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

Researchers identify "rescue" mechanism that helps cells survive malfunctioning split

Researchers identify
2021-02-04
(Press-News.org) Cells replicate their genetic material and divide into two identical clones, perpetuating life -- until they don't. Some cells pause -- or are intentionally made to pause -- in the process. When the cell resumes division after such a pause, a displaced nucleus -- an essential part of cell survival -- can become caught in the fissure, splitting violently and killing both cells. But that is not always the case; some mutant cells can recover by pushing their nucleus to safety. Researchers from Hiroshima University in Japan are starting to understand how in the first step toward potential cell death rescue applications.

The results were published on Jan. 22 in iScience, a Cell Press journal.

The researchers examined fission yeast, a common model organism used for studying the molecular mechanisms underpinning the cell cycle. These rod-shaped cells provide an ideal view of each phase of mitosis, the process by which the cell duplicates and divides. In this process, the genetic-containing nucleus migrates to the center of the cell, dissolves its protective envelope, replicates and reassembles as two on each side of the cell. The center of the cell then pinches apart.

"Proper nuclear positioning is essential for the execution of a wide range of cellular processes in eukaryotic cells, which contain a nucleus bound in a membrane," said first author Masashi Yukawa, assistant professor in the Hiroshima Research Center for Healthy Aging and the Graduate School of Integrated Sciences for Life, Hiroshima University. "Yet how the nucleus is retained in the center of the cell during mitosis remains elusive."

Researchers can use drugs to pause this process and study it further or to help halt unhealthy cell division in various diseases. The nucleus, not yet divided, remains in the center of the cell.

"We found several fission yeast mutants that arrest in mitosis all displace the nucleus towards one end of the cell," Yukawa said. "Our questions are how and why these mutant cells translocate their nucleus from the cell center during mitosis."

They found that microfilaments made of a protein called actin appear to play a role. These cable-like filaments act as arms, pushing the nucleus to the center of the cell.

"During prolonged mitotic arrest, the forces of the actin cables become unbalanced, pushing the nucleus to one side," Yukawa said.

The researchers also found that the mitosis-induced ring that constricts the original cell into two helps push an off-balanced nucleus further to one side. When the cell splits, the nucleus remains intact.

"Eukaryotic cells may have a novel mitotic surveillance mechanism that involves an actin-mediated nuclear movement to escape from disastrous mitotic catastrophe," Yukawa said. "We will continue to elucidate the mechanism by which cells keep the correct position of their nucleus during mitosis.

INFORMATION:

Yasuhiro Teratani and Takashi Toda, both with the Laboratory of Molecular and Chemical Cell Biology in the Graduate School of Integrated Sciences for Life at Hiroshima University, also authored this work. Toda is also affiliated with the Hiroshima Research Center for Healthy Aging at Hiroshima University.

The Japan Society for the Promotion of Science supported this work.

About Hiroshima University Since its foundation in 1949, Hiroshima University has striven to become one of the most prominent and comprehensive universities in Japan for the promotion and development of scholarship and education. Consisting of 12 schools for undergraduate level and 4 graduate schools, ranging from natural sciences to humanities and social sciences, the university has grown into one of the most distinguished comprehensive research universities in Japan.
English website: https://www.hiroshima-u.ac.jp/en


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Researchers identify

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Cancer leading cause of death among people with diabetes

2021-02-04
This is the finding of an 18-year-study of over 300,000 people with diabetes in England, from scientists from Imperial College London and published in the journal The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology. Thursday Feb 4th is World Cancer Day. The research, funded by the Wellcome Trust, reveals that between 2001-2018 heart disease and stroke were no longer the leading causes of death among people with diabetes, as they were 18 years ago. Diabetes affects 4.7 million people in the UK, and is caused by the body being unable to regulate blood sugar levels. Around 90 per cent have type ...

Nickel phosphide nanoparticle catalyst is the full package

Nickel phosphide nanoparticle catalyst is the full package
2021-02-04
Osaka - Many different catalysts that promote the conversion of glucose to sorbitol have been studied; however, most offer certain properties while requiring compromises on others. Now, researchers from Osaka University have reported a hydrotalcite-supported nickel phosphide nanoparticle catalyst (nano-Ni2P/HT) that ticks all the boxes. Their findings are published in Green Chemistry. Sorbitol is a versatile molecule that is widely used in the food, cosmetics, and pharmaceuticals industries. There is therefore a pressing need to produce sorbitol in a sustainable, low-cost, and green manner. The nickel catalysts that are commonly used in the industrial hydrogenation of glucose to sorbitol are unstable in air and require hash reaction conditions. Rare metal alternatives--despite being ...

Battling bugs help solve mysteries of weapon evolution

2021-02-04
Remember the first rule of fight club? That's right: You don't talk about fight club. Luckily, the rules of Hollywood don't apply to science. In new published research, University of Arizona researchers report what they learned when they started their own "fight club" - an exclusive version where only insects qualify as members, with a mission to shed light on the evolution of weapons in the animal kingdom. In many animal species, fighting is a common occurrence. Individuals may fight over food, shelter or territory, but especially common are fights between males over access to females for mating. Many of the most striking and unusual features of animals are associated with these mating-related fights, including the horns of beetles and the antlers of deer. What is less clear ...

New biomarker may predict which pancreatic cancer patients respond to CD40 immunotherapy

2021-02-04
PHILADELPHA--Inflammation in the blood could serve as a new biomarker to help identify patients with advanced pancreatic cancer who won't respond to the immune-stimulating drugs known as CD40 agonists, suggests a new study from researchers in the Abramson Cancer Center of the University of Pennsylvania published in JCI Insight It is known that pancreatic cancer can cause systemic inflammation, which is readily detectable in the blood. The team found that patients with systemic inflammation had worse overall survival rates than patients without inflammation when treated with both a CD40 agonist and the chemotherapy gemcitabine. The ...

Dual treatments help PTSD and depression

2021-02-04
This study is the first randomised control trial to rigorously test a sequential approach to treating comorbid PTSD and major depressive disorder. Findings from a trial of 52 patients undergoing three types of treatment regime - using only Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT), using Behavioural Activation Therapy (BA) with some CPT, or CPT with some BA - found that a combined treatment protocol resulted in meaningful reductions in PTSD and depression severity, with improvements maintained at six-month follow-up investigations. "We sought to examine whether a protocol that specifically targeted both PTSD and comorbid ...

Toshiba's new algorithms quickly deliver highly accurate solutions to complex problems

Toshibas new algorithms quickly deliver highly accurate solutions to complex problems
2021-02-04
TOKYO --Toshiba Corporation (TOKYO: 6502) and Toshiba Digital Solutions Corporation (collectively Toshiba), industry leaders in solutions for large-scale optimization problems, today announced the Ballistic Simulated Bifurcation Algorithm (bSB) and the Discrete Simulated Bifurcation Algorithm (dSB), new algorithms that far surpass the performance of Toshiba's previous Simulated Bifurcation Algorithm (SB). The new algorithms will be applied to finding solutions to highly complex problems in areas as diverse as portfolio management, drug development and logistics management. ...

Help for borderline personality disorder

2021-02-04
Borderline Personality Disorder, or BPD, is the most common personality disorder in Australia, affecting up to 5% of the population at some stage, and Flinders University researchers warn more needs to be done to meet this high consumer needs. A new study in the Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing (Wiley) describes how people with BPD are becoming more knowledgeable about the disorder and available treatments, but may find it difficult to find evidence-based help for their symptoms. The South Australian psychiatric researchers warn these services are constrained by stigma ...

Solving chronic pain during intercourse

2021-02-04
Researchers at Flinders University are working to remedy this situation by identifying what triggers this chronic pain in the female reproductive tract. Dr Joel Castro Kraftchenko - Head of Endometriosis Research for the Visceral Pain Group (VIPER), with the College of Medicine and Public Health at Flinders University - is leading research into the pain attached to Dyspareunia, also known as vaginal hyperalgesia or painful intercourse, which is one of the most debilitating symptoms experienced by women with endometriosis and vulvodynia. Pain is detected by specialised proteins (called ion channels) that are present in sensory nerves and project from peripheral organs to the central ...

A new tool in the search for axions

2021-02-04
Researchers from the international BASE collaboration at CERN, Switzerland, which is led by the RIKEN Fundamental Symmetries Laboratory, have discovered a new avenue to search for axions--a hypothetical particle that is one of the candidates of dark matter particles. The group, which usually performs ultra-high precision measurements of the fundamental properties of trapped antimatter, has for the first time used the ultra-sensitive superconducting single antiproton detection system of their advanced Penning trap experiment as a sensitive dark matter antenna. If our current understanding of cosmology is correct, ordinary "visible" matter only ...

Pregnant questions

2021-02-04
When health researchers ask pregnant women about their alcohol use, expectant women may underreport their drinking, hampering efforts to minimize alcohol use in pregnancy and prevent development of fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD) in children. In a recently published study in Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research, University of New Mexico scientists found that pregnant women's reporting of their own risky drinking varies greatly depending on how key questions are worded. Most women know that alcohol use during pregnancy may harm their unborn child - and that leads to fear of being ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Plants feed through one-way routes

3D-printed kidney tumors show potential for more targeted treatment

Cats with dementia share hallmarks of humans with Alzheimer’s

AI could soon detect early voice box cancer from the sound of your voice

New survey reveals top reasons why kids avoid going to school

Playtime a mostly mutual activity between dolphins and whales

Brain cells learn faster than machine learning, new research reveals

Mixed-dimensional nanowires/nanosheet heterojunction of GaSb/Bi2O2Se for self-powered near-infrared photodetection and photocommunication

Universities that eliminated admission test requirements saw gains in student body diversity

Head-to-head against AI, pharmacy students won

Only some emotions help posts go viral

Predicting risk in children with heart defects

Test performance improves when children can exercise briefly beforehand, UNCG researchers find

Meet IDEA: An AI assistant to help geoscientists explore Earth and beyond

Ready for market: New process boosts clean, cost-efficient chemical production

Losing weight before IVF may increase chance of pregnancy

New study uncovers how genetics and lifestyle drive the heart disease dilated cardiomyopathy

City of Hope study shows childhood cancer survivors face new health problems later in life

An innovative system that dehydrates fruit without heat

The Optica Foundation names Cara Green Executive Director of Development

Is the 'love hormone,' oxytocin, also the 'friendship hormone'?

Global Virus Network reaffirms support for mRNA vaccines and collaborative vaccine research

Unpacking chaos to protect your morning coffee

Planets without water could still produce certain liquids, a new study finds

Researchers identify key biomarkers for chronic fatigue syndrome

Surprisingly diverse innovations led to dramatically cheaper solar panels

Lab-made sugar-coated particle blocks Covid-19 infection — Possible new treatment on the horizon

Rice’s dean of engineering and computing building new software infrastructure for evolutionary biology

Researchers discover all-new antifungal drug candidate in McMaster’s greenhouse

New quality control for ‘wonder material’ graphene oxide is cheapest and fastest yet

[Press-News.org] Researchers identify "rescue" mechanism that helps cells survive malfunctioning split