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

Research prompts rethink of enzyme evolution

2015-04-29
(Press-News.org) New research by scientists at New Zealand's University of Otago suggests a need for a fundamental rethink of the evolutionary path of enzymes, the proteins vital to all life on Earth.

Enzymes catalyse a vast array of biologically relevant chemical reactions even in the simplest living cells.

Biochemist Dr Wayne Patrick says that people tend to imagine evolution as a slow and steady march from barely functional life forms in the primordial soup, towards a modern-day pinnacle of near perfection.

"When it comes to enzyme evolution, this is also the textbook version of the events occurring at the molecular level; a smooth and steady trajectory, from barely functional primordial catalysts to the highly active and specific enzymes that we observe today. However, upon closer examination, the reality appears quite different."

In an article appearing in the UK Journal of the Royal Society Interface, Dr Patrick, his PhD student Matilda Newton and their collaborator Professor Vic Arcus (Waikato), summarise experimental data that challenges the prevailing thinking.

"We discuss examples in which enzymes have evolved with lightning speed--over years, rather than eons--and provide evidence that many enzymes were better catalysts in the ancient past than they are today."

One example of extraordinarily rapid evolution is the emergence of enzymes that modern-day bacteria use to break down human-made antibiotics and pesticides, he says.

"Studying the complexities of enzyme evolution not only provides fundamental knowledge about how life emerged from the primordial soup, but also gives insights into designing proteins with biomedical and biotechnological applications."

Dr Patrick and colleagues at the Department of Biochemistry's Laboratory for Enzyme Engineering and Evolution are currently pursuing such applications. Their work includes collaborating with leading biotechnology company LanzaTech, which has a microbe that can grow by using harmful gases from industrial plants such as steel mills and oil refineries.

The Otago researchers are engineering enzymes to put into this microbe so it can produce useful raw materials that would otherwise have to be made from petroleum.

"This is a great example of the ways in which really fundamental research--carried out with a grant from the Marsden Fund of New Zealand--can translate into applied outcomes in unexpected ways," Dr Patrick says.

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Two-thirds of bowel cancer patients aren't advised to exercise despite health benefits

2015-04-29
MORE than two-thirds (69 per cent) of bowel cancer patients say they weren't advised to exercise regularly after their diagnosis - despite evidence that brisk physical activity is linked to better survival in bowel cancer, according to a Cancer Research UK study published today (Wednesday) in BMJ Open. The research, from the Cancer Research UK Health Behaviour Research Centre at UCL (University College London), is the largest study of its kind. More than 15,000 bowel cancer patients* were asked about their current level of physical activity and whether they were advised ...

UK coalition government derailed efforts to reduce salt in food

2015-04-29
The coalition government derailed a successful programme that reduced salt content added to foods by industry, argue experts in The BMJ this week. A poor diet is the leading cause of death and disability in the UK and worldwide. Large amounts of salt, for example, are added to food by industry and eating too much can raise blood pressure, a major factor associated with strokes, heart failure and heart attacks. The UK's Food Standards Agency (FSA), established in 2000, became a "world leader" in improving nutrition and pioneered a salt reduction programme by working ...

Make calorie labels compulsory on all alcoholic drinks, says public health expert

2015-04-29
Calorie counts should be mandatory on all alcoholic drinks as a matter of urgency, argues a leading public health doctor in The BMJ this week. Fiona Sim, Chair of the Royal Society for Public Health, says alcoholic drinks contribute to obesity and the law "should require restaurant menus and labels to make energy content explicit in addition to alcohol content." She explains that, since 2011, packaged foods in the European Union have been subject to regulation requiring labelling with their ingredients and nutritional information, including energy content (calories). ...

Cocaine changes the brain and makes relapse more common in addicts

Cocaine changes the brain and makes relapse more common in addicts
2015-04-29
Cocaine use causes 'profound changes' in the brain that lead to an increased risk of relapse due to stress - according to new research from the University of East Anglia. New research published today in The Journal of Neuroscience identifies a molecular mechanism in the reward centre of the brain that influences how recovering cocaine addicts might relapse after stressful events. Importantly, the study identifies a potential mechanism for protecting against such relapses with treatment. The research team looked at the effects of cocaine in rat brain cells (in vitro) ...

History of breastfeeding associated with reduced risk of breast cancer recurrence

2015-04-28
Women diagnosed with breast cancer who previously breastfed their babies had a 30 percent overall decreased risk of the disease recurring, according to a new Kaiser Permanente study published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. In addition, researchers found that the protective effect of breastfeeding was more pronounced for tumors of particular genetic subtypes, including the most commonly diagnosed of all breast cancers. The study involved 1,636 women with breast cancer who completed a questionnaire that included breastfeeding history. Additional medical ...

New studies examine the significant risk of blood clots in post-surgical lung cancer patients

2015-04-28
One life-threatening complication of lung cancer surgery is the formation of blood clots in the lungs (also called pulmonary embolism - PE) or in the legs (also known as deep vein thrombosis - DVT). Together, they would be defined as venous thromboembolic events (VTE). Several presentations at AATS 2015 shed new light on this serious problem. In the first prospective study of its kind, the incidence of VTE was found to be higher than previously reported, with a 5.4% VTE-specific mortality rate. Of concern to clinicians, most events were asymptomatic and occurred after patients ...

Children with ADHD at risk for binge eating, study shows

2015-04-28
Children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD, are significantly more likely to have an eating disorder -- a loss of control eating syndrome (LOC-ES) -- akin to binge eating, a condition more generally diagnosed only in adults, according to results of a new Johns Hopkins Children's Center study. The findings, reported ahead of print April 9 in the International Journal of Eating Disorders, suggest a common biological mechanism linking the two disorders, and the potential for developing treatment that works for both. Though many children with ADHD may ...

Genital-only screening misses many cases of gonorrhea and chlamydia in women

2015-04-28
Current public health guidelines recommend that only gay men and people with HIV should be routinely screened for extragenital gonorrhea and chlamydia, given the high burden of these sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in this at-risk population. However, a new Johns Hopkins Medicine study that looked at over 10,000 people who attended an STI clinic in Baltimore has found that the occurrence of gonorrhea or chlamydia in extragenital areas like the throat or rectum is also significant in women, particularly younger women. The findings will be published in the May issue ...

Electron chirp: Cyclotron radiation from single electrons measured directly for first time

2015-04-28
RICHLAND, Wash. -- A year before Albert Einstein came up with the special theory of relativity, or E=mc2, physicists predicted the existence of something else: cyclotron radiation. Scientists predicted this radiation to be given off by electrons whirling around in a circle while trapped in a magnetic field. Over the last century, scientists have observed this radiation from large ensembles of electrons but never from individual ones. Until now. A group of almost 30 scientists and engineers from six research institutions reported the direct detection of cyclotron radiation ...

Researchers find evidence of groundwater in Antarctica's Dry Valleys

2015-04-28
BATON ROUGE -- Using a novel, helicopter-borne sensor to penetrate below the surface of large swathes of terrain, a team of researchers supported by the National Science Foundation, or NSF, has gathered compelling evidence that beneath the Antarctica ice-free McMurdo Dry Valleys lies a salty aquifer that may support previously unknown microbial ecosystems and retain evidence of ancient climate change. The team, which includes LSU hydrogeologist Peter Doran and researchers from the University of Tennessee; University of California-Santa Cruz; Dartmouth College; University ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

How London’s Ultra Low Emission Zone is changing the school run

Breakthrough CRISPR-based test offers faster, more accurate diagnosis for fungal pneumonia

3D-printed knee implants improves quality and reliability

UC San Diego innovators to spotlight transformative science at SXSW 2025

Burning question: How to save an old-growth forest in Tahoe

SwRI, U-Michigan engineers create more effective burner to reduce methane emissions

Dental implants still functional after forty years

A hot droplet can bounce across a cool pan, too

Synthetic microbiome therapy suppresses bacterial infection without antibiotics

New mouse study: How to trick the body's metabolism

Rates of population-level child sexual abuse after a community-wide preventive intervention

Rural-urban disparities in cervical cancer incidence and mortality among US women

Tele-buprenorphine initiations for opioid use disorder without in-person relationships

Researchers reveal key mechanism behind bacterial cancer therapy

Who carries and uses Naloxone in the U.S.?

Complete breakdown of Plexiglas into its building blocks

New study suggests a shift in diabetes testing after pregnancy to improve women's health

FOME alliance pioneers VR innovation in management education

Evidence expanding that 40Hz gamma stimulation promotes brain health

Teaching kids how to become better citizens

Pusan National University researchers develop a novel 3D adipose tissue bioprinting method

Scientists use AI to better understand nanoparticles

We feed gut microbes sugar, they make a compound we need

One of the largest psychotherapy trials in the world has implications for transforming mental health care during pregnancy and after birth

It’s not just what you say – it’s also how you say it

Sleep patterns may reveal comatose patients with hidden consciousness

3D genome structure guides sperm development

Certain genetic alterations may contribute to the primary resistance of colorectal and pancreatic cancers to KRAS G12C inhibitors

Melting Antarctic ice sheets will slow Earth’s strongest ocean current

Hallucinogen use linked to 2.6-fold increase in risk of death for people needing emergency care

[Press-News.org] Research prompts rethink of enzyme evolution