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

Proteomics provides new leads into nerve regeneration

C-myc protein, previously unrecognized, spurs extensive nerve growth

2015-05-05
(Press-News.org) Using proteomics techniques to study injured optic nerves, researchers at Boston Children's Hospital have identified previously unrecognized proteins and pathways involved in nerve regeneration. Adding back one of these proteins--the oncogene c-myc--they achieved unprecedented optic nerve regeneration in mice when combined with two other known strategies. The findings were published online April 30 by the journal Neuron.

Researchers have been trying for many decades to get injured nerves in the brain and spinal cord to regenerate. Various molecules have been targeted and found to yield nerve growth, but many studies have been hard to replicate. Even with most effective manipulations, the "holy grail" of regenerating a nerve enough for it to resume its function has been largely elusive.

"The majority of axons still cannot regenerate," says Zhigang He, PhD, co-senior investigator on the paper and a member of the F.M. Kirby Neurobiology Center at Boston Children's Hospital. "This suggests we need to find additional molecules, additional mechanisms. The proteomics approach fills the gap very well."

Studying mice with optic nerve injury--a classic, easy-to-study type of central nervous system injury--He and co-senior investigator Judith Steen, PhD, also of the Kirby Center, applied quantitative mass spectrometry to identify and quantify proteins produced by the injured retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), which run from the retina to the brain. Their team, including fellows, Stephane Belin, PhD, and Homaira Nawabi, PhD, used bioinformatics analyses to compare the protein measurements with those in intact RGCs and looked for patterns indicating proteins that act together in concert.

"This approach gave us a nice 30,000-foot view of what pathways are changed in the system as a whole in response to injury," says Steen. "It showed us the main pathways we should perturb to get regeneration."

The pathways matched many that were previously identified, but also included some new players, such as c-myc, TGF-b, NFkb, and Huntingtin, that could lead to a much better understanding of how to recover nerves' regenerative ability. "You may have to invoke several pathways simultaneously," says Steen. "You can't say there's one magic bullet."

When the researchers induced mice to make more c-myc, optic nerve regeneration was promoted, even when some time had elapsed after the injury. When they combined this approach with deletion of two other molecules known to inhibit regeneration (PTEN and SOCS3), they saw a synergistic effect. The RGCs' survival was dramatically improved and their axons grew to the optic chiasm (the part of the brain where the optic nerves cross) and beyond--an unprecedented degree of regeneration. (See image)

The researchers caution that there is risk in stimulating c-myc (a tumor promoter) and deleting PTEN (a tumor suppressor), as both strategies could also promote cancer--the likely reason that these pathways are shut down once our nervous system has developed. However, there may be ways to mimic these pathways, or ways of stimulating them in a targeted, temporary fashion, the researchers suggest.

Steen and He note that microarray analyses, looking at what genes are transcribed (turned on) in injured nerves, have also been useful in identifying possible nerve regeneration strategies. The problem, Steen says, is that even when the genes are transcribed, the cell may not actually build the proteins they encode. "By measuring proteins, you get a more direct, downstream readout of the system," she says.

Steen and He are now testing other proteins they identified through their analysis and are finding some regenerative promise. They are also using proteomics to look for new pathways to target in other neurologic disorders such as Alzheimer's disease, frontotemporal dementia, spinal muscular atrophy and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, as well as sensory nerve injury.

INFORMATION:

Belin and Nawabi were co-first authors on the study. The study was supported by the William Randolph Hearst Foundation, NIH grants EY021242 and NS066973, and the Dr. Miriam and Sheldon G. Adelson Medical Research Foundation.

About Boston Children's Hospital Boston Children's Hospital is home to the world's largest research enterprise based at a pediatric medical center, where its discoveries have benefited both children and adults since1869. More than 1,100 scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Sciences, 14 members of the Institute of Medicine and 14 members of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute comprise Boston Children's research community. Founded as a 20-bed hospital for children, Boston Children's today is a 395-bed comprehensive center for pediatric and adolescent health care. Boston Children's is also the primary pediatric teaching affiliate of Harvard Medical School. For more information about research and clinical innovation at Boston Children's Hospital, visit: http://vectorblog.org.

Join the social discussion and tweet us @BostonChildrens @BCH_Innovation.

Follow Boston Children's on Facebook: http://on.bchil.org/1mJ9fxf.

Follow Boston Children's on YouTube: http://on.bchil.org/1oJib5B.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Shedding light on rods

2015-05-05
"Imagine a tiny spotlight like those used in theatres but with a light ray measuring only a few nanometres, which shines light on a given spot but leaves everything else in the dark," explains Monica Mazzolini, SISSA research scientist, "That's how the optic fibres we used in our experiment work". Mazzolini, first author of a paper just published in PNAS, literally shut herself in a "darkroom" lit with infrared light only to stimulate rods, the light-sensitive cells of the retina (for night vision), with these extremely focused light beams in vitro. In their study, Mazzolini ...

Women hospitalized 60 percent more than men after emergency asthma treatment

2015-05-05
ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, Ill. (May 5, 2015) - While it may be a stereotype, it's also true that women seek medical care more frequently than men do. And a recent study shows that women with acute asthma who are treated in the emergency department (ED) are 60 percent more likely than men treated in the ED to need hospitalization. The study, published in the Annals of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology, the scientific publication of the American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (ACAAI), looked at the sex differences in patient characteristics, and risk of hospitalizations ...

Bystander CPR helps cardiac arrest survivors return to work

2015-05-04
DALLAS, May 4, 2015 -- More bystanders performing CPR contributed to more cardiac arrest survivors returning to work in a Danish study published in the American Heart Association journal Circulation. In the largest study to date to examine return to work after cardiac arrest, researchers studied 4,354 patients in Denmark who were employed before they suffered out-of-hospital cardiac arrests between 2001 to 2011. Researchers found: More than 75 percent of survivors who had a cardiac arrest outside a hospital were capable of returning to work. Chances of returning ...

An unexpected role for calcium in controlling inflammation during chronic lung infection

2015-05-04
Many of us take a healthy immune system for granted. But for certain infants with rare, inherited mutations of certain genes, severe infection and death are stark consequences of their impaired immune responses. Now, researchers at NYU Langone Medical Center have identified an important role for calcium signaling in immune responses to chronic infection resulting from Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the bacterium causing tuberculosis (TB). Specifically, they determined that the immune systems in genetically altered mice lacking the critically important calcium channel ...

Primary care visits available to most uninsured, but at a high price

2015-05-04
Uninsured people don't have any more difficulty getting appointments with primary care doctors than those with insurance, but they get them at prices that are likely unaffordable to a typical uninsured person, according to new Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health-led research. And payment options are not very flexible, with only one in five people told they could be seen without paying the whole cost up front, suggests the new study published in the May issue of the journal Health Affairs. "There's a discouragement factor for uninsured people when it comes ...

New screening technique could pick up twice as many women with ovarian cancer

2015-05-04
A new screening method can detect twice as many women with ovarian cancer as conventional strategies, according to the latest results from the largest trial of its kind led by UCL. The method uses a statistical calculation to interpret changing levels in women's blood of a protein called CA125, which is linked to ovarian cancer. This gives a more accurate prediction of a woman's individual risk of developing cancer, compared to the conventional screening method which uses a fixed 'cut-off' point for CA125. The new method detected cancer in 86% of women with invasive epithelial ...

Racial differences in male breast cancer outcomes

2015-05-04
ATLANTA -- May 4, 2015 -- While black and white men under age 65 diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer received similar treatment, blacks had a 76% higher risk of death than whites, according to a new study. The study, published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, found that the disparity was significantly reduced after accounting for differences in insurance and income. Male breast cancer is a rare disease, accounting for less than 1% of all cancers in men and approximately 2% of all breast cancers in the United States. Black men have a higher incidence of breast ...

How oxidizing a heart 'brake' causes heart damage

2015-05-04
Oxidative stress has been long known to fuel disease, but how exactly it damages various organs has been challenging to sort out. Now scientists from Johns Hopkins say research in mice reveals why oxidation comes to be so corrosive to heart muscle. A report on the results, published online May 4 in The Journal of Clinical Investigation, shows that oxidation inside the cardiac cells precipitates heart failure by disrupting the work of a heart-shielding protein called PKG, known to act as a natural "brake" against biological stressors like chronically elevated blood pressure, ...

Are scare tactics off the table for public health campaigns targeting HIV?

2015-05-04
Over the last ten years, public health campaigns in New York City around smoking, obesity, and HIV underwent a dramatic shift to use fear and disgust to spur behavior change, sometimes with the unintended consequence of stigmatizing affected populations. In a new article published in the May issue of the journal Health Affairs, scholars at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health explore the implications of this shift to fear-based campaigns in the present public health environment. Beginning in 2005, the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene ...

Green tea extract and exercise hinder progress of Alzheimer's disease in mice

2015-05-04
COLUMBIA, Mo. -- According to the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Alzheimer's disease (AD) may affect as many as 5.5 million Americans. Scientists currently are seeking treatments and therapies found in common foods that will help stave off the disease or prevent it completely. Now, University of Missouri researchers have determined that a compound found in green tea, and voluntary exercise, slows the progression of the disease in mice and may reverse its effects. Further study of the commonly found extract could lead to advancements in the treatment and prevention ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

$14 million supports work to diversify human genome research

New study uncovers key mechanism behind learning and memory

Seeing the unseen: New method reveals ’hyperaccessible’ window in freshly replicated DNA

Extreme climate pushed thousands of lakes in West Greenland ‘across a tipping point,’ study finds

Illuminating an asymmetric gap in a topological antiferromagnet

Global public health collaboration benefits Americans, SHEA urges continued support of the World Health Organization

Astronomers thought they understood fast radio bursts. A recent one calls that into question.

AAAS announces addition of Journal of EMDR Practice and Research to Science Partner Journal program

Study of deadly dog cancer reveals new clues for improved treatment

Skin-penetrating nematodes have a love-hate relationship with carbon dioxide

Fewer than 1% of U.S. clinical drug trials enroll pregnant participants, study finds

A global majority trusts scientists, wants them to have greater role in policymaking, study finds

Transforming China’s food system: Healthy diets lead the way

Time to boost cancer vaccine work, declare UK researchers

Colorado State receives $326M from DOE/EPA to improve oil and gas operations and reduce methane emissions

Research assesses how infertility treatments can affect family and work relationships

New findings shed light on cell health: Key insights into the recycling process inside cells

Human papillomavirus infection kinetics revealed in new longitudinal study

Antibiotics modulate E. coli’s resistance to phages

Building sentence structure may be language-specific

Biotin may shield brain from manganese-induced damage, study finds

Treatment for children with obesity has lasting effect

Spotted hyena found in Egypt for the first time in 5,000 years

SignGPT – Project awarded £8.45m to build a sign language AI model for the Deaf community 

Garden ponds: Hidden gems of urban biodiversity conservation

Epigenetic aging and DNA-methylation as tumor markers for breast cancer

Salt deposit ring inside your pasta pan?

First fast radio burst traced to old, dead, elliptical galaxy

We can make fertilizer more efficiently under the surface of the Earth

What's behind preterm birth? Scientists just found a big clue

[Press-News.org] Proteomics provides new leads into nerve regeneration
C-myc protein, previously unrecognized, spurs extensive nerve growth