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

Iron-ferrying protein may be 'universal Achilles heel' for parasitic worms

2011-05-27
(Press-News.org) Researchers have discovered a tiny protein without which the soil and lab-dwelling worm C. elegans can't deliver iron-rich heme taken in from their diets to the rest of their bodies or to their developing embryos. The finding reported in the May 27th issue of the journal Cell, a Cell Press publication, offers important insight into the transport of the essential ingredient in worms and other animals, including humans.

Researchers say it also suggests a strategy for the development of drugs aimed at parasitic worms, which affect more than a quarter of the world's human population and cause tens of billions of dollars of loss in animal and plant production annually. Like C. elegans, parasitic helminths such as hookworms don't produce any of their own heme as other animals and bacteria do. That means they are crucially dependent on heme from external sources and on the newly discovered transport pathway. When the pathway doesn't function properly, they are unable to produce live offspring.

Heme is probably most familiar as a critical component of the oxygen-carrying protein, hemoglobin, which makes our blood red, the researchers explained. C. elegans worms don't have hemoglobin, but they do have other globins that carry oxygen through their circulation.

"Hemoglobin was one of the first protein structures known," said Iqbal Hamza of the University of Maryland, College Park. "For over 60 years, nobody knew how heme gets into globin or within or between cells. It's so important because the majority of the world's population suffers from iron deficiency and a diet rich in iron contained within heme is more easily absorbed by humans."

To sort the transport pathway out, Hamza looked not to humans or mice but to C. elegans, precisely because the worms don't make heme at all. Those studies led his team a few years ago to a breakthrough: the first bona fide heme importer in a multicellular organism, called HRG-1. HRG-1 is needed to get heme from the diet into the intestine. But what brings heme from the intestine into the circulation?

"Now, this study takes the pathway to the next level," he says. They find that a tiny protein called HRG-3 takes that heme from the intestine to other parts of the worms' body – their brains and skin, for example – and, perhaps most importantly, to their many embryos.

In the absence of HRG-3, heme accumulates in the intestine of pregnant mothers. Consequently, their embryos become heme deficient and either die or stop growing immediately after hatching.

The findings in C. elegans may have implications for humans and parasitic worms. "C. elegans has been a beautiful incubator for gene discovery," Hamza said. His team has taken advantage of powerful genetic approaches available by studying worms and then "superimposed those discoveries on humans and parasites."

Once you understand the transport of heme, it may be possible to more effectively deliver it for better absorption of iron in the human intestine, he said. It might also uncover what Hamza calls a "universal Achilles heel" for targeting the parasites that are a particular problem for people in developing countries, such as Hamza's native India.

"Anthelminthics are becoming less effective in humans and livestock because of rampant drug resistance," the researchers wrote. "We propose that an excellent anthelminthic target would be the HRG-3-mediated pathway for transporting heme to developing oocytes, especially in parasites such as hookworms, which infect more than a billion people worldwide and feed on host red blood cell hemoglobin."

INFORMATION:

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Link-Assistant.Com Launches SEO Crash-Test Lab, Reviews Submitted Sites to Advance SEO Knowledge

2011-05-27
Link-Assistant.Com, the maker of the celebrated SEO PowerSuite toolkit, has launched an unprecedented project on their SEO blog - SEO Crash-Test Lab. It is aimed at advancing SEO knowledge in the global Web marketing community, simultaneously giving site owners a unique opportunity to showcase their websites and get a free piece of professional SEO advice. Link-Assistant.Com SEO experts are going to select 3-4 random sites for an online review each week. They will provide critical SEO advice for each crash-tested website and post it to their Link-Assistant.Com SEO blog. ...

Fish oil may have positive effects on mood, alcohol craving, new study shows

2011-05-27
INDIANAPOLIS – Omega 3 fatty acids may be beneficial for more than just the heart. Research at the Indiana University School of Medicine disclosed at a molecular level a potential therapeutic benefit between these dietary supplements, alcohol abuse and psychiatric disorders. In a multi-year study, researchers showed conclusive behavioral and molecular benefits for omega 3 fatty acid given to mice models of bipolar disorder. The fatty acid DHA, which is one of the main active ingredients in fish oil, "normalized their behavior," according to Alexander B. Niculescu, M.D., ...

The quantum computer is growing up

The quantum computer is growing up
2011-05-27
A general rule in data processing is that disturbances cause the distortion or deletion of information during data storage or transfer. Methods for conventional computers were developed that automatically identify and correct errors: Data are processed several times and if errors occur, the most likely correct option is chosen. As quantum systems are even more sensitive to environmental disturbances than classical systems, a quantum computer requires a highly efficient algorithm for error correction. The research group of Rainer Blatt from the Institute for Experimental ...

Laser Pointers Shop Lazerpoint Gives Out 200 Dollar Survival Kits At Grand Opening

2011-05-27
Laser enthusiasts will get the opportunity to win a prize pack worth almost 200 dollars as portion of the promotion this week by a new online laser and light equipment site. Laser pointers shop Lazerpoint opened its doors this Tuesday and provided the laser fans with the opportunity to win a prize pack worth around $200 to shoppers who purchased the most stuff to May 19. The online laser pointers site also offered several deep discounts including a $35 1000 lumen LED flashlight and discounts of 3% to 25% covering a wide range of products till Jun 17. Johnson Gray, ...

Children who sleep less are more likely to be overweight

2011-05-27
Young children who do not get enough sleep are at increased risk of becoming overweight, even after taking account of lifestyle factors, finds a study published on bmj.com today. Several studies have shown a relatively consistent relation between shorter sleep duration and increased body weight in children, but doctors are still not sure how sleep and body composition interact in early childhood and whether this shows cause and effect. So a team of researchers in New Zealand set out to investigate whether reduced sleep is associated with differences in body composition ...

enprovia launches new light-weight Enterprise Content Management client for Apple Macintosh

2011-05-27
BlueJet is a native, easy-to-use Mac OS X program enabling users to manage their corporate content on their Macs. It is fully integrated in the Mac OS X environment and compatible with most common ECM systems. BlueJet allows easy editing of documents located in Enterprise Content Management systems and automatically synchronizes local copies of any documents, making the work with documents transparent and efficient. Users can download documents and store them in an encrypted Vault area for later offline use. A so-called smart folder keeps track of the latest documents ...

Nuclear radiation affects baby gender

2011-05-27
Ionizing radiation is not without danger to human populations. Indeed, exposure to nuclear radiation leads to an increase in male births relative to female births, according to a new study by Hagen Scherb and Kristina Voigt from the Helmholtz Zentrum München. Their work shows that radiation from atomic bomb testing before the Partial Test Ban Treaty in 1963, the Chernobyl accident, and from living near nuclear facilities, has had a long-term negative effect on the ratio of male to female human births (sex odds). Their work is published in the June issue of Springer's journal, ...

Modern EU agriculture jeopardizes biodiversity in new member states

Modern EU agriculture jeopardizes biodiversity in new member states
2011-05-27
This release is available in German. Sighişoara/Leipzig. Traditional agricultural practices can make a major contribution to preserving biodiversity in the EU's new member states in Central and Eastern Europe. By contrast, the construction of roads and the intensification of agriculture currently encouraged by EU farming subsidies pose a threat to amphibians. The rich natural environment still extant in many accession countries is under threat, according to scientists writing in the journal Biological Conservation. The researchers from Romania, Germany and the ...

Great Workplace Workshop Offered For The First Time In New Jersey

2011-05-27
Donna Price, President of Compass Rose Consulting and Co-Founder of the Real World Leadership Institute is pleased to announce the introduction of a new workshop entitled: Great Workplace . Based on a many years of research and training conducted at the Great Place to Work Institute—producers of the FORTUNE 100 Best Companies to Work For Annual List—The Great Workplace: Building Trust and Inspiring Performance Workshop provides managers with a set of powerful, effective exercises that will help them understand the conceptual and practical considerations of creating a high-trust ...

Solar inverters: Losses are cut in half

Solar inverters: Losses are cut in half
2011-05-27
This release is available in German. »It was a matter of minutes,« Dr. Heribert Schmidt remembers the day in spring of 2002. To find opportunities for improvement, he had often pondered about the switching plan of an inverter while in his office at the Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems ISE in Freiburg, Germany. A sudden flash of inspiration – and a solution that was ingeniously simple came to his mind. He immediately went to get an inverter from the laboratory, laid a few new strips and installed two additional semiconductor switches. »Then it required only ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Historian Lyndal Roper named 2026 Holberg Prize Laureate

Reconnecting kidney plumbing, the zebrafish way

Biologically inspired event camera for accurate passive vibration measurement

Single-cell transcriptomic analysis of the terminal ileum identifies BCMA as a therapeutic target in IgA nephropathy

Muscle-healing 'Ally' turns 'Enemy': A novel immune cell subset that controls muscle regeneration and ossification in FOP

Waterpipe smoking can cause carbon monoxide poisoning even after brief use, during outdoor smoking, or through indoor secondhand exposure

Impact of Japan's indoor smoke-free laws on the prevalence of smoke-free establishments

New study fills research gap in food safety to better protect pregnant people from Listeria

PFAS exposure may weaken teens’ bones

Researchers develop promising new therapy for most common form of bone cancer in children and young adults

FAU-FWC Study: Endangered smalltooth sawfish make a comeback in a historical Florida nursery

Towards highly efficient selective hydrogenation: the role of single-atom catalysts

A theory of Alzheimer's disease linking amyloid beta and tau

Ultra-processed foods linked with serious heart problems

Routine blood pressure readings offer early insights on dementia risk

Shingles vaccine drastically cuts risk of serious cardiac events

A new bird species in Japan

Divisive political rhetoric and the pursuit of celebrity by politicians

The adoption of the bow and arrow in western North America

AI model could revolutionize flood forecasting

Tsinghua University team discovers skin's hidden role in amplifying immune responses, paving way for novel vaccine adjuvants

Jeonbuk National University researchers reveal safer way to manage chemical sewage sludge using pyrolysis

Activation of hypoxia signaling pathway enhances bone health and metabolism in obesity

Clinical consensus of ultrasound-derived fat fraction for assessment of liver steatosis

Trace levels of food pathogen do not always translate to health risk, says study

Engineered lipid nanoparticles reprogram immune metabolism for better mRNA vaccines

Democratic backsliding reaches Western democracies, with US decline “unprecedented”

Study maps how tuberculosis bacteria power themselves

'Unprecedented' wildfires in tropical peatlands during 20th century

University of Manchester scientists play key role in discovery of new heavy-proton particle at CERN

[Press-News.org] Iron-ferrying protein may be 'universal Achilles heel' for parasitic worms