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

UNC team describes novel inflammatory protein function

2012-08-06
(Press-News.org) A UNC-led team of scientists describes the function of a previously uncharacterized protein that dramatically influences inflammation.

A majority of the NLR family of proteins function as activators of inflammation. However, scientists at UNC report that a newly identified NLR protein, NLRC3, was able to inhibit a major inflammatory pathway that is controlled by a protein called NF-Kappa B. NF-Kappa B activation has been long associated with inflammation and cancer promotion. Their article appears in the August 5,2012 online publication of the journal Nature Immunology.

The UNC team previously reported that another NLR family member, NLRP12, was also able to inhibit NF-Kappa B activation. However, in their new study, the team reported that NLRC3 inhibits this major inflammatory pathway through a completely different mechanism. The researchers show that NLRC3 directly interacts with the molecule TRAF6 and forms a novel, previously uncharacterized protein complex described as a 'TRAFasome'. TRAF6 is a key regulator of NF-kappaB and is a critical step in the regulation of inflammation.

In pre-clinical models, the team was able to show that NLRC3 and the formation of the TRAFasome was important in regulating the immune response during endotoxic shock, a serious hyperinflammatory process typically associated with severe infection.

Monika, Scheneider, first author of the paper and a postdoctoral research associate at UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, explains, "Our research reveals greater insight into the mechanisms controlling inflammation and identifies potential therapeutic targets."

###Schneider is in the laboratory of Jenny Ting, PhD, UNC Alumni Distinguished Professor of Microbiology and Immunology and director of the Inflammation center at UNC. Ting is a pioneer in the understanding of the NLR family of proteins. She is co-leader of UNC Lineberger's Immunology Program and senior author of the Nature Immunology paper.

Other UNC-based authors are: Albert Zimmermann, PhD;Reid Roberts, MD/PhD graduate student; Lu Zhang, PhD graduate student; Karen Swanson, PhD; Haitao Wen, PhD; Irving C. Allen, PhD; Timothy Eitas, PhD; and Beverly Koller, PhD. Other authors formerly at UNC: Beckley Davis, PhD; Eda Holl, PhD; Zhengmao Ye, PhD; Adeeb Rahman,PhD; and Brian Conti,PhD.

Funding for the study was provided by the National Institutes of Health: R37-AI029564, U54-AI057157, U19-AI1077437 and T32-AR007416.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Research links extreme summer heat events to global warming

2012-08-06
VIDEO: This visualization shows a flat map of the Earth with summertime temperature anomalies for the Northern Hemisphere. This analysis compares observed seasonal mean temperatures (June-July-August) to the seasonal mean temperatures... Click here for more information. A new statistical analysis by NASA scientists has found that Earth's land areas have become much more likely to experience an extreme summer heat wave than they were in the middle of the 20th century. The research ...

UK riots 2011: Holding media to account after the riots

2012-08-06
News outlets need to be held to account for their coverage of the English riots, a new report has argued. Media and the Riots: A Call for Action, published today on the first anniversary of the riots, is the first report to examine the impact of the mainstream print and broadcast media's reporting on the communities most affected. The report, written by Dr Leah Bassel of the University of Leicester's Department of Sociology, reflects the views of those who attended the Media and the Riots conference held by the Citizen Journalism Educational Trust and citizen journalism ...

Vaginal delivery as safe as cesarean for most early preterm births

2012-08-06
Philadelphia, PA, August 6, 2012 – Vaginal delivery for early preterm fetuses presenting head first, or vertex presentation, had a high rate of success with no difference in neonatal mortality compared to cesarean delivery, a new study published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology reports. For breech births, however, the failure rate of vaginal delivery was high and planned cesarean delivery was associated with significantly lower neonatal mortality. "Selecting a route of delivery at less than 32 weeks' gestation is a difficult clinical decision given ...

Tale of 2 scientific fields -- ecology and phylogenetics -- offers new views of Earth's biodiversity

Tale of 2 scientific fields -- ecology and phylogenetics -- offers new views of Earths biodiversity
2012-08-06
Patterns in nature are in everything from ocean currents to a flower's petal. Scientists are taking a new look at Earth patterns, studying the biodiversity of yard plants in the U.S. and that of desert mammals in Israel, studying where flowers and bees live on the Tibetan plateau and how willow trees in America's Midwest make use of water. They're finding that ecology, the study of relationships between living organisms and their environment, and phylogenetics, research on evolutionary relationships among groups of organisms, are inextricably intertwined. Results ...

Seeing through walls: Laser system reconstructs objects hidden from sight

Seeing through walls: Laser system reconstructs objects hidden from sight
2012-08-06
WASHINGTON, Aug. 6, 2012—Inspired by the erratic behavior of photons zooming around and bouncing off objects and walls inside a room, researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Harvard University, the University of Wisconsin, and Rice University combined these bouncing photons with advanced optics to enable them to "see" what's hidden around the corner. This technique, described in a paper published today in the Optical Society's (OSA (http://www.osa.org)) open-access journal Optics Express (http://www.opticsinfobase.org/oe), may one day prove invaluable ...

Vanderbilt researchers find proteins may point way to new prostate cancer drug targets

Vanderbilt researchers find proteins may point way to new prostate cancer drug targets
2012-08-06
Two proteins that act in opposing directions – one that promotes cancer and one that suppresses cancer — regulate the same set of genes in prostate cancer, Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center researchers have found. The findings, reported recently in the Journal of Clinical Investigation, point toward potential drug targets and prognostic markers for prostate cancer. "We are trying to understand the molecular genetics of prostate cancer: what are the genes that are altered in human prostate cancer, and very importantly, how do they lead to cancer when they are changed?" ...

New Hampshire leads nation in percent tree cover

2012-08-06
SYRACUSE. N.Y, August 6, 2012 – Tree cover in the nation's Lower 48 states covers 659 million acres, more than one-third of the nation, according to a U.S. Forest Service study of national tree cover and impervious surfaces. New Hampshire leads the nation in percent tree cover (89 percent), followed by Maine (83 percent) and Vermont (82 percent). On the other end of the spectrum, North Dakota has the lowest percent tree cover (3 percent), followed by Nebraska (4 percent) and South Dakota (6 percent). Using aerial photograph interpretation of circa 2005 imagery, U.S. ...

A new line of defense: Researchers find cattle vaccine works to reduce E. coli O157:H7

2012-08-06
MANHATTAN, KAN. -- A commercial vaccine for cattle can effectively reduce levels of E. coli by more than 50 percent, a Kansas State University study has found. The vaccine is also effective using two doses instead of the recommended three doses, which can help cut costs for the beef industry. David Renter, associate professor of epidemiology, is the principal investigator on a project that researched the effectiveness of products used to prevent the shedding of E. coli O157:H7 in cattle. The research appears in a recent online version of the journal Vaccine and helps ...

New approaches needed for uncovering, identifying, and treating buried chemical warfare material

2012-08-06
WASHINGTON — The current approach for identifying and destroying buried chemical munitions and related chemical warfare materials uncovered during environmental remediation projects is neither reliable enough nor has the capability to efficiently tackle large-scale projects, says a new report from the National Research Council. An alternative or modified approach is needed to remediate the Redstone Arsenal and other such projects on active and former U.S. Department of Defense sites and ranges. Additionally, the report recommends that the Office of the Secretary of Defense ...

Off-label drug use common, but patients may not know they're taking them, Mayo finds

2012-08-06
Aug. 6, 2012 ROCHESTER, Minn. -- Many people have probably heard of off-label drug use, but they may not know when that applies to prescriptions they are taking, a Mayo Clinic analysis found. Off-label drug use occurs when a physician prescribes medication to treat a condition before that use has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration. In a newly published article in Mayo Clinic Proceedings, researchers pose and answer 10 questions about off-label drug use. "Since the Food and Drug Administration does not regulate the practice of medicine, off-label drug ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Public and community engagement key to enhancing urban living conditions and environmental decision making in China, study says

Bagheri to leverage recycled polyurethane foam for real-world applications

Seeing a black hole's jet in a new light

Experienced research leader tapped as CEO of Upstate New York Energy Storage Engine led by Binghamton University

Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University awarded nearly $1 million in PCORI funding to improve antibiotic prescribing for childhood respiratory infections

A new chemistry for CRISPR

Giant clam declared critically endangered after the latest assessment

DOE awards $12 million to expand marine energy initiatives at Lehigh and partner universities

Pythons can swallow even bigger prey than scientists realized

Evidence mounts for dark energy from black holes

AI might scare us, but can we scare it?

Early intervention in patients with asymptomatic severe aortic stenosis and myocardial fibrosis

Rutgers receives $3.3 million federal grant to recruit counselors for high-need schools

Bovine H5N1 influenza from infected worker transmissible and lethal in animal models

Marzougui & Kan receive funding for crash testing

Global leaders in the fight against cancer gathered in Washington, DC on October 18, 2024, for the NFCR Global Summit and Award Ceremonies for Cancer Research & Entrepreneurship

New research highlights economic and employment challenges for parents of medically complex babies

Prenatal cannabis exposure and executive function and aggressive behavior at age 5

BMI and postacute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection in children and young adults

Cannabis use during pregnancy can impact thinking and learning skills, increase aggression among children, study shows

Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia researchers discover underlying mechanisms that make CRISPR an effective gene editing tool

Age-period-cohort analysis of cutaneous malignant melanoma incidence in the United States from 1987 to 2016

NCCN Cancer Center study demonstrates usability of Health Equity Report Card (HERC) tool for driving fair access to care

SwRI adds new chamber for spacecraft-related EMC, EMI testing

Molecular profiling using next-generation sequencing of sufficient endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle aspiration and liquid biopsy samples in patients with advanced lung cancer

Case Western Reserve University awarded $2.6 million to study impact of high blood-pressure medications on chronic kidney disease patients

Dramatic drop in marijuana use among U.S. youth over a decade: (2011 to 2021)

Exploring unlabeled data for enhanced semi-supervised MRI segmentation

Inhaled reliever therapies for asthma

Thin skin significantly blunts injury from puncture, study finds

[Press-News.org] UNC team describes novel inflammatory protein function