housing Committee Chair responds – UK Parliament

    1. Government fails to bring forward draft leasehold legislation: Housing Committee Chair responds  UK Parliament
    2. Labour Row Brewing Over Long-Delayed Leasehold Reform  Guido Fawkes
    3. The quiet divide conveyancers are now facing under the hidden impact of leasehold reform  Today’s Conveyancer
    4. Nottingham-based property managers Watson call for an end to the ‘Wild West’ of unregulated managing agents.  Love Business East Midlands
    5. Leasehold reforms risk torpedoing billions in UK investment  The Times

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  • Government fails to bring forward draft leasehold legislation: Housing Committee Chair responds – UK Parliament

    1. Government fails to bring forward draft leasehold legislation: Housing Committee Chair responds  UK Parliament
    2. Labour Row Brewing Over Long-Delayed Leasehold Reform  Guido Fawkes
    3. The quiet divide conveyancers are now facing under the hidden impact of leasehold reform  Today’s Conveyancer
    4. Nottingham-based property managers Watson call for an end to the ‘Wild West’ of unregulated managing agents.  Love Business East Midlands
    5. Leasehold reforms risk torpedoing billions in UK investment  The Times

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  • AG Nessel on the MPSC Approving DTE’s Application to Service Saline Data Center

    AG Nessel on the MPSC Approving DTE’s Application to Service Saline Data Center

    LANSING – Today, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel issued the following statement after the Michigan Public Service Commission (MPSC) approved DTE’s ex parte application for approval of two special contracts to service a 1.4-gigawatt data center in Saline Township:

    “After receiving more than 5,500 public comments, overwhelming opposition from community leaders, and bipartisan calls from public officials urging the Commission to slow down, I am extremely disappointed in the MPSC’s decision to fast-track DTE’s secret application to service this massive data center without holding a contested case hearing. While I am relieved that the Commission at least purports to have placed some conditions on DTE’s application, without being able to see the full, unredacted contract, and study the predicate conditions and enforcement mechanisms set by the Commission, it is impossible to verify any of these claims today. As Michigan’s chief consumer advocate, my office is reviewing the Commission’s order and considering what next steps we may be able to take to protect our residents.

    “This secret contract still leaves Michiganders scrounging for hidden and vital details that could harm ratepayers should these AI corporations leave, move out of state, or simply go bankrupt. None of the conditions proposed by the Commission will bring these terms into public view, including what exit fee provisions might be in effect before December 2027.

    “Rushing approval through an ex parte process lets DTE brush past important questions and shields the utility from the transparency the public deserves, and review by essential consumer protection organizations and offices such as mine, which I take personally as an elected official charged with protecting the consumers of this state.

    “Our regulatory system only works if the process is done properly and transparently. When the utilities and MPSC cut corners, Michigan ratepayers are left unprotected. While this decision to forego a contested case is a major setback for consumer protection watchdogs, and a detriment to the public’s trust in their appointed government regulators, my office will continue to stand with ratepayers, demand transparency from utilities, and push for a regulatory process that puts Michiganders, not corporations, first.”

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  • Christmas in Hopelands is Canceled, Thursday December 18 – City of Aiken, SC (.gov)

    1. Christmas in Hopelands is Canceled, Thursday December 18  City of Aiken, SC (.gov)
    2. Today’s events for Dec. 16  Post and Courier
    3. Downtown Aiken celebrates Night of 1,000 Lights  WRDW
    4. Night of 1,000 Lights  Post and Courier
    5. Merry and very, very bright: Aiken’s Hopelands Gardens holiday event features over 100,000 lights  Post and Courier

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