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

New mouse models generated for MYH9 genetic disorders

NIH researchers present work today at Biophysical Meeting in Baltimore

2011-03-10
(Press-News.org) WASHINGTON, D.C. (March 9, 2011) -- Researchers have created the first mouse models of human MYH9 genetic disorders, which cause several problems -- including enlarged platelets and sometimes fatal kidney disease.

The MYH9 gene makes non-muscle myosin II-A protein. This protein plays a critical role in helping cells move to their correct home during embryonic development. Later in life, the protein continues its involvement in cell migration, cell-cell adhesion and also in maintaining cell shape, says Yingfan Zhang, Ph.D., a postdoctoral fellow at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) of the National Institutes of Health.

Zhang, with the NHLBI's Laboratory of Molecular Cardiology, has focused on three of the more than forty MYH9 mutations identified in humans. One of the mutations impaired myosin's motor activity, while the other two affected the protein's ability to form filaments.

In work she will present today at the 55th Annual Biophysical Society Annual Meeting in Baltimore, MD, Zhang generated specific mutations in the MYH9 gene, then bred mice with one or two copies of the impaired gene. While mice with two copies of the gene causing motor impairment died as embryos, those with one mutated gene showed symptoms similar to humans. The filament forming impaired mice showed symptoms with both one and two mutant genes.

Inactivation of the MYH9 gene in humans causes a disorder called the May-Hegglin anomaly (MHA), a rare genetic disorder of the blood platelets that causes them to be abnormally large and also causes abnormalities known as Dohle bodies in leukocytes. Mutations of the MYH9 are also associated with kidney disease in humans.

"The mice had very, very large platelets, exactly like humans, and those platelets didn't work very well," says senior author Robert Adelstein,M.D. also with the NHLBI's Laboratory of Molecular Cardiology. "The mice also developed kidney disease."

The mouse models will help scientists better understand MYH9 disorders in humans, Adelstein says. "Now we can study the development of the disease in real-time, and try to figure out what has gone wrong and why the gene product has led to these defects."

###

This work was sponsored by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, one of the National Institutes of Health.

The presentation, "Mouse Models of Human MYH9-Related Diseases" by Yingfan Zhang et al is at 10:30 AM on Wednesday, March 9, 2011 in the Baltimore Convention Center, Hall C. Abstract: http://tinyurl.com/4f8a6zb

MORE MEETING INFORMATION

Each year, the Biophysical Society Annual Meeting brings together more than 6,000 scientists and hosts more than 4,000 poster presentations, 200 exhibits, and more than 20 symposia. The largest meeting of its type in the world, the Biophysical Society Annual Meeting retains its small-meeting flavor through its subgroup meetings, platform sessions, social activities, and committee programs.

QUICK LINKS

Meeting Home Page: http://www.biophysics.org/2011meeting
General Meeting Information: http://www.biophysics.org/GeneralInfo/Overview/tabid/2062/Default.aspx
Search abstracts: http://www.abstractsonline.com/plan/start.aspx?mkey={FEA830A5-24AD-47F3-8E61-FCA29F5FEF34}

PRESS REGISTRATION

The Biophysical Society invites credentialed journalists, freelance reporters working on assignment, and public information officers to attend its Annual Meeting for free. For more information on registering as a member of the press, please contact Ellen Weiss at eweiss@biophysics.org or 240-290-5606. Also see: http://www.biophysics.org/Registration/Press/tabid/2148/Default.aspx

ABOUT THE BIOPHYSICAL SOCIETY

The Biophysical Society, founded in 1956, is a professional, scientific society established to encourage development and dissemination of knowledge in biophysics. The society promotes growth in this expanding field through its annual meeting, monthly journal, and committee and outreach activities. Its over 9,000 members are located throughout the U.S. and the world, where they teach and conduct research in colleges, universities, laboratories, government agencies, and industry. For more information on the society or the 2011 Annual Meeting, visit www.biophysics.org

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Researchers in France and Austria find novel role for calcium channels in pacemaker cell function

2011-03-10
WASHINGTON, D.C. (March 9, 2011) -- Pacemaker cells in the sinoatrial node control heart rate, but what controls the ticking of these pacemaker cells? New research by Angelo Torrente and his colleagues of the M.E. Mangoni group's, reveals, for the first time, a critical functional interaction between Cav1.3 calcium ion (Ca2+) channels and ryanodine-receptor (RyR) mediated Ca2+ signaling. The study also sheds light on a long-standing debate regarding the relative contributions of the 'funny current' generated by ion channels and the RyR dependent spontaneous diastolic ...

New genetic deafness syndrome identified

2011-03-10
WASHINGTON, D.C. (March 9, 2011) -- Ten years ago, scientists seeking to understand how a certain type of feature on a cell called an L-type calcium channel worked created a knockout mouse missing both copies of the CACNA1D gene. The CACNA1D gene makes a protein that lets calcium flow into a cell, transmitting important instructions from other cells. The knockout mice lived a normal life span, but their hearts beat slowly and arrhythmically. They were also completely deaf. Today at the 55th Annual Biophysical Society Meeting in Baltimore, an international team lead ...

Newly identified spider toxin may help uncover novel ways of treating pain and human diseases

2011-03-10
WASHINGTON, D.C. (March 9, 2011) -- Spider venom toxins are useful tools for exploring how ion channels operate in the body. These channels control the flow of ions across cell membranes, and are key components in a wide variety of biological processes and human diseases. A newly identified toxin from the American Funnel Web spider acts on T-type and N-type calcium channels, researchers from the University of California at Riverside have discovered. The toxin offers a new target for studying T-type channels, which play a role in congestive heart failure, hypertension, ...

Gene fusion mechanisms offer new clues to origin of pediatric brain tumors

2011-03-10
March 10, 2011 – A detailed analysis of gene fusions present at high frequency in the most common pediatric brain tumors has been performed for the first time in a study published online today in Genome Research (www.genome.org), shedding new light on how these genomic rearrangements form in the early stages of cancer. Genomic rearrangements, genetic changes that alter the structure of chromosomes, have a positive role in evolution by creating genetic diversity and new genes; however, rearrangements can also predispose to or potentially initiate diseases such as cancer. ...

Web-crawling the brain

2011-03-10
VIDEO: Researchers have created a three-dimensional nanoscale model of a neural circuit using electron microscopy. As a result, the researchers can crawl these vast neural networks much as Google crawls Web... Click here for more information. BOSTON, Mass. (March 9, 2011) — The brain is a black box. A complex circuitry of neurons fires information through channels, much like the inner workings of a computer chip. But while computer processors are regimented with the deft economy ...

UK doctors consistently oppose euthanasia and assisted suicide

2011-03-10
Los Angeles, CA (March 10th, 2011) – A review of research carried out over 20 years suggests that UK doctors appear to consistently oppose euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide (PAS). The findings - which appear in the latest issue of the journal Palliative Medicine, published by SAGE - highlight a gap between doctors' attitudes and those of the UK public. The study, carried out by Dr Ruaidhrí McCormack and colleagues Dr M Clifford and Dr M Conroy at the Department of Palliative Medicine, Milford Care Centre, Limerick, Eire, searched through literature from 1990 to ...

NIST electromechanical circuit sets record beating microscopic 'drum'

NIST electromechanical circuit sets record beating microscopic drum
2011-03-10
BOULDER, Colo.—Physicists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have demonstrated an electromechanical circuit in which microwaves communicate with a vibrating mechanical component 1,000 times more vigorously than ever achieved before in similar experiments. The microscopic apparatus is a new tool for processing information and potentially could control the motion of a relatively large object at the smallest possible, or quantum, scale. Described in the March 10 issue of Nature,* the NIST experiments created strong interactions between ...

Researchers find smoking may increase risk for lung disease

2011-03-10
Boston, MA – A team of researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH) have found that approximately one out of every twelve adult smokers have abnormal lung densities present on chest computed tomography (CT) images suggestive of interstitial lung disease which is associated with substantial reductions in lung volumes. In addition, despite being positively associated with smoking, these lung densities were inversely not associated with emphysema. This research is published online on March 10th in the New England Journal of Medicine. It is increasingly acknowledged ...

Tiny gems take big step toward battling cancer

2011-03-10
Chemotherapy drug resistance contributes to treatment failure in more than 90 percent of metastatic cancers. Overcoming this hurdle would significantly improve cancer survival rates. Dean Ho, an associate professor of biomedical engineering and mechanical engineering at Northwestern University, believes a tiny carbon particle called a nanodiamond may offer an effective drug delivery solution for hard-to-treat cancers. In studies of liver and breast cancer models in vivo, Ho and a multidisciplinary team of scientists, engineers and clinicians found that a normally lethal ...

Study illuminates role of cerebrospinal fluid in brain stem cell development

2011-03-10
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), the fluid found in and around the brain and spinal cord, may play a larger role in the developing brain than previously thought, according to researchers at Children's Hospital Boston. A paper published online March 10th by the journal Neuron sheds light on how signals from the CSF help drive neural development. The paper also identifies a CSF protein whose levels are elevated in patients with glioblastoma, a common malignant brain tumor, suggesting a potential link between CSF signaling and brain tumor growth and regulation. The study, led ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Tsunami from massive Kamchatka earthquake captured by satellite

Hidden dangers in 'acid rain' soils

Drug developed for inherited bleeding disorder shows promising trial results

New scan could help millions with hard-to-treat high blood pressure

9th IOF Asia-Pacific Bone Health Conference set to open in Tokyo

Can your driving patterns predict cognitive decline?

New electrochemical strategy boosts uranium recovery from complex wastewater

Study links America’s favorite cooking oil to obesity

Famous Easter Island statues were created without centralized management

Captive male Asian elephants can live together peacefully and with little stress, if introduced slowly and carefully, per Laos case study of 8 unrelated males

The Galapagos and other oceanic islands and Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) may be "critical" refuges for sharks in the Tropical Eastern Pacific, as predatory fish appear depleted in more coastal MPAs t

Why are shiny colours rare yet widespread in nature?

Climate-vulnerable districts of India face significantly higher risks of adverse health outcomes, including 25% higher rates of underweight children

New study reveals spatial patterns of crime rates and media coverage across Chicago

Expanding seasonal immunization access could minimize off-season RSV epidemics

First-of-its-kind 3D model lets you explore Easter Island statues up close

foldable and rollable interlaced origami structure: Folds and rolls up for storage and deploys with high strength

Possible therapeutic approach to treat diabetic nerve damage discovered

UBC ‘body-swap’ robot helps reveal how the brain keeps us upright

Extensive survey of Eastern tropical Pacific finds remote protected areas harbor some of the highest concentrations of sharks

High risk of metastatic recurrence among young cancer patients

Global Virus Network statement on the Marburg virus outbreak in Ethiopia

'Exploitative' online money gaming in India causing financial, health and social harm, analysis shows

Mayo Clinic researchers identify why some lung tumors respond well to immunotherapy

The pterosaur rapidly evolved flight abilities, in contrast to modern bird ancestors, new study suggests

Farms could be our secret climate weapon, QUT-led study finds

New research by ASU paleoanthropologists gives valuable insight into how two ancient human ancestors coexisted in the same area

Therapeutic use of cannabis and cannabinoids

‘Cognitive Legos’ help the brain build complex behaviors

From inhibition to destruction – kinase drugs found to trigger protein degradation

[Press-News.org] New mouse models generated for MYH9 genetic disorders
NIH researchers present work today at Biophysical Meeting in Baltimore