PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Understanding how cells follow electric fields

Electrotaxis could be important in wound healing

Understanding how cells follow electric fields
2015-05-28
(Press-News.org) Many living things can respond to electric fields, either moving or using them to detect prey or enemies. Weak electric fields may be important growth and development, and in wound healing: it's known that one of the signals that guides cells into a wound to repair it is a disturbance in the normal electric field between tissues. This ability to move in response to an electric field is called galvanotaxis or electrotaxis.

UC Davis dermatology professor Min Zhao, Peter Devroetes at Johns Hopkins University and colleagues hope to unravel how these responses work, studying both body cells and Dictyostelium discoideum, an amoeba that lives in soil. Dictyostelium is unusual because it spends part of its life crawling around as a single-cell amoeba, but occasionally multiple amoebae will come together to form a fruiting body.

In a paper just published in the journal Science Signaling, Zhao and colleagues screened Dictyostelium for genes that affect electrotaxis. They used special barcoded microplates developed by Tingrui Pan, professor of biomedical engineering at UC Davis to screen hundreds of amoeba strains.

The team identified a number of genes, including one called PiaA, which encodes a critical component of a pathway controlling motility. Other genes associated with electrotaxis in Dictyostelium were also linked to the same pathway.

Right now, no one nows how cells detect these very weak electric fields, Zhao said. The screening technique could be used to identify more genes linked to electrotaxis and help researchers piece together exactly how electrical signals are detected and turned into action.

INFORMATION:

Coauthors on the paper include biologists, engineers and mathematicians. They are: at UC Davis, Runchi Gao, Siwei Zhao, Yaohui Sun, Sanjun Zhao, Jing Gao, and Alex Mogilner; Jane Borleis, Stacey Willard, Ming Tang, Huaqing Cai, and Yoichiro Kamimura at Johns Hopkins University; Yuesheng Huang, Jianxin Jiang, Xupin Jiangat the State Key Laboratory of Trauma, Burns and Combined Injury, Third Military Medical University, Chongqing, China; and Zunxi Huang, Yunnan Normal University, Kunming, China.

The work was supported by the National Science Foundation (U.S.), the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation of China and the Wellcome Trust.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Understanding how cells follow electric fields

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Nineteen medical school deans join together to call for sustainable biomedical research funding

2015-05-28
Unstable funding is threatening the viability of academic biomedical research in this country, according to a new paper published this week in the journal Science Translational Medicine. The paper was written jointly by the deans of 19 prominent medical schools around the country. Among this group is University of Maryland School of Medicine Dean E. Albert Reece. "We must reinvigorate the federal-academic partnership for research across all sciences," the authors write. If the current trends in funding continue, both established investigators and early-career scientists ...

New rapid-deployment plasma protocol effectively treats trauma patients quicker in the ER

2015-05-28
CHICAGO (May 28, 2015): Traumatic injury is the leading cause of death among people under age 45, but if trauma physicians could deliver plasma to these injury victims within minutes of their arrival in the emergency room, more of them would stand a better chance of survival. When they arrive at the hospital, trauma victims can often wait 30 minutes or longer to receive plasma because the traditional way of giving them plasma involves two time-consuming steps: testing for blood type and then thawing frozen plasma. "There's a golden hour after trauma where you need to ...

Vulnerability found in some drug-resistant bacteria

2015-05-28
Using a complex modeling program that helps analyze the physical dynamics of large, structurally complex protein molecules, a research team has made progress towards finding a weak spot in the architecture of a group of enzymes that are essential to antibiotic resistance in a number of bacteria. In an article published in PLOS ONE, University of North Carolina at Charlotte senior biology major Jenna R. Brown and her faculty mentor, UNC Charlotte professor of bioinformatics and genomics Dennis R. Livesay, present an analysis of the four currently known protein structures ...

Scientists discover key to what causes immune cell migration to wounds

2015-05-28
Immune cells play an important role in the upkeep and repair of our bodies, helping us to defend against infection and disease. Until now, how these cells detect a wounded or damaged site has largely remained a mystery. New research, led by University of Bristol academics in collaboration with a team from the University of Sheffield, has identified the triggers which lead these cells to react and respond in cell repair. It is hoped the findings, published in Current Biology, could help scientists design therapies to manipulate the cell repair process and direct immune ...

Do you have the time? Flies sure do

2015-05-28
Flies might be smarter than you think. According to research reported in the Cell Press journal Current Biology on May 28, fruit flies know what time of day it is. What's more, the insects can learn to connect different scents with the sweet reward of sugar, depending on the hour: menthol in the morning and mushrooms in the afternoon. Researchers say that the findings show the surprising mental abilities of animals, no matter how small. "If even the fly, with its miniature brain, has the sense of time, most animals may have it," says Martin Heisenberg of Rudolf Virchow ...

Controlling typhoid bacterium key to prevent gallbladder cancer in India and Pakistan

Controlling typhoid bacterium key to prevent gallbladder cancer in India and Pakistan
2015-05-28
Controlling bacterial infections responsible for typhoid fever could dramatically reduce the risk of gallbladder cancer in India and Pakistan, according to a study published by Cell Press May 28th in Cell Host & Microbe. The findings establish for the first time the causal link between bacterial infection and gallbladder cancer, explaining why this type of cancer is rare in the West but common in India and Pakistan, where typhoid fever is endemic. Public policy changes inspired by this research could have an immediate impact on preventing a type of cancer that currently ...

A new tool to study an important anti-cancer and immunosuppressive target

2015-05-28
The chemical rapamycin is used clinically as an immunosuppressant and as an anti-cancer agent that works by inactivating a protein named TOR (Target Of Rapamycin). This protein is essential for the growth of normal cells, but is hyperactive in tumor cells. To be able to carry out its various growth-related tasks, TOR needs to assemble into one of two larger protein complexes named TORC1 and TORC2. Curiously, whereas TORC1 is inhibited by rapamycin, TORC2 is unaffected by this drug. The team of Robbie Loewith, professor in biology at the University of Geneva (UNIGE), Switzerland, ...

Bladder cells regurgitate bacteria to prevent UTIs

2015-05-28
DURHAM, N.C. -- Duke Medicine researchers have found that bladder cells have a highly effective way to combat E. coli bacteria that cause urinary tract infections (UTIs). In a study published online May 28, 2015, in the journal Cell, Duke researchers and their colleagues describe how bladder cells can physically eject the UTI-causing bacteria that manage to invade the host cell. This response is analogous to having indigestion and vomiting to rid the stomach of harmful substances. The finding suggests there may be a potential way to capitalize on this natural tendency ...

Out of Africa via Egypt

2015-05-28
New research suggests that European and Asian (Eurasian) peoples originated when early Africans moved north - through the region that is now Egypt - to expand into the rest of the world. The findings, published in the American Journal of Human Genetics, answer a long-standing question as to whether early humans emerged from Africa by a route via Egypt, or via Ethiopia. The extensive public catalogue of the genetic diversity in Ethiopian and Egyptian populations developed for the project also now provides a valuable, freely available, reference panel for future medical ...

How we make emotional decisions

2015-05-28
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- Some decisions arouse far more anxiety than others. Among the most anxiety-provoking are those that involve options with both positive and negative elements, such choosing to take a higher-paying job in a city far from family and friends, versus choosing to stay put with less pay. MIT researchers have now identified a neural circuit that appears to underlie decision-making in this type of situation, which is known as approach-avoidance conflict. The findings could help researchers to discover new ways to treat psychiatric disorders that feature impaired ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

A university lecture, with a dash of jumping jacks

How light can vaporize water without the need for heat

These giant, prehistoric salmon had tusk-like teeth

New study infers our wellbeing by analyzing the language we use around ageing, using language markers to enable "a different type of access to individuals’ inner worlds"

New research confirms plastic production is directly linked to plastic pollution

MSU researchers uncover 'parallel universe' in tomato genetics

Grey cuckoo, red cuckoo: unveiling the genomic secrets of color polymorphism in female cuckoo birds

CHOP researchers discover underlying biology behind Fontan-associated liver disease

A flexible microdisplay can monitor brain activity in real-time during brain surgery

Diversity and productivity go branch-in-branch

Color variants in cuckoos: the advantages of rareness

Laser technology offers breakthrough in detecting illegal ivory

Why can’t robots outrun animals?

After spinal cord injury, neurons wreak havoc on metabolism

Network model unifies recency and central tendency biases

Ludwig Lausanne scientists identify and show how to target a key tumor defense against immune attack

Can climate change accelerate transmission of malaria? Pioneering research sheds light on impacts of temperature

A new attempt to identify salt gland development and salt resistance genes of Limonium bicolor ——Identification of bHLH gene family and its function analysis in salt gland development

The SAPIENS Podcast named finalist at the 16th Annual Shorty Awards

Startup financing gender gaps greater in societies where women are more empowered

Postpartum depression after adolescent stress shows a dysregulated HPA axis: a cross-species translational study

When studies conflict: building a decision-support system for clinicians

Artificial sweetener has potential to damage gut

Gene-based therapy restores cellular development and function in brain cells from people with Timothy syndrome

MD Anderson Research Highlights for April 24, 2024

Child pedestrians, self-driving vehicles: What’s the safest scenario for crossing the road?

Mount Sinai researchers the first to apply single-cell analysis to reveal mechanisms of a common complication of Crohn’s disease

Scientists unveil genetics behind development of gliding

Safety of ancestral monovalent COVID-19 vaccines in children

Reversals in the decline of heart failure mortality in the US

[Press-News.org] Understanding how cells follow electric fields
Electrotaxis could be important in wound healing