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

Molecular mechanism contributing to neuronal circuit formation found

2011-03-08
(Press-News.org) During embryonic development, sensory and motor fibers interact to form nerves in the limbs. The research team led by Dr. Andrea Huber Brösamle of the Institute of Developmental Genetics of Helmholtz Zentrum München has now elucidated how this interaction functions at the molecular level: The cell surface receptor neuropilin-1 is present in both sensory and motor nerve fibers and controls their interaction in order to correctly regulate growth.

"We observed that motor and sensory axons were both able to guide and lead the formation of the spinal nerves of the arms and legs," said Rosa-Eva Hüttl and Heidi Söllner, lead authors of the study and doctoral students in Dr. Andrea Huber Brösamle's research group. This finding surprised the authors because it had previously been assumed that the motor axons were always responsible for establishing the correct trajectories. In the same study, the researchers created a model to better elucidate structural changes in human neurodegenerative disorders and following trauma : "Our next goal," said Dr. Huber Brösamle, "is to find out to what extent neuropilin-1 also controls the formation of fiber tracts in the brain."

### Further Information

*Background Nerves are bundles of sensory and motor fibers. The sensory fibers transmit physical sensation signs (e.g. pain), while the motor fibers control the contraction and movement of muscles.

Original Publication: Huettl R.E. et al. (2011). Npn-1 contributes to axon-axon interactions that differentially control sensory and motor innervation of the limb. PLoS Biol 9(2): e1001020. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1001020

Helmholtz Zentrum München is the German Research Center for Environmental Health. As leading center of Environmental Health, it focuses on chronic and complex diseases, which develop from the interaction of environmental factors and individual genetic disposition. Helmholtz Zentrum München has around 1700 staff members. The head office of the center is located in Neuherberg to the north of Munich on a 50-hectare research campus. Helmholtz Zentrum München belongs to the Helmholtz Association, Germany's largest research organization, a community of 16 scientific-technical and medical-biological research centers with a total of 30,000 staff members.

Contact for Media Representatives

Sven Winkler . Helmholtz Zentrum München – German Research Center for Environmental Health, Ingolstädter Landstraße 1, 85764 Neuherberg, Germany. Phone: +49(0)89-3187-3946. Fax +49(0)89-3187-3324, Internet: www.helmholtz-muenchen.de . e-mail: presse@helmholtz-muenchen.de

Scientific Contact Dr. Andrea Huber Brösamle . Helmholtz Zentrum München – German Research Center for Environmental health, Ingolstädter Landstraße 1, 85764 Neuherberg, Germany. Phone: +49(0)89-3187-4117. Fax +49(0)89-3187-3099, Internet: www.helmholtz-muenchen.de . e-mail: andrea.huber@helmholtz-muenchen.de


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Accurate measurement of radioactive thoron possible at last

2011-03-08
"Many people are now saying: 'Is it really that easy? Then why didn't anyone think of it a long time ago?' But you have to have the right idea at the right time," says Annette Röttger, physicist at the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB), in a pleased way. Annette Röttger and her scientific team managed to do something that was previously thought to be impossible: they developed a primary standard for the measurement of short-lived radioactive thoron. Thoron measuring instruments from all over the world will now be calibrated at this unique device which is currently ...

You are what your mother ate

2011-03-08
Poor diet during pregnancy increases offspring's vulnerability to the effects of aging, new research has shown for the first time. The research, by scientists from the University of Cambridge, provides important insight into why children born to mothers who consumed an unhealthy diet during pregnancy have an increased risk of type 2 diabetes (a significant contributing factor to heart disease and cancer) later in life. "What is most exciting about these findings is that we are now starting to really understand how nutrition during the first nine months of life ...

1 in 3 doctors afraid to report underperforming colleagues

2011-03-08
Almost one in five UK doctors has had direct experience of an incompetent or poorly performing colleague in the past three years, finds a survey of professional values, published online in BMJ Quality & Safety. Nearly three out of four of these doctors said they had sounded the alarm, but one in three of those who had not done so gave fear of retribution as the reason. The study authors canvassed the views of almost 2,000 US doctors working in primary care and hospital medicine and over 1,000 of their UK peers in 2009 about various aspects of professional behaviour. Topics ...

High levels of 'good' cholesterol may cut bowel cancer risk

2011-03-08
High levels of "good" (high density lipoprotein) HDL cholesterol seem to cut the risk of bowel cancer, suggests research published online in Gut. The association is independent of other potentially cancer-inducing markers of inflammation in the blood. The researchers base their findings on participants in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) study. This is tracking the long term impact of diet on the development of cancer in more than half a million people in 10 European countries, including the UK. Some 1,200 people who developed ...

Acupuncture curbs severity of menopausal hot flushes

2011-03-08
Traditional Chinese acupuncture curbs the severity of hot flushes and other menopausal symptoms, suggests a small study published today in Acupuncture in Medicine. The effects did not seem to be related to changes in levels of the hormones responsible for sparking the menopause and its associated symptoms, the study shows. The authors base their findings on 53 middle aged women, all of whom were classified as being postmenopausal - they had spontaneously stopped having periods for a year. Their somatic (hot flushes) urogenital (vaginal dryness and urinary tract infection) ...

Suggesting genes' friends, Facebook-style

Suggesting genes friends, Facebook-style
2011-03-08
Scientists at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) and the German Cancer Research Centre (DKFZ), both in Heidelberg, Germany, have developed a new method that uncovers the combined effects of genes. Published online today in Nature Methods, it helps understand how different genes can amplify, cancel out or mask each others' effects, and enables scientists to suggest genes that interfere with each other in much the same manner that facebook suggests friends. To understand the connections between genetic make-up and traits like disease susceptibility, scientists ...

Older parents are happier with more children

2011-03-08
This release is available in German. "Children may be a long-term investment in happiness," says MPIDR demographer Mikko Myrskylä. Together with Rachel Margolis from the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, USA, he published the new study in the latest issue of the journal "Population and Development Review". It shows a global trend: while for parents under 30 the level of happiness decreases with the first and each additional child, mothers and fathers aged 30 to 39 feel as happy as childless peers until they have four children or more. From age 40 onwards parents ...

Unique frog helps amphibian conservation efforts

2011-03-08
A tropical frog – the only one of its kind in the world – is providing conservationists with exclusive insights into the genetic make-up of its closest endangered relatives. University of Manchester scientists have allowed two critically endangered species of Central American Leaf frogs to interbreed, producing the unique frog – a hybrid of the two species. DNA tests using a harmless mouth swab showed that the two parent frogs were actually very closely related despite being different species. The findings are important because DNA tests on frogs of the same species ...

Genome sequencing used to assess a novel form of Clostridium botulinum

2011-03-08
Scientists on the Norwich Research Park have sequenced the genome of a novel strain of Clostridium botulinum, one of the most dangerous pathogens known to man. The strain produces an unusual botulinum neurotoxin, known as type A5 neurotoxin, which was isolated by the Health Protection Agency (HPA), following a case of wound botulism. Professor Mike Peck and his research group at the Institute of Food Research (IFR) study Clostridium botulinum. Their expertise is crucial for preventing food poisoning outbreaks in the UK and internationally and to understanding the threat ...

Otters on road to recovery in Andalusia

2011-03-08
Improved environmental conditions have enabled the otter (Lutra lutra) to spread in Andalusia over the past 20 years. However, the recovery of populations of this mammal has been "relatively" slow, and in some areas the impact of human activities still prevents the species from gaining a foothold. "The high level of 'humanisation' of the landscape still acts as a strong impediment to the expansion of the otter, to such an extent that it is preventing the species from fully recovering its original distribution area", Miguel Clavero, lead author of the study and a researcher ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Literary theorist Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak named 2025 Holberg Prize Laureate

The relationship between gut microbiota, immunoglobulin A, and vaccine efficacy

Advancing sorghum science: drought-resilient crop for Spain's agricultural future

Round up, just below, or precise amount? Choosing the final price of a product may be just a cultural thing

Improving rehabilitation after spinal cord injury using a small compound oral drug

The long wait for bees to return to restored grasslands

For Nairobi’s informal settlements, diverse school lunches make a big difference

Why it’s good to be nostalgic – an international study suggests you may have more close friends!

New antibody reduces tumor growth in treatment-resistant breast and ovarian cancers

Violent supernovae 'triggered at least two Earth extinctions'

Over 1.2 million medical device side-effect reports not submitted within legal timeframe

An easy-to-apply gel prevents abdominal adhesions in animals in Stanford Medicine study

A path to safer, high-energy electric vehicle batteries

openRxiv launch to sustain and expand preprint sharing in life and health sciences

“Overlooked” scrub typhus may affect 1 in 10 in rural India, and be a leading cause of hospitalisations for fever

Vocal changes in birds may predict age-related disorders in people, study finds

Spotiphy integrative analysis tool turns spatial RNA sequencing into imager

Dynamic acoustics of hand clapping, elucidated

AAN, AES and EFA issue position statement on seizures and driving safety

Do brain changes remain after recovery from concussion?

Want to climb the leadership ladder? Try debate training

No countries on track to meet all 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals

Robotics and spinal stimulation restore movement in paralysis

China discovers terrestrial "Life oasis" from end-Permian mass extinction period

Poor sleep may fuel conspiracy beliefs, according to new research

Adolescent boys who experience violence have up to 8 times the odds of perpetrating physical and sexual intimate partner violence that same day, per South African study collecting real-time data over

Critically endangered hawksbill turtles migrate up to 1,000km from nesting to foraging grounds in the Western Caribbean, riding with and against ocean currents to congregate in popular feeding hotspot

UAlbany researchers unlock new capabilities in DNA nanostructure self-assembly

PM2.5 exposure may be associated with increased skin redness in Taiwanese adults, suggesting that air pollution may contribute to skin health issues

BD² announces four new sites to join landmark bipolar disorder research and clinical care network

[Press-News.org] Molecular mechanism contributing to neuronal circuit formation found