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

UCSF team describes genetic basis of rare human diseases

UCSF team describes genetic basis of rare human diseases
2011-07-10
(Press-News.org) Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco and in Michigan, North Carolina and Spain have discovered how genetic mutations cause a number of rare human diseases, which include Meckel syndrome, Joubert syndrome and several other disorders.

The work gives doctors new possible targets for designing better diagnostics to detect and drugs to treat these diseases, which together affect perhaps one in 200 people in the United States.

On the surface, these diseases look very different. Meckel syndrome causes deadly brain malformations and kidney cysts. Joubert syndrome strikes people with severe movement disorders. But the work of the UCSF-led team, published this week in the journal Nature Genetics, found similarities between the diseases at the molecular level.

"We think these diseases have a common underlying cause," said UCSF developmental biologist Jeremy Reiter. "They are fundamentally caused by defects in 'antenna' on cells."

Seen in Twins from Bangladesh

Technically known as cilia, these antennae are protrusions that dangle off cells and, like tiny receivers, allow the cells to explore and interact with their environment. Found everywhere from the brain to the eyes to the lungs in humans, these antennae also exist in creatures as diverse as gorillas, gnats, aardvarks and algae.

What cilia do depends on where they are in the body. In the eyes or deep within the nostrils, they are covered with sensory proteins and help capture light and odors, forming the basis of our senses of sight and smell. In the lungs, cilia move, helping to expel foreign particles from the airways. They also lend mobility to sperm.

This wide range of functions is also reflected in people with genetic disorders like Joubert syndrome, which affects cilia in specific parts of their body. People with these diseases suffer symptoms related to what those cilia do, such things as blindness, infertility or inability to smell.

Reiter and his colleagues looked at the DNA of twins from Bangladesh born with Joubert syndrome, and they showed how certain mutations associated with the disease work.

They found that these mutations lead to malfunctions in a protein called Tectonic1, one of several that forms a crucial collar around the base of a cilium.

You can think of the collar as a turnstile at the foot of a long bridge connecting a remote island to the mainland. If the turnstile is damaged, traffic stops, and there is no way to drive goods and passengers out to the island.

Similarly, mutations in Tectonic1 prevent the collar from forming correctly, and this causes defects in the cilia within the brain and ultimately leads to Joubert syndrome, Reiter and his colleagues determined. In cells, they showed that restoring a non-mutated form of the protein restores the function of the cilia.



INFORMATION:



The article, "A transition zone complex regulates mammalian ciliogenesis and ciliary membrane composition" by Francesc R. Garcia-Gonzalo, Kevin C. Corbit, María Salomé Sirerol-Piquer, Gokul Ramaswami, Edgar A. Otto, Thomas R. Noriega, Allen D. Seol, Jon F Robinson, Christopher L. Bennett, Dragana J. Josifova, José Manuel García-Verdugo, Nicholas Katsanis, Friedhelm Hildebrandt and Jeremy F. Reiter appears in the current issue of Nature Genetics. See: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ng.891

In addition to UCSF, authors of the paper are affiliated with Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red (CIBERNED) and the University of Valencia in Valencia, Spain; the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI; Duke University in Durham, NC; and Guy's Hospital in London.

The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the March of Dimes, the Burroughs Wellcome Fund, the Packard Foundation, the Sandler Family Supporting Foundation and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

Additional support was provided through a National Science Foundation predoctoral grant and a National Institute for General Medical Sciences-Initiative for Maximizing Student Diversity grant.

UCSF is a leading university dedicated to promoting health worldwide through advanced biomedical research, graduate-level education in the life sciences and health professions, and excellence in patient care.



Follow UCSF on Twitter @ucsf/@ucsfscience

FOR REPORTERS AND EDITORS: Image of Cilia: http://www.ucsf.edu/sites/default/files/cilia.jpg?1310142207


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
UCSF team describes genetic basis of rare human diseases

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Time Running Out to Participate in 2011 OVDI

2011-07-10
In February 2011, the IRS announced the 2011 Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Initiative. Motivated by the success of previous disclosure programs -- and the federal government's urgent need for more revenue -- the 2011 OVDI is designed to get taxpayers with offshore financial accounts into compliance and to recoup the money in offshore accounts into U.S. tax coffers. It does this by allowing U.S. citizens, green card holders, and U.S. tax residents with previously undeclared offshore accounts to become current with their taxes. FBAR Reporting Requirement for Offshore Accounts For ...

Drug designer

2011-07-10
Protease inhibitor drugs are one of the major weapons in the fight against HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, but their effectiveness is limited as the virus mutates and develops resistance to the drugs over time. Now a new tool has been developed to help predict the location of the mutations that lead to drug resistance. First discovered in 1995, protease inhibitor drugs have dramatically reduced the number of AIDS deaths. Taken in combination with two other anti-HIV drugs, protease inhibitors work by halting the action of the protease enzyme, a protein produced by HIV ...

Agility UK Launches New Website

2011-07-10
Agility UK has launched a new website to promote its health and safety and employment law training and advisory services to businesses across the UK. Indicating significant progress for the organisation, the launch of the new website better promotes the company's range of cost-effective, flexible and solution-focused health and safety and employment law services. In a triangulated initiative between a web development team, a leading digital agency, and a design agency, the new website offers refreshed branding, improved usability and more comprehensive information ...

Geothermal industry to get boost from University of Nevada, Reno research

Geothermal industry to get boost from University of Nevada, Reno research
2011-07-10
RENO, Nev. – An ambitious University of Nevada, Reno project to understand and characterize geothermal potential at nearly 500 sites throughout the Great Basin is yielding a bounty of information for the geothermal industry to use in developing resources in Nevada, according to a report to the U.S. Department of Energy. The project, based in the University's Bureau of Mines and Geology in the College of Science, is funded by a $1 million DOE grant from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. It has reached the one-year mark and is entering phase two, when ...

Littlewoods Europe Announces Launch of Autumn 2011 Collection

2011-07-10
Littlewoods Europe has announced the launch of its new collection for autumn 2011, which will be available on its website. The new season collection will launch with over 10,000 new lines on offer, comprising 5,000 new fashion lines for the whole family, including women, men and children. In addition there will also be new lines of shoes, accessories, electrical, childrens toys and great new season pieces for the home. In addition to this the new collection for autumn 2011 will include an increased range from the popular menswear brand Goodsouls, a heritage collection ...

A change of heart: Penn researchers reprogram brain cells to become heart cells

A change of heart: Penn researchers reprogram brain cells to become heart cells
2011-07-10
PHILADELPHIA - For the past decade, researchers have tried to reprogram the identity of all kinds of cell types. Heart cells are one of the most sought-after cells in regenerative medicine because researchers anticipate that they may help to repair injured hearts by replacing lost tissue. Now, researchers at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania are the first to demonstrate the direct conversion of a non-heart cell type into a heart cell by RNA transfer. Working on the idea that the signature of a cell is defined by molecules called messenger ...

Ethics Sage Offers Free Advice on Workplace Ethics Issues and Conflict Situations

Ethics Sage Offers Free Advice on Workplace Ethics Issues and Conflict Situations
2011-07-10
My new blog, "Workplace Ethics Advice," expands on my popular Ethics Sage website to provide reasoned advice how best to deal with workplace ethics issues. Workplace ethics issues may include: - What to do when you suspect financial wrongdoing by a supervisor or top management - What to do when you have been told to do something you feel is inappropriate - What to do when you have been asked to do something you feel is inappropriate - What to do when you have been ordered to keep quiet about a company action - How to handle workplace stress issues including: ...

Nanocrystal transformers

Nanocrystal transformers
2011-07-10
While a movie about giant robots that undergo structural transformations is breaking box office records this summer, a scientific study about structural transformations within single nanocrystals is breaking new ground for the design of novel materials that will serve next-generation energy storage batteries and solar energy harvesting devices. Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)'s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) have reported the first direct observation of structural transformations within a single nanocrystal of copper sulfide, a ...

Arthroscopy and open surgery are equally efficacious in treating common hip problem in most patients

2011-07-10
Researchers at Hospital for Special Surgery have found that in comparison to open surgery, arthroscopic treatment of a common hip problem that leads to arthritis produces similar outcomes in terms of repairing structural problems in most patients. The study will be published in the July 2011 TK issue of the American Journal of Sports Medicine. "For the majority of patients with more typical hip impingement, arthroscopic approaches should be just as effective at adequately restoring the mechanics as the open surgical technique," said Bryan T. Kelly, M.D., co-director of ...

University of Houston researcher an author of multi-institutional genetic study of ovarian cancer

2011-07-10
A University of Houston researcher is an author on a landmark multi-institutional genetic study of the most aggressive and common form of ovarian cancer that is published in the current issue of the scientific journal Nature. Ovarian cancer is the fifth-leading cause of cancer death in women in the United States. The genome sequencing study, which was conducted by The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) research network, provides the first comprehensive genetic overview of ovarian cancer, showing the changes that turn normal ovarian cells into deadly tumors that are highly resistant ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

SfN announces Early Career Policy Ambassadors Class of 2026

Spiritual practices strongly associated with reduced risk for hazardous alcohol and drug use

Novel vaccine protects against C. diff disease and recurrence

An “electrical” circadian clock balances growth between shoots and roots

Largest study of rare skin cancer in Mexican patients shows its more complex than previously thought

Colonists dredged away Sydney’s natural oyster reefs. Now science knows how best to restore them.

Joint and independent associations of gestational diabetes and depression with childhood obesity

Spirituality and harmful or hazardous alcohol and other drug use

New plastic material could solve energy storage challenge, researchers report

Mapping protein production in brain cells yields new insights for brain disease

Exposing a hidden anchor for HIV replication

Can Europe be climate-neutral by 2050? New monitor tracks the pace of the energy transition

Major heart attack study reveals ‘survival paradox’: Frail men at higher risk of death than women despite better treatment

Medicare patients get different stroke care depending on plan, analysis reveals

Polyploidy-induced senescence may drive aging, tissue repair, and cancer risk

Study shows that treating patients with lifestyle medicine may help reduce clinician burnout

Experimental and numerical framework for acoustic streaming prediction in mid-air phased arrays

Ancestral motif enables broad DNA binding by NIN, a master regulator of rhizobial symbiosis

Macrophage immune cells need constant reminders to retain memories of prior infections

Ultra-endurance running may accelerate aging and breakdown of red blood cells

Ancient mind-body practice proven to lower blood pressure in clinical trial

SwRI to create advanced Product Lifecycle Management system for the Air Force

Natural selection operates on multiple levels, comprehensive review of scientific studies shows

Developing a national research program on liquid metals for fusion

AI-powered ECG could help guide lifelong heart monitoring for patients with repaired tetralogy of fallot

Global shark bites return to average in 2025, with a smaller proportion in the United States

Millions are unaware of heart risks that don’t start in the heart

What freezing plants in blocks of ice can tell us about the future of Svalbard’s plant communities

A new vascularized tissueoid-on-a-chip model for liver regeneration and transplant rejection

Augmented reality menus may help restaurants attract more customers, improve brand perceptions

[Press-News.org] UCSF team describes genetic basis of rare human diseases