(Press-News.org) A team of Canadian and American scientists has made a promising breakthrough in understanding the origins of a mysterious neurological disorder known as mirror movements.
The discovery was made by Kaiyue Zhang, a doctoral student at the Montreal Clinical Research Institute (IRCM), affiliated with Université de Montréal, and by Karina Chaudhari, a doctoral student at the University of Pennsylvania.
As co-first authors, they published their study today in the journal Science Signaling.
They were led by Frédéric Charron, an UdeM research professor and director of the IRCM’s molecular biology of neuronal development research unit, in collaboration with Greg Bashaw's team at the University of Pennsylvania.
Mirror movement disorder is a poorly understood hereditary neurological disorder that manifests itself in involuntary movements from an early age, mainly in the arms and hands.
In those affected, the right hand involuntarily reproduces the movements of the left and vice versa. The disorder can cause pain in the arms during prolonged activities, and difficulties in performing tasks requiring left-right coordination.
“Mirror movement disorder disrupts the daily lives of affected individuals,” said Charron, who’s also an adjunct professor at McGill University. “Simple actions such as opening a bottle of water can become difficult, as can playing a musical instrument.”
A defect in a phenomenon
The cellular mechanism behind mirror movements is a defect in a phenomenon known as axon guidance.
During embryonic development, neurons extend their axons, a long cellular cable that enables them to link specific areas of the body together, thus establishing nerve connections.
The set of processes that control axon elongation and guide its navigation is called axon guidance. Among other things, axon guidance connects each neuron to its specific target. It is therefore crucial to the proper development of the nervous system.
Various guidance molecules direct axons to their targets, acting like signposts to guide axons to their destination. To do this, these guidance molecules must induce axon movement when they are detected by axons.
This movement requires a complex molecular machinery that is still poorly understood.
In the new study, the researchers showed that the machinery required for guidance is in fact the cytoskeleton, a microscopic skeleton which gives a cell a certain rigidity, rather like the bones of the body which, through their rigidity, enable movement.
Understanding the mechanisms causing mirror movement is key to finding ways to treat it. The work of the Charron laboratory promises new targets in that regard, as well as for other diseases resulting from defects in the development of the nervous system.
END
Looking deeper into the mirror
2024-10-01
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Friends of BrainHealth donor circle awards coveted grants to fuel innovative research
2024-10-01
The 2024 Ramona Jones Friends of BrainHealth Luncheon on September 30, 2024 continued the 25th anniversary celebration of Center for BrainHealth – part of The University of Texas at Dallas – and the second year this annual event has been sponsored by founding Advisory Board member Ramona Jones and her family.
Staged “Shark Tank”-style” at the Dallas Country Club, the event featured a competition between emerging scientists pitching novel research proposals and vying for $20,000 in seed funding. Event co-chair Nikki Kapioltas opened the event, calling attention to a milestone ...
Study of infertility, health among women of Mexican heritage funded by $2.2M NIH grant
2024-10-01
Researchers at the University of Arizona Health Sciences and the Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública in Mexico are using a $2.2 million National Institutes of Health grant to explore the link between infertility and long-term health issues among Hispanic women of Mexican heritage.
According to recent research, female infertility is often associated with greater risks of cancer, cardiovascular disease and premature mortality. Hispanic women are up to 70% more likely to experience infertility than white women, yet little is known about their long-term health.
“Hispanics are the largest minority group in the United States, and 60% of Hispanics have Mexican heritage. ...
Airborne plastic chemical levels shock researchers
2024-10-01
A new study documents how Southern Californians are chronically being exposed to toxic airborne chemicals called plasticizers, including one that’s been banned from children’s items and beauty products.
Plasticizers are chemical compounds that make materials more flexible. They are used in a wide variety of products ranging from lunchboxes and shower curtains to garden hoses and upholstery.
“It’s not just for drinking straws and grocery bags,” said David Volz, environmental sciences professor at UC Riverside, ...
DOD awards $9M for snowpack and meltwater research and Arctic training program in Alaska and New England
2024-10-01
The Department of Defense (DOD) has awarded a $9 million contract to the University of Maine for research that will significantly expand efforts to quantify snowpack properties, explore the impact of snowmelt on the surrounding terrestrial environments of Alaska and Maine, and expand training opportunities in polar science.
The project is led by School of Earth and Climate Sciences and Climate Change Institute faculty member Seth Campbell, who will collaborate with more than a dozen other scientists from UMaine and other institutions. The effort builds on a related and existing ...
SETI Institute awards education grant through the STRIDE program
2024-10-01
SETI Institute Awards Education Grant through the STRIDE Program
October 1, 2024, Mountain View, CA – The SETI Institute awarded its first education grant through its Support Technology, Research, Innovation, Development and Education (STRIDE) program. The grant supports a new project called Encountering Stars in an Inflatable Planetarium, which will offer immersive astronomy and astrobiology experiences for elementary and middle school students in low-income areas and high school and adult audiences interested in STEM-related experiences. The program also includes a training workshop for K-12 teachers ...
NYU Historian Jennifer L. Morgan wins 2024 MacArthur “Genius Grant”
2024-10-01
New York University historian Jennifer L. Morgan, whose work focuses on the institutionalization of race-based slavery in early America and the Black Atlantic, has been named a 2024 MacArthur Fellow by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.
MacArthur Fellows are recipients of the foundation’s “genius grants,” who each receive $800,000 over a five-year period to pursue intellectual, social, and artistic endeavors.
“The 2024 MacArthur Fellows pursue rigorous inquiry with aspiration and purpose,” says MacArthur Fellows Director ...
Research in 4 continents links outdoor air pollution to differences in children’s brains
2024-10-01
Outdoor air pollution from power plants, fires and cars continues to degrade human, animal and environmental health around the globe. New research shows that even pollution levels that are below government air-quality standards are associated with differences in children’s brains.
A University of California, Davis, research team systematically analyzed 40 empirical studies, the majority of which had found that outdoor air pollution is associated with differences in children’s brains. These differences include volumes of white matter, which is associated with ...
UTA physicists explore possibility of life beyond Earth
2024-10-01
Are there planets beyond Earth where humans can live? The answer is maybe, according to a new study from University of Texas at Arlington physicists examining F-type star systems.
Stars fall into seven lettered categories according to their surface temperature. They also differ in other factors including mass, luminosity, and radius. F-types are in the middle of the scale, hotter and more massive than our sun. F-type stars are yellowish white in color and have surface temperatures of more than 10,000 degrees.
A habitable zone (HZ) is the distance from a star at which water could exist on orbiting planets’ surfaces. In the research led by doctoral student Shaan Patel ...
Seeing double: Designing drugs that target “twin” cancer proteins
2024-10-01
LA JOLLA, CA—Some proteins in the human body are easy to block with a drug; they have an obvious spot in their structure where a drug can fit, like a key in a lock. But other proteins are more difficult to target, with no clear drug-binding sites.
To design a drug that blocks a cancer-related protein, Scripps Research scientists took a hint from the protein’s paralog, or “twin.” Using innovative chemical biology methods, the scientists pinpointed a druggable site on the paralog, and then used that knowledge to characterize drugs that bound to a similar—but more difficult to detect—spot on its twin. Ultimately, they found drugs ...
Fierce names Insilico Medicine as one of its Fierce 50 Honorees of 2024
2024-10-01
Cambridge, MA, Sept. 26, 2024 –Insilico Medicine, a clinical-stage generative AI-driven drug discovery company, announced today that Fierce Life Sciences and Fierce Healthcare have named Insilico Medicine as one of 2024’s Fierce 50 honorees. The Fierce 50 showcases 50 individuals and companies driving advancements in medicine, fostering innovation and shaping the future of biopharma and healthcare.
“The annual Fierce 50 special report highlights individuals and companies that are driving progress in the pharmaceutical, healthcare and biotechnology industries,” said Ayla Ellison, Editor-in-Chief of Fierce Life Sciences and Healthcare. “These 50 outstanding ...