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

LEC: A multi-purpose tool

Stowers investigators' study reveals key piece of RNA-splicing machinery

2013-08-08
(Press-News.org) KANSAS CITY, MO—A little-studied factor known as the Little Elongation Complex (LEC) plays a critical and previously unknown role in the transcription of small nuclear RNAs (snRNA), according to a new study led by scientists at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research and published in the Aug. 22, 2013, issue of the journal Molecular Cell.

"We have found that LEC not only has a role in this process—it is like the "Swiss Army knife" of snRNA transcription," says Stowers Investigator Ali Shilatifard, senior author of the study. "LEC does it all." The findings shed new light on the mystery of snRNA transcription, which is vitally important to gene expression and regulation but has been poorly understood until now.

"As biologists we are very much interested in defining the molecular machineries involved in life, and snRNA are very important in life," Shilatifard says. "DNA is a suitcase with all this information in it, and you need specific machinery to identify the right information to perform the exact process that's needed. Now we understand another piece of that machinery."

Understanding LEC and the machinery of snRNA transcription may also have implications for the treatment of disease. It could, for example, open the door to novel approaches for treating diseases that are associated with defective snRNA function and splicing, such as spinal muscular atrophy and Prader-Willi syndrome, or attacking cancer cells, whose proteins may also undergo splicing. But first, more mysteries must be solved, Shilatifard says.

Shilatifard and his colleagues have spent decades studying the factors that facilitate transcription, the process by which information encoded in DNA is converted into various forms of RNA, including messenger RNA, which carries protein-making instructions, and snRNAs, which partner with proteins to form small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs). In particular, they have focused their work on a family of factors called ELL (for "Eleven-nineteen lysine-rich leukemia gene"), which speed up the rate at which genes are expressed to help the transcription process along. In a recent study in fruit flies, Edwin Smith, Ph.D., a research scientist in Shilatifard's lab, identified the Little Elongation Complex as a complex that contains ELL. But the researchers were unable to pinpoint the exact molecular properties of LEC and its subunits.

So Smith teamed up with fellow Stowers researcher Deqing Hu, Ph.D., who led the current study, as well as Shilatifard and a number of other collaborators at Stowers, the Saint Louis University School of Medicine in Missouri, and the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City to follow LEC's footsteps in hopes of solving the mystery.

First using fruit fly (Drosophila) cells, the team sequenced the entire genome to track where LEC went, and were able to show it sought out places in the genome that encode snRNAs. SnRNAs are small RNA molecules that are involved in splicing, a molecular process that edits RNAs to ensure the right sequences of genetic information make it into the final RNA "products" of transcription.

Then the team began to tweak the LEC, removing certain components of the complex to see if they could determine each component's function. They found that, without one of the LEC components, the LEC fell apart and the snRNA transcription machinery didn't work.

"It's like a car factory—if you remove the person who makes the steering wheels, the car comes out without a steering wheel," Shilatifard explains. "And then we knew which subunit of LEC was doing this job, and that it's required from the beginning to the end of transcription."

The team confirmed that LEC occupies the same central –and unusual—"Swiss Army knife" role in human cells and is required for initiation and elongation phases of snRNA transcription. "It's very unique to have one factor do it all," Shilatifard says.

"There could be many practical applications, but we need to learn much more about LEC first," he adds. "How does it get there, how does it do its job—those are all questions for future studies."



INFORMATION:



Researchers who also contributed to the study include Alexander S. Garruss, Nima Mohaghegh, Joseph M. Varberg, Chengqi Lin, Xin Gao, Anita Saraf and Laurence Florens of the Stowers Institute for Medical Research; Michael P. Washburn of Stowers and the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at the University of Kansas Medical Center; and Jessica Jackson and Joel C. Eissenberg of the Edward A. Doisy Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at the Saint Louis University School of Medicine.

The work was funded in part by the Stowers Institute for Medical Research and the National Cancer Institute.

About the Stowers Institute for Medical Research

The Stowers Institute for Medical Research is a non-profit, basic biomedical research organization dedicated to improving human health by studying the fundamental processes of life. Jim Stowers, founder of American Century Investments, and his wife Virginia opened the Institute in 2000. Since then, the Institute has spent over 800 million dollars in pursuit of its mission.

Currently the Institute is home to over 500 researchers and support personnel; over 20 independent research programs; and more than a dozen technology development and core facilities. Learn more about the Institute at http://www.stowers.org.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Sanford-Burnham scientists identify key protein that modulates organismal aging

2013-08-08
LA JOLLA, Calif., August 8, 2013 — Scientists at Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute have identified a key factor that regulates the autophagy process, a kind of cleansing mechanism for cells in which waste material and cellular debris is gobbled up to protect cells from damage, and in turn, modulates aging. The findings, published in Nature Communications today, could lead to the development of new therapies for age-related disorders that are characterized by a breakdown in this process. Malene Hansen, Ph.D., associate professor in Sanford-Burnham's Del E. Webb ...

Latino genomes point way to hidden DNA

2013-08-08
Hidden in the tangled, repetitious folds of DNA structures called centromeres, researchers from Harvard Medical School and the Broad Institute have discovered the hiding place of 20 million base pairs of genetic sequence, finding a home for 10 percent of the DNA that is thought to be missing from the standard reference map of the human genome. Mathematician Giulio Genovese, a computational biologist in genetics at HMS and at the Broad Institute, working in the lab of geneticist Steven McCarroll, HMS assistant professor of genetics and director of genetics for the Stanley ...

Scientists watch live brain cell circuits spark and fire

2013-08-08
Scientists used fruit flies to show for the first time that a new class of genetically engineered proteins can be used to watch nerve cell electrical activity in live brains. The results, published in Cell, suggest these proteins may be a promising new tool for mapping brain cell activity in multiple animals and for studying how neurological disorders disrupt normal nerve cell signaling. Understanding brain cell activity is a high priority of the President's Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) Initiative. Brain cells use electricity ...

A powerful strategy for developing microbial cell factories by employing synthetic small RNAs

2013-08-08
The current systems for the production of chemicals, fuels and materials heavily rely on the use of fossil resources. Due to the increasing concerns on climate change and other environmental problems, however, there has been much interest in developing biorefineries for the production of such chemicals, fuels and materials from renewable resources. For the biorefineries to be competitive with the traditional fossil resource-based refineries, development of high performance microorganisms is the most important as it will affect the overall economics of the process most significantly. ...

Scientists devise innovative method to profile and predict the behavior of proteins

2013-08-08
SAN FRANCISCO, CA and COLLEGE STATION, TX—August 8, 2013—An enzyme is a tiny, well-oiled machine. A class of proteins that are made up of multiple, interlocking molecular components, enzymes perform a variety of tasks inside each cell. However, precisely how these components work together to complete these tasks has long eluded scientists. But now, a team of researchers has found a way to map an enzyme's underlying molecular machinery, revealing patterns that could allow them to predict how an enzyme behaves—and what happens when this process disrupted. In the latest ...

Kids born small should get moving

2013-08-08
HOUSTON – (Aug. 8, 2013) – Female mice who were growth restricted in the womb were born at a lower birth weight, but were less active and prone to obesity as adults, said researchers from Baylor College of Medicine and the USDA/ARS Children's Nutrition Research Center (CNRC) at BCM and Texas Children's Hospital in a report that appears online in the International Journal of Obesity. "Given that human studies also show female-specific obesity following early growth restriction," said Dr. Robert Waterland, associate professor of pediatrics – nutrition at BCM, and a member ...

Scientific breakthrough reveals how vitamin B12 is made

2013-08-08
Vitamin B12 is pieced together as an elaborate molecular jigsaw involving around 30 individual components. It is unique amongst the vitamins in that it is only made by certain bacteria. In the early 1990's it was realised that there were two pathways to allow its construction – one that requires oxygen and one that occurs in the absence of oxygen. It is this so-called anaerobic pathway, which is the more common pathway, that proved so elusive as the components of the pathway are very unstable and rapidly degrade. However, as explained in a paper published by PNAS (Proceedings ...

New forensic technique for analyzing lipstick traces

2013-08-08
Using a technique called Raman spectroscopy, which detects laser light, forensic investigators will be able to analyse lipstick marks left at a crime scene, such as on glasses, a tissue, or cigarette butts, without compromising the continuity of evidence as the sample will remain isolated. Analysis of lipstick traces from crime scenes can be used to establish physical contact between two individuals, such as a victim and a suspect, or to place an individual at a crime scene. The new technique is particularly significant for forensic science as current analysis of lipstick ...

Cesareans weaken gut microbiota and increase risk of allergies

2013-08-08
Children who came into the world by Caesarean section are more often affected by allergies than those born in the natural way. The reason for this may be that they have a less diverse gut microbiota, according to a study by universities in Sweden and Scotland. The researchers have followed gut macrobiota development in 24 children up to the age of two in the Swedish provinces of Östergötland and Småland, nine delivered through Caesarean and 15 delivered naturally, through vaginal birth. They used a type of molecular biology analysis, which gives a broad overview of the ...

Chemists' work will aid drug design to target cancer and inflammatory disease

2013-08-08
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- Chemists at Indiana University Bloomington have produced detailed descriptions of the structure and molecular properties of human folate receptor proteins, a key development for designing new drugs that can target cancer and inflammatory diseases without serious side effects. The researchers, from the lab of Charles Dann III, assistant professor of chemistry in the College of Arts and Sciences, published their findings in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Dann said the results should help chemists create more effective antifolate ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New Durham University study reveals mystery of decaying exoplanet orbits

The threat of polio paralysis may have disappeared, but enterovirus paralysis is just as dangerous and surveillance and testing systems are desperately needed

Study shows ChatGPT failed when challenging ESCMID guideline for treating brain abscesses

Study finds resistance to critically important antibiotics in uncooked meat sold for human and animal consumption

Global cervical cancer vaccine roll-out shows it to be very effective in reducing cervical cancer and other HPV-related disease, but huge variations between countries in coverage

Negativity about vaccines surged on Twitter after COVID-19 jabs become available

Global measles cases almost double in a year

Lower dose of mpox vaccine is safe and generates six-week antibody response equivalent to standard regimen

Personalised “cocktails” of antibiotics, probiotics and prebiotics hold great promise in treating a common form of irritable bowel syndrome, pilot study finds

Experts developing immune-enhancing therapies to target tuberculosis

Making transfusion-transmitted malaria in Europe a thing of the past

Experts developing way to harness Nobel Prize winning CRISPR technology to deal with antimicrobial resistance (AMR)

CRISPR is promising to tackle antimicrobial resistance, but remember bacteria can fight back

Ancient Maya blessed their ballcourts

Curran named Fellow of SAE, ASME

Computer scientists unveil novel attacks on cybersecurity

Florida International University graduate student selected for inaugural IDEA2 public policy fellowship

Gene linked to epilepsy, autism decoded in new study

OHSU study finds big jump in addiction treatment at community health clinics

Location, location, location

Getting dynamic information from static snapshots

Food insecurity is significant among inhabitants of the region affected by the Belo Monte dam in Brazil

The Society of Thoracic Surgeons launches new valve surgery risk calculators

Component of keto diet plus immunotherapy may reduce prostate cancer

New circuit boards can be repeatedly recycled

Blood test finds knee osteoarthritis up to eight years before it appears on x-rays

April research news from the Ecological Society of America

Antimicrobial resistance crisis: “Antibiotics are not magic bullets”

Florida dolphin found with highly pathogenic avian flu: Report

Barcodes expand range of high-resolution sensor

[Press-News.org] LEC: A multi-purpose tool
Stowers investigators' study reveals key piece of RNA-splicing machinery