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

Findings could shed light on cancer, aging

Research on yeast leads to evidence in key process of chromosome length

2015-09-14
(Press-News.org) Researchers at the Johns Hopkins University have found molecular evidence of how a biochemical process controls the lengths of protective chromosome tips, a potentially significant step in ultimately understanding cancer growth and aging.

In a paper recently published as the cover story in the online journal eLife, biologist David C. Zappulla and graduate student Evan P. Hass show how in baker's yeast cells, two proteins work together to usher a key enzyme to the chromosome tip, the telomere, to restore its length, which diminishes with each round of cell division.

That enzyme, telomerase, is not found in significant amounts in adult human tissue, but in most cancers, it's abundant and allows unlimited cell growth. The work on the model yeast cells -- which, like humans, have linear chromosomes -- aims to find out how telomerase works in hopes of ultimately learning how to disrupt it and possibly kill cancer cells, said Zappulla, an assistant professor in the Department of Biology in the university's Krieger School of Arts and Sciences.

While inhibiting telomerase from maintaining telomeres in cancer cells could curb disease, there is a downside to shortened telomere length in normal cells: It is associated with the progression of aging in humans and many other animals. As telomerase-recruiting proteins could potentially be inhibited to curb the growth of cancer, they could possibly be encouraged to slow aging. That, however, could run the "risk of triggering cancer, as cancer and aging have almost a yin-yang relationship," Zappulla said.

Zappulla said the finding affirms previous reports, and provides new insights about the functions of two key proteins, Ku and Sir4. Earlier studies showed that Ku binds to Sir4, but Zappulla and Hass provide genetic evidence showing that the binding action is significant for telomerase to lengthen telomeres.

Zappulla said the workings of the new telomerase-regulating protein network could be understood more deeply by studying its effects on a single telomere in real time. He said his lab is currently developing an experimental system in the highly manipulatable yeast organism as the next phase of this molecular biology research.

Zappulla said his laboratory works on baker's yeast because it gives researchers a lot of control over variables and because its cells divide very quickly. He acknowledges that there is always the question of how biologically relevant findings in yeast will be to humans.

Future studies will include investigating if a similar mechanism operates in human cells, which could potentially yield a basis for new drugs to treat cancer.

Telomerase was discovered in 1984 by Carol Greider, now the Daniel Nathans Professor and director of molecular biology and genetics at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. In 2009, Greider shared the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine with Elizabeth Blackburn and Jack W. Szostak for their finding that telomeres are protected from shortening by telomerase.

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Size matters -- the more DNA the better

2015-09-14
A new study from researchers at Uppsala University shows that variation in genome size may be much more important than previously believed. It is clear that, at least sometimes, a large genome is a good genome. 'Our study shows that females with larger genome lay more eggs and males with larger genome fertilize more eggs', says research leader Göran Arnqvist, Professor of Animal Ecology at Uppsala University. The study of seed beetles is published in the scientific journal Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. The amount of nuclear DNA per cell, or the ...

AHA's 'Life's Simple 7' and diabetes care program reduce risk of heart failure

2015-09-14
Philadelphia, PA, September 14, 2015 - One in four middle-aged adults who survive to age 85 will develop heart failure, according to current estimates. Intervention programs to improve lifestyles are widely advocated, but do they actually work? Investigators in the U.S. and Taiwan independently examined programs that may reduce cardiovascular risk and concluded that both programs will reduce lifetime risk of heart failure. Results are reported in The American Journal of Medicine. A group of American investigators estimated whether greater adherence to the American Heart ...

Three new studies converge on promising new target for addiction treatment

2015-09-14
Philadelphia, PA, September 14, 2015 - The latest issue of Biological Psychiatry presents the results of three studies implicating metabotropic glutamate receptor 2 (mGluR2) as a new molecular target for the treatment of addiction. Group II metabotropic glutamate receptors, which include the subtypes mGluR2 and mGluR3, have been known targets for addiction treatment. Unfortunately, mGluR2/3 agonists studied to date have shown important limitations, including development of tolerance and decreasing food intake along with drug intake. Thus, scientists have been working ...

Optogenetics: Light switch generates cellular second messenger

2015-09-14
This news release is available in German. FRANKFURT. Optogenetics is a quickly expanding field of research which has revolutionized neurobiological and cellbiological research around the world. It uses natural or tailored light-sensitive proteins in order to switch nerve cells on and off without electrodes with unprecedented accuracy in respect to time and location. The discovery of the light-gated ion channel channelrhodopsin in algae in 2002 was a key finding for this field. In 2005, Frankfurt scientists working with Prof. Alexander Gottschalk succeeded in transferring ...

You're not irrational, you're just quantum probabilistic

2015-09-14
COLUMBUS, Ohio--The next time someone accuses you of making an irrational decision, just explain that you're obeying the laws of quantum physics. A new trend taking shape in psychological science not only uses quantum physics to explain humans' (sometimes) paradoxical thinking, but may also help researchers resolve certain contradictions among the results of previous psychological studies. According to Zheng Joyce Wang and others who try to model our decision-making processes mathematically, the equations and axioms that most closely match human behavior may be ones ...

World's turtles face plastic deluge danger

Worlds turtles face plastic deluge danger
2015-09-14
An international study led by a University of Queensland researcher has revealed more than half the world's sea turtles have ingested plastic or other human rubbish. The study, led by Dr Qamar Schuyler from UQ's School of Biological Sciences, found the east coasts of Australia and North America, Southeast Asia, southern Africa, and Hawaii were particularly dangerous for turtles due to a combination of debris loads and high species diversity. "The results indicate that approximately 52 per cent of turtles world-wide have eaten debris," Dr Schuyler said. The study ...

Elite tennis players feel the heat at Australian Open as summers intensify

2015-09-14
Melbourne summer temperatures have been steadily climbing over the past 25 years, but even more so during the two weeks of the Australian Open in late January, new data analysis reveals. The average afternoon temperature in January has risen by 0.8 degrees Celsius per decade since 1987. But in the two weeks of the Australian Open - usually held in mid-late January - temperatures have increased by 1.25 degrees per decade. Ben Hague, a third-year Atmosphere and Ocean Sciences student at the University of Melbourne, said extreme summer temperatures have also become more ...

Does social capital explain community-level differences in organ donor designation?

2015-09-14
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, Mass. (Sept. 14, 2015)--A new study finds that the characteristics of one's community may be as important as individual factors on the decision to become an organ donor. The study, published in The Milbank Quarterly, shows an association between sociodemographic/social capital measures and organ donor registrations across 4,466 Massachusetts neighborhoods. In order to increase organ donation registrations, the research suggests that future health policies adopt a community-level focus. The shortage of organs for transplantation has reached unprecedented ...

World has lost 3 percent of its forests since 1990

2015-09-14
The globe's forests have shrunk by three per cent since 1990 - an area equivalent to the size of South Africa - despite significant improvements in conservation over the past decade. The UN's Global Forest Resources Assessment (GFRA) 2015 was released this week, revealing that while the pace of forest loss has slowed, the damage over the past 25 years has been considerable. Total forest area has declined by three per cent between 1990 and 2015 from 4,128 million hectares to 3,999 million hectares - a loss of 129 million hectares. Significantly, loss of natural forested ...

Alzheimer's-disease-related proteases control axonal guidance by regulating growth cone dynamics

2015-09-14
Alzheimer's-disease-related proteases, BACE1 and APH1B-y-secretase, control axonal guidance by regulating growth cone dynamics BACE1 is the major drug target for Alzheimer's disease, but we know surprisingly little about its normal function in the CNS. Soraia Barão and Bart De Strooper (VIB/KU Leuven) now show that this protease is critically involved in axonal guidance processes in thalamic and hippocampal neurons. An active membrane bound proteolytic CHL1 fragment is generated by BACE1 upon Sema3A binding. This fragment relays the Sema3A signal to the neuronal ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Microplastics, algal blooms, seafood safety are public health concerns addressed by new Oceans and Human Health Centers

Alba Yerro-Colom to use National Science Foundation CAREER award to better predict and prevent landslides

Researchers discover urine-based test to detect head and neck cancer

Moffitt treats first clinical trial patient with gamma delta CAR T for bone metastatic prostate cancer

Wiley's latest natural products database release empowers drug discovery and research

Reproductive success improves after a single generation in the wild for descendants of some hatchery-origin Chinook salmon

New treatment method using plasma irradiation promotes faster bone healing

CNIC scientists identify therapeutic targets for the prevention of heart injury linked to cancer treatment

Older males out-compete young males when it comes to extra-marital breeding

Using machine learning to identify patients with cancer that would benefit from immunotherapy

NASA’s Fermi mission sees no gamma rays from nearby supernova

Neutrons rule the roost for cage-free lithium ions

Common HIV treatments may aid Alzheimer’s disease patients

Turner to receive funding for Israel Institute Postdoctoral Fellowship

How AI improves physician and nurse collaboration

Diverse native wildflower plantings for pollinators in farmlands

Study suggests adolescent stress may raise risk of postpartum depression in adults

New book gathers insights, methods from rising generation of Indigenous archaeologists

Scientists identify cell vulnerability ‘fingerprint’ related to Parkinson’s, Lewy body dementia

Cooler transformers could help electric grid

Oregon State researchers advance pigment chemistry with moon-inspired reddish magentas

Conformity to masculine gender norms is linked to muscle dysmorphia among young people

EuBiologics’ simplified OCV achieves WHO PQ

GPT-4 matches radiologists in detecting errors in radiology reports

SwRI to discuss automotive decarbonization, automation at SAE International’s WCX™ 2024

From a cryptic genetic element in the human gut to a sensitive biomarker

Researchers can help shipowners achieve ambitious climate targets

Florida Wildlife Corridor eases worst impacts of climate change

Creating an island paradise in a fusion reactor

Field-margin wetlands alone can’t fix the Gulf of Mexico’s dead zone

[Press-News.org] Findings could shed light on cancer, aging
Research on yeast leads to evidence in key process of chromosome length