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

Unraveling a protein that may inspire a new biotechnology tool

Scientists determine activation process of important protein

2023-07-26
(Press-News.org) COLUMBUS, Ohio – Scientists have unraveled the step-by-step activation process of a protein with a deep evolutionary history in all domains of life, opening the door to harnessing its functions for use as a biotechnology tool.

The protein belongs to the “superfamily” of Argonaute proteins, which previous research has suggested to be involved in gene silencing, a fundamental process known as RNA interference.

These proteins are well-characterized in eukaryotes – the plants, fungi, animals, humans and other life forms with cells that have a defined nucleus. In prokaryotes that have no nucleus, there are two types of Argonaute proteins, long Argonautes and short Argonautes. The long Argonautes resemble their relatives in eukaryotes both structurally and functionally. In contrast, short Argonautes adopt different structures and perform different functions from other well-studied Argonautes.

This is the first study to detail structures and mechanisms of a short Argonaute, potentially sketching the beginnings of a blueprint for application to future therapeutic purposes.

“The short version of these prokaryotic proteins constitute 58% of all Argonautes, and are now emerging as a hot spot in the field,” said senior author Tianmin Fu, assistant professor of biological chemistry and pharmacology in The Ohio State University College of Medicine. “Among the capabilities we’ve identified is this protein’s precise role in the way bacteria trigger their own death to avoid losing power over their lifecycle through plasmid invasion. Understanding these types of mechanisms is the first step toward efforts to adapt highly effective natural functions for diagnostics and therapies.”

The study is published today (July 26, 2023) in Nature.

In this work, the research team focused on a protein called SPARTA, a short prokaryotic Argonaute (also referred to as Ago), specifically building upon other studies that showed this protein enables Maribacter polysiphoniae bacteria to program their death when they detect a plasmid invasion – when external DNA segments are trying to insert themselves to change bacterial properties.

Ago proteins in eukaryotes are known to remain as simple molecules throughout activation, with the ability to bind only to other simple molecules. They also are established as participants in RNA interference, an evolutionary strategy to inhibit the expression of specific genes that may represent a threat to cell survival.

SPARTA, on the other hand, lacks certain structures that are needed to facilitate RNA interference. And though it starts out as a simple molecule like long prokaryotic and eukaryotic Agos, the activation similarities end there.

Using cryogenic electron microscopy, researchers identified SPARTA’s next steps: After it binds to RNA or DNA, it goes through numerous changes, eventually assembling into a larger multi-unit molecular complex.

Functional analysis of the complex revealed that the protein’s structural changes had to reach this point before it could produce the chemical reaction that allows threatened bacteria to program their own cell death – an enticing function scientists would like to manipulate to protect human health.

The researchers also introduced mutations to confirm that each step of the process was essential to maintaining SPARTA’s functionality.

All of this points to the fact that oligomerization – the methodical conversion of simple molecules into molecular complexes – is an essential part of activating short prokaryotic Argonaute proteins. While oligomerization of proteins is not rare, understanding its role in a protein’s activation is key to understanding how a protein interacts with other proteins and to determining its functional purpose.

“When we talk about one protein that is expressed everywhere, in all organisms, we know this protein is inherently important, even if we don’t yet know all of its specific functions,” said first author Zhangfei Shen, a postdoctoral scholar in Fu’s lab. “Now that we know not just that it is oligomerized, but how it is oligomerized, and captured the intermediate states it is in during oligomerization, we’ve made good progress toward developing this protein as a tool.”

The possibilities envisioned by Fu’s lab include engineering short prokaryotic Agos that could help cells detect threats, or that could trigger molecules that threaten healthy cells to bring on their own death.

This work was supported by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences.

Additional co-authors include Xiao-Yuan Yang and Kotaro Nakanishi of Ohio State, Shiyu Xia of the California Institute of Technology, and Wei Huang and Derek Taylor of Case Western Reserve University.

#

Contact: Tianmin Fu, Fu.978@osu.edu

Written by Emily Caldwell, Caldwell.151@osu.edu

 

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study: Insect protein slows weight gain, boosts health status in obese mice

Study: Insect protein slows weight gain, boosts health status in obese mice
2023-07-26
URBANA, Ill. — As the global population grows under a changing climate, the urgency to find sustainable protein sources is greater than ever. Plant-based “meat” and “dairy” products may be popular, but they’re not the only environmentally friendly meat alternatives.  A new study in mice from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign suggests replacing traditional protein sources with mealworms in high-fat diets could slow weight gain, improve immune response, reduce inflammation, enhance energy metabolism, and ...

Recent advances in research to identify sources of nano- and microplastics

2023-07-26
Exposure to microplastics and nanoplastics — particles smaller than 5 millimeters and 1 micrometer across, respectively — have been linked to adverse health outcomes. Although some of their sources are well known, others haven’t been thoroughly vetted yet. Below are recent papers published in ACS journals that report new insights into the origins of some microscopic plastic pieces: laser-cut acrylic sheets, orthodontic rubber bands and children’s food containers. Reporters can request free access to these papers by emailing newsroom@acs.org. “Characterization ...

Mount Sinai researchers uncover how mammary glands control overall energy balance and fat metabolism

2023-07-26
An Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai study sheds light on the intricate interplay between mammary adipose (fat) tissue and breast health, and offers exciting possibilities for understanding breast development, lactation, cancer, and obesity and related metabolic disorders. The study was published today in Nature. The research team was led by Prashant Rajbhandari, PhD, Assistant Professor of Medicine (Endocrinology, Diabetes and Bone Disease), and a member of the Diabetes, Obesity, and Metabolism Institute at Icahn Mount Sinai. The ...

Study in journal Nature Communications finds high blood glucose levels sensitizes pancreatic cancer cells to chemotherapy

2023-07-26
CLEVELAND - Pancreatic cancer is one of the most difficult cancers to treat, being highly resistant to chemotherapy. However, there are no effective alternative therapies to chemotherapy, so chemo remains the best available treatment. Although there are fewer than roughly 60,000 new cases of pancreatic cancer diagnosed annually in the U.S., about 95 percent of people with it die from it, mainly because it often goes undetected in early stages. Approved multi-agent chemotherapy regimens offer a marginal advance over single-agent ...

Global wildlife trade risks altering evolutionary history and ecosystem function, study suggests

2023-07-26
Some of the world’s most distinct and ancient animal species, which play crucial roles in our planet’s ecosystems, are exploited for the wildlife trade across large parts of the world, according to new research from the University of Sheffield.   The study, led by researchers from the University’s School of Biosciences, has found that in large areas of the world, a wide range of functionally and evolutionarily distinct species are targeted for the wildlife trade, which has the potential to cause major losses of evolutionary history and alter key ecological processes.   Published in Nature, the ...

For people with diabetes, healthy eating is not enough if their diet is rich in ultra-processed foods

2023-07-26
The very first rule for people diagnosed with type 2 diabetes is to eat a healthy nutritious diet. Attention to ingested calories, as well as nutrients contained in various foods, become integral parts of a diabetic person's life. However, this might not be enough: an important role in determining the future health status of people with this condition could be played by the degree of processing of foods that end up on the dish. These products are described as "ultra-processed" and are associated with adverse health outcomes, as reported in general population studies. A study conducted by the Department of Epidemiology and Prevention at the I.R.C.C.S. Neuromed in Pozzilli, ...

Keck Hospital of USC receives highest rating on national quality report

Keck Hospital of USC receives highest rating on national quality report
2023-07-26
LOS ANGELES, CA — Keck Hospital of USC earned five stars, the highest rating possible, on the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) 2023 quality star rating report. Only approximately 16% of hospitals across the country, 483 out of 3,076, received five stars out of a one-to-five-star rating system. “This prestigious designation demonstrates our continuing commitment to patient safety and to best patient outcomes, and is the result of the hard work of every physician, nurse and staff member at the hospital,” said Stephanie Hall, MD, MHA, chief medical officer ...

Earlier and earlier high-Arctic spring replaced by “extreme year-to-year variation”

Earlier and earlier high-Arctic spring replaced by “extreme year-to-year variation”
2023-07-26
About 15 years ago, researchers reported that the timing of spring in high-Arctic Greenland had advanced at some of the fastest rates of change ever seen anywhere in the world. But, according to new evidence reported in the journal Current Biology on July 26, that earlier pattern has since been completely erased. Instead of coming earlier and earlier, it seems the timing of Arctic spring is now driven by tremendous climate variability with drastic differences from one year to the next. “As scientists we are obliged to revisit previous ...

Mapping mass shootings in the United States

2023-07-26
The United States has more than 10 times the number of mass shooting incidents than other developed countries, yet little research has shown the distribution and types of shootings, geographically. “I’m constantly asked, ‘What is public health doing about the rise in mass shootings?” says Leslie Barnard, MPH, a student working with the University of Colorado School of Medicine’s Firearm Injury Prevention Initiative. Barnard, a doctoral candidate in the Department of Epidemiology in the Colorado School of Public Health at the CU Anschutz Medical Campus, wanted to find answers to address public ...

Eight out of ten child deaths in low-income countries could be prevented

2023-07-26
Eighty-two percent of child deaths in low-income countries could be prevented, according to a study from the international CHAMPS network published in JAMA Network Open. The study, which used the minimally invasive autopsy technique developed by the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal), found an infectious agent in 87% of cases and identified malnutrition as the most common underlying cause of death. Ninety-nine percent of deaths in children under five years of age occur in low- and middle-income countries. "If we want to prevent these deaths, we need to know the causes, but the problem is that we lack reliable data," says Quique Bassat, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New breakthrough helps free up space for robots to ‘think’, say scientists

Environmental law reform needed to protect endangered marine species

UC Irvine-led team engineers new enzyme to produce synthetic genetic material

New study unveils unique combination of DNA techniques to authenticate ginseng supplements and combat adulteration

Argonne receives funding for artificial intelligence in scientific research

Significant worldwide disparities in availability and timeliness of new cancer drugs

4+ hour emergency care wait linked to heightened risks of death and longer hospital stay for hip fracture patients

Policy change may be helping to drive rise in treatment-resistant vaginal thrush

Heat stress may still affect babies once born, first evidence suggests

Stressed bees lack the buzz in life

UC Irvine researchers discover atomic-level mechanism in polycrystalline materials

USC’s Rong Lu and Caltech’s Michael B. Elowitz win the NIH Director’s Transformative Research Award for their new approach to study blood and immune cell production in bone marrow

Microwave-induced synthesis of bioactive nitrogen heterocycles

Research to use machine learning to ’reverse-engineer’ new composite materials

New research calls for transparency in Medicare Advantage operations

Applied Biological Laboratories, maker of Biovanta, to present at American Society of Microbiology’s Clinical Virology Symposium 2024

How academia drives sustainability: Discover the impact of science on the SDGs

NOAA awards grant to enhance decision-ready climate projections for diverse stakeholders

Why using a brand nickname in marketing is not a good idea

Asymmetric placebo effect in response to spicy food

Echoes in the brain: Why today’s workout could fuel next week’s bright idea

Salk Institute’s Nicola Allen receives 2024 NIH Director’s Pioneer Award

The secret strength of our cell guards

DataSeer and AAAS partner to boost reporting standards

Mizzou researchers awarded $8 million in grants to discover new bullying prevention strategies

Holographic 3D printing has the potential to revolutionize multiple industries, say Concordia researchers

Cerebral blood flow and arterial transit in older adults

How diabetes risk genes make cells less resilient to stress

Aerobic physical activity and depression among patients with cancer

Incidence of hospitalizations involving alcohol withdrawal syndrome

[Press-News.org] Unraveling a protein that may inspire a new biotechnology tool
Scientists determine activation process of important protein