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

2-way traffic enable proteins to get where needed, avoid disease

2013-11-25
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Toni Baker
tbaker@gru.edu
706-721-4421
Medical College of Georgia at Georgia Regents University
2-way traffic enable proteins to get where needed, avoid disease

Augusta, Ga. - It turns out that your messenger RNA may catch more than one ride to get where it's going.

Scientists have found that mRNA may travel one way down a cell, then board another, aptly named motor protein, and head in the opposite direction to get where it ultimately needs to be.

It's a pretty important journey, because mRNA determines which proteins a cell expresses, differentiating a brain cell from, say, a muscle cell, said Dr. Graydon B. Gonsalvez, cell biologist at the Medical College of Georgia at Georgia Regents University.

"It used to be thought there was a relatively simple scenario where if a cargo needs to go here, it gets on one track and it goes that way," said Gonsalvez, corresponding author of the study in the journal PLOS ONE.

But like a motorist on a backed-up interstate, scientists at MCG and the University of Cambridge, have found that mRNA needs the flexibility to maneuver around potentially numerous obstacles in its path to ultimately arrive at the right spot.

"The ability to reverse their tracks is important to their ability to eventually get where they need to go," Gonsalvez said. And location is really everything, because the proteins need to be expressed in a specific location to function correctly.

While too much misdirection is incompatible with life, a little is OK and maybe even normal. But at levels in between, the health consequences can include Alzheimer's, cancer, multiple sclerosis, and Fragile X syndrome, which can produce mild to severe intellectual deficits as well as physical characteristics such as flat feet and an elongated face. "Most human diseases come from not a loss of a process, but a compromise to the process," Gonsalvez said.

The scientists suspected the bidirectional ability because they could see the two motor proteins that would head in opposite directions parked side-by-side in the cell. When they removed the then-idle motor that could go in the opposite direction, delivery, or localization, of the cargo mRNA already en-route was compromised.

"What we have seen is that there are many things that can reverse that track," Gonsalvez said. "If they can only go in one direction, they can bump into something, like a stray organelle, and get stuck."

Motor proteins have long been known to haul mRNA up and down the cell's cytoskeleton, which essentially functions as an internal roadway for the cell. Gonsalvez recently received a $1.4 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to fill in other important knowledge gaps about the journey, like how the motor proteins know which mRNA to transport, because not all mRNA needs to be localized.

He likens the routing system to a ZIP code and thinks proteins are again key, but in this case, they are bound to the mRNA, flagging it for travel. "Something is telling the cell that this message is different," he said.

In the case of Fragile X syndrome, for example, he suspects that one or more proteins that should be bound to mRNA are missing so the cell can't tell the messenger it needs to be moved.

Another question Gonsalvez wants to answer is how mRNA holds on for the ride since the motor protein won't bind with it directly.

"These are not easy questions but the thought is once we understand the answers, we will understand why, when you have a defect in this process, you have a disease pathology," Gonsalvez said.

He notes that transportation of mRNA occurs lifelong, since proteins have a limited life and are constantly being replaced.

His research model is the comparatively simple fruit fly in which the technology is available to selectively knock out motor proteins in specific cells. His published research was funded by the American Cancer Society and the NIH.



INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

University Of Massachusetts Medical School scientists re-imagine how genomes are assembled

2013-11-25
University Of Massachusetts Medical School scientists re-imagine how genomes are assembled Using DNA interaction frequency data, UMMS faculty develop quicker, more accurate method for assembling complex genome sequences WORCESTER, MA ...

Drug interactions causing a significant impact on statin use

2013-11-25
Drug interactions causing a significant impact on statin use CORVALLIS, Ore. – A new study has found that many people who stopped taking cholesterol-lowering statin drugs were also taking an average of three other drugs that interfered with the normal metabolism of the statins. The ...

NASA sees Tropical Cyclone Alessia make landfall near Darwin

2013-11-25
NASA sees Tropical Cyclone Alessia make landfall near Darwin Tropical Cyclone made landfall near Darwin, Australia on November 24 as a weak tropical storm as NASA's TRMM satellite passed overhead and measured its rainfall. The final warning on the tropical storm ...

Turning autism upside down: When symptoms are strengths

2013-11-25
Turning autism upside down: When symptoms are strengths Alternative treatment focuses on controlling the 'fight or flight' response A novel approach to treating children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder could help them navigate their world by teaching ...

Rain as acidic as lemon juice may have contributed to ancient mass extinction

2013-11-25
Rain as acidic as lemon juice may have contributed to ancient mass extinction MIT researchers find that rain as acidic as lemon juice may have contributed to massive die-offs on land 252 million years ago Rain as acidic as undiluted lemon juice may have ...

Broken cellular 'clock' linked to brain damage

2013-11-25
Broken cellular 'clock' linked to brain damage A new discovery may help explain the surprisingly strong connections between sleep problems and neurodegenerative conditions such as Alzheimer's disease. Sleep loss increases the risk of Alzheimer's ...

Research: Materialism makes bad events even worse

2013-11-25
Research: Materialism makes bad events even worse CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — In addition to its already well-documented negative direct effects on a person's well-being, materialism also wields an indirect negative effect by making bad events even ...

UCI, Northwestern researchers create compounds that boost antibiotics' effectiveness

2013-11-25
UCI, Northwestern researchers create compounds that boost antibiotics' effectiveness Inhibitors could form basis of new treatments for such diseases as MRSA, anthrax Irvine, Calif., Nov. 25, 2013 — Inhibitor compounds developed by UC Irvine structural ...

NASA catches Tropical Cyclone Lehar over the Andaman Islands

2013-11-25
NASA catches Tropical Cyclone Lehar over the Andaman Islands The Andaman Islands received an unwelcome visitor on November 25 in the form of Tropical Cyclone Lehar. NASA's Terra satellite captured a picture of the visitor as it was making its exit from the islands ...

First large-scale PheWAS study using EMRs provides systematic method to discover new disease association

2013-11-25
First large-scale PheWAS study using EMRs provides systematic method to discover new disease association VIDEO: Vanderbilt University Medical ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Want to improve early detection of diabetes? Look in the same households as those with abnormal blood sugar

Unveiling the gut-heart connection: The role of microbiota in heart failure

Breakthrough insights into tumor angiogenesis and endothelial cell origins

Unlocking the power of mitochondrial biogenesis to combat acute kidney injury

MIT study sheds light on graphite’s lifespan in nuclear reactors

The role of fucosylation in digestive diseases and cancer

Meet Allie, the AI-powered chess bot trained on data from 91 million games

Students’ image tool offers sharper signs, earlier detection in the lab or from space

UBC Okanagan study suggests fasting effects on the body are not the same for everyone

Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and Children’s Hospital Colorado researchers conduct first prospective study of pediatric EoE patients and disease progression

Harnessing VR to prevent substance use relapse

The 8,000-year history recorded in Great Salt Lake sediments

To craft early tools, ancient human relatives transported stones over long distances 600,000 years earlier than previously thought

Human embryo implantation recorded in real time for the first time

70 years of data show adaptation reducing Europe’s flood losses

Recapitulating egg and sperm development in the dish

Study reveals benefits of traditional Himalayan crops

Scientist uncover hidden immune “hubs” that drive joint damage in rheumatoid arthritis

Congress of Neurological Surgeons releases first guidelines on the care of patients with functioning pituitary adenomas

New discovery could lower heart attack and stroke risk for people with type 2 diabetes

Tumor electrophysiology in precision tumor therapy

AI revolution in medicine: how large language models are transforming drug development

Hidden contamination in DNA extraction kits threatens accuracy of global zoonotic surveillance

Slicing and dictionaries: a new approach to medical big data

60 percent of the world’s land area is in a precarious state

Thousands of kids in mental health crisis are stuck for days in hospital emergency rooms, study finds

Prices and affordability of essential medicines in 72 low-, middle-, and high-income markets

Space mice babies

FastUKB: A revolutionary tool for simplifying UK Biobank data analysis

Mount Sinai returns as official hospital and medical services provider of the US Open Tennis Championships

[Press-News.org] 2-way traffic enable proteins to get where needed, avoid disease