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

Fruit flies provide new knowledge about uninhibited cell growth

2012-04-30
(Press-News.org) In a new study, scientists at the University of Copenhagen show that a specific type of carbohydrate plays an important role in the intercellular signalling that controls the growth and development of the nervous system. In particular, defects in that carbohydrate may result in the uninhibited cell growth that characterizes the genetic disease neurofibromatosis and certain types of cancer. The results have just been published in the well-reputed journal PNAS.

Scientists from The Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences at the University of Copenhagen have put a special type of fruit fly under the microscope. The new research results turn the spotlight on a certain group of carbohydrates – the so-called glycolipids – and their influence on the cells' complicated communication system. In the long term, this model study can shine new light on the disease neurofibromatosis for the benefit of patients the world over. Egghead to the right: changes in cellular growth. Foto: Klaus Qvortrup

"The most important thing about our discovery right now is that we document a new function for carbohydrates in the communication between cells. We also show how disturbances in the signalling pathways cause changes in cellular growth. This is knowledge that cancer researchers can develop," says Ole Kjærulff, doctor and associate professor at the Department of Neuroscience and Pharmacology, who has conducted the study together with Dr. Katja Dahlgaard, and Hans Wandall, associate professor at the Copenhagen Center for Glycomics. Sugar chains control cell growth

Glycolipids are compounds consisting of fats linked to long chains of sugar molecules. They are located in the cell membrane, where they serve various functions, such as protecting the cell or making it recognizable to the immune system.

"In the fruit fly model, if we prevent the sugar chains from lengthening, we can show that carbohydrate plays an important role in controlling the growth of normal cells. When the sugar chains are shortened, the tissue grows dramatically on account of increased cell division. In particular, it appears that the nervous system's support cells – the glia cells – are influenced," explains Hans Wandall, associate professor.

Neurofibromatosis can cause deformity

The new results also influence our understanding of neurofibromatosis. This is a heritable disorder that results in unsightly tumours – so-called neurofibromas – in the nerves and skin. The disease affects approximately 20 people out of 100,000 and varies from mild to severe cases with decided deformities. The condition also affects the bones and often causes learning problems:

"When you get closer to an understanding of the mechanisms that result in a certain disease, naturally it is easier to influence the disease process in the form of drug development in the longer term. Neurofibromatosis is not a terminal disease, but it very much affects the life quality of the people who have it because the symptoms are so noticeable," explains Ole Kjærulff. Hans Wandall adds that the disease is also associated with certain types of cancer, particularly in the brain.

### Contact:

Hans Wandall, associated professor, mobile phone: +45 27 21 09 36

Ole Kjærulff, associated professor, mobile phone: +45 20 45 52 73


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Researchers from the University of Zurich discover new particle at CERN

2012-04-30
This press release is available in German. In particle physics, the baryon family refers to particles that are made up of three quarks. Quarks form a group of six particles that differ in their masses and charges. The two lightest quarks, the so-called "up" and "down" quarks, form the two atomic components, protons and neutrons. All baryons that are composed of the three lightest quarks ("up", "down" and "strange" quarks) are known. Only very few baryons with heavy quarks have been observed to date. They can only be generated artificially in particle accelerators as ...

Atomic clock comparison via data highways

Atomic clock comparison via data highways
2012-04-30
This press release is available in German. Optical atomic clocks measure time with unprecedented accuracy. However, it is the ability to compare clocks with one another that makes them applicable for high-precision tests in fundamental theory, from cosmology all the way to quantum physics. A clock comparison, i.e. a comparison of their optical frequencies, proved to be challenging so far as the few existing optical clocks around the world are not readily portable due to their complex nature. A team of researchers from the Physikalisch-TechnischeBundesanstalt (PTB) in ...

Global prices of pollination-dependent products such as coffee could rise in the long term

Global prices of pollination-dependent products such as coffee could rise in the long term
2012-04-30
This press release is available in German. Leipzig/Dresden/Freiburg. In recent years the economic value of pollination-dependent crops has substantially increased around the world. As a team of researchers from the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ), the Technical University of Dresden and the University of Freiburg headed by the UFZ wrote in an article entitled "Spatial and temporal trends of global pollination benefit" in the open-access journal PLoS ONE the value of ecological pollination services was around 200 billion US dollars in 1993 and rose ...

New drug to tackle fat problems

2012-04-30
Medical researchers at the University of Sheffield have defined the structure of a key part of the human obesity receptor- an essential factor in the regulation of body fat- which could help provide new treatments for the complications of obesity and anorexia. This major advance in research, published in the journal Structure, will greatly enhance the ability to generate drugs which can both block and stimulate the receptor for the obesity hormone leptin. This could have life-changing effects on people suffering from the complications of obesity and malnutrition. Researchers ...

Blood samples show deadly frog fungus at work in the wild

Blood samples show deadly frog fungus at work in the wild
2012-04-30
The fungal infection that killed a record number of amphibians worldwide leads to deadly dehydration in frogs in the wild, according to results of a new study. High levels of an aquatic, chytrid fungus called Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) disrupt fluid and electrolyte balance in wild frogs, the scientists say, severely depleting the frogs' sodium and potassium levels and causing cardiac arrest and death. Their findings confirm what researchers have seen in carefully controlled lab experiments with the fungus, but San Francisco State University biologist Vance ...

Can nature's beauty lift citizens from poverty?

Can natures beauty lift citizens from poverty?
2012-04-30
Using nature's beauty as a tourist draw can boost conservation in China's valued panda preserves, but it isn't an automatic ticket out of poverty for the humans who live there, a unique long-term study shows. Often those who benefit most from nature-based tourism are people who already have resources. The truly impoverished have a harder time breaking into the tourism business, according to the paper, "Drivers and Socioeconomic Impacts of Tourism Participation in Protected Areas," published in the April 25 edition of PLoS One. The study looks at nearly a decade of burgeoning ...

Folding light: Wrinkles and twists boost power from solar panels

Folding light: Wrinkles and twists boost power from solar panels
2012-04-30
Taking their cue from the humble leaf, researchers have used microscopic folds on the surface of photovoltaic material to significantly increase the power output of flexible, low-cost solar cells. The team, led by scientists from Princeton University, reported online April 22 in the journal Nature Photonics that the folds resulted in a 47 percent increase in electricity generation. Yueh-Lin (Lynn) Loo, the principal investigator, said the finely calibrated folds on the surface of the panels channel light waves and increase the photovoltaic material's exposure to light. "On ...

NYUCN's Dr. Laura Wagner: Study finds accreditation improves safety culture at nursing homes

2012-04-30
Accredited nursing homes report a stronger resident safety culture than nonaccredited facilities, according to a new study published in the May 2012 issue of The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety. The study shows that senior managers at more than 4,000 facilities across the U.S. identify Joint Commission accreditation as a positive influence on patient safety issues such as staffing, teamwork, training, nonpunitive responses to mistakes, and communication openness. The findings that accreditation stimulates positive changes in safety-related organizational ...

Slow-growing babies more likely in normal-weight women; Less common in obese pregnancies

2012-04-30
Obesity during pregnancy puts women at higher risk of a multitude of challenges. But, according to a new study presented earlier this month at the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine annual convention, fetal growth restriction, or the poor growth of a baby while in the mother's womb, is not one of them. In fact, study authors from the University of Rochester Medical Center found that the incidence of fetal growth restriction was lower in obese women when compared to non-obese women. Researchers, led by senior study author and high-risk pregnancy expert Loralei ...

Assembly errors quickly identified

Assembly errors quickly identified
2012-04-30
Today's cars are increasingly custom-built. One customer might want electric windows, heated door mirrors and steering-wheel-mounted stereo controls, while another is satisfied with the minimum basic equipment. The situation with aircraft is no different: each airline is looking for different interior finishes – and lighting, ventilation, seating and monitors are different from one company to the next. Yet the customer's freedom is the manufacturer's challenge: because individual parts and mountings have to be installed in different locations along the fuselage, automated ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

City of Hope study demonstrates proof of concept for targeted new approach to treat pancreatic cancer

Flex appeal: ‘Trade-off’ between armor and efficiency in sea turtle shells

Spray drying tech used in instant coffee applied to high-capacity battery production

Understanding consumer dynamics in community-supported agriculture in Japan

Cannabidiol therapy could reduce symptoms in autistic children and teenagers

Do “completely dark” dark matter halos exist?

In Guatemala, painted altar found at Tikal adds new context to mysterious Maya history

3 schools win NFL PLAY 60 grants to boost student fitness

Urinals without splashback

Even under stress, male-female pairs had each other’s backs

Predictable visual stimuli as an early indicator for autism spectrum disorder in children

AI threats in software development revealed in new study from The University of Texas at San Antonio

Funding to support mental health at work is failing to deliver results

The Lancet: Nearly 500,000 children could die from AIDS-related causes by 2030 without stable PEPFAR programmes, expert policy analysis estimates

Eclipse echoes: groundbreaking study reveals surprising avian vocal patterns during solar eclipse

Mirvie announces results from largest molecular study in pregnancy and clinical validation of simple blood test to predict risk for preeclampsia months before symptoms

Eating only during the daytime could protect people from heart risks of shift work

Discovery of mitochondrial protein by researchers at Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University opens path to therapeutic advances for heart and Alzheimer’s disease

Recognizing the bridge builders between neuroscience and psychiatry

Lactic acid bacteria can improve plant-based dairy alternatives

Public housing smoking ban reduced heart attacks and strokes

Positron emission tomography in psychiatry: Dr. Romina Mizrahi maps the molecular future

Post-trauma drug blocks fear response in female mice, study shows

Trees could be spying on illegal gold mining operations in the Amazon rainforest

Even after a thousand bends, performance remains uncompromised!

Survey: Women’s perceptions of perimenopause

Singapore scientists pioneer non-invasive 3D imaging to transform skin cancer management

Powerful new tool promises major advances in cancer treatment

Inflammation and the brain: how immune activity can alter mood and fuel anxiety

Researchers demonstrate the UK’s first long-distance ultra-secure communication over a quantum network

[Press-News.org] Fruit flies provide new knowledge about uninhibited cell growth