(Press-News.org) ONCOLOGY
Understanding colon cancer metastasis and invasion | Back to top
Chemokines are signals in the body that act as beacons, calling out to migrating cells, such as white blood cells, guiding them to where they are needed. One chemokine in particular, Chemokine 25 (CCL25), binds to Chemokine Receptor 9 (CCR9), forming a signaling pathway that is important in the small intestine and colon, where it regulates immune response and decreases cell death. Drs. Steven Lipkin, Xiling Shen, and colleagues at Cornell University have discovered that the CCL25-CCR9 pathway also has an unexpected role— inhibiting colon cancer metastasis and invasion. They found that CCR9 was highly abundant in early stage colon cancer but surprisingly lacking in invasive and metastatic cancer, suggesting a role for this receptor in reducing the spread of colon cancer. By blocking this pathway in early stage cancer cells, they showed that tumor formation within the small intestine/colon was inhibited, but metastasis and invasion were increased. Furthermore, they found that activation of a second pathway called NOTCH, known to stimulate metastasis and invasion, promotes the degradation of CCR9, thus inhibiting the actions of its binding partner CCL25. This discovery sheds light on how colon cancer progresses and metastasizes.
TITLE:
Chemokine 25–induced signaling suppresses colon cancer invasion and metastasis
AUTHOR CONTACT:
Steven Lipkin
Weill Cornell College of Medicine, New York, NY, USA
Phone: 2127747160; E-mail: stl2012@med.cornell.edu
View this article at: http://www.jci.org/articles/view/62110?key=ec3038b0ac205857d679
NEUROLOGICAL DISEASE
Identifying a new target for ALS treatment | Back to top
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressive disease wherein the cells of the central nervous system (CNS) involved in movement and coordination are destroyed. Although the mechanism of ALS is not completely understood, inflammation is believed to play a role in the disease process. A recent study by Howard Weiner and colleagues at Harvard Medical School and Tufts School of Medicine investigated the role of inflammation in a mouse model of ALS. Weiner and colleagues found that the recruitment of activated immune cells known as monocytes into the spinal cord correlated with increased CNS cell death, and this recruitment was mediated by high expression of the chemoattractant protein CCL2 by resident spinal cord-derived immune cells. Antibody-mediated depletion of the monocyte population reduced cellular recruitment to the spinal cord, decreased CNS cell death, and extended survival time in the mice. The analogous monocyte population in humans with ALS exhibited a similar inflammatory signature to the ALS model mice, suggesting that this cell population could serve as a marker of disease progression in human ALS patients. Thus, these results identify an inflammatory monocyte population as a potential therapeutic target for ALS.
TITLE:
Modulating inflammatory monocytes with a unique microRNA signature ameliorates murine ALS
AUTHOR CONTACT:
Howard L. Weiner
Brigham and Women's Hospital/Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA
Phone: 617-525-5300; Fax: 617-525-5252; E-mail: hweiner@rics.bwh.harvard.edu
View this article at: http://www.jci.org/articles/view/62636?key=c072141c367825b44d9b
HEPATOLOGY
Abnormal chromosome count may protect liver cells from injury | Back to top
The majority of liver cells contain an abnormal number of chromosomes, but these cells still retain their ability to divide. Researchers have long puzzled over why liver cells have unusual chromosome numbers, a state known as aneuploidy, and whether this genetic variation provides some benefit. To test whether aneuploidy protect liver cells agains liver injury, Andrew Duncan and colleagues at the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania examined a mouse model of liver disease caused by deficiency of fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase (Fah). They knew that if these mice acquire a second mutation in proteins that regulate FAH, these mutations provide a selective advantage and protect from liver damage. To determine whether aneuploidy might contribute to these protective mutations, the Duncan team analyzed chromosomes from the mice. They found a striking prevalence in aneuploidy that lead to protective mutations in all mice that became completely resistant to liver injury. Their results suggest that the selection of a specific aneuploid mutations can result in the adaptation of liver cells to chronic liver injury.
TITLE:
Aneuploidy as a mechanism for stress-induced liver adaptation
AUTHOR CONTACT:
Andrew Duncan
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Phone: 412-624-5302; Fax: 412-624-5-5363; E-mail: duncana@pitt.edu
View this article at: http://www.jci.org/articles/view/64026?key=aa7f5f5ac5d39431b384
METABOLISM
Natural killer T cells in adipose tissue prevent insulin resistance | Back to top
A high fat diet can lead to lipid overload and disfunction of fat cells (adipocytes), which can eventually lead to insulin resistance. A specialized population of immune cells known as invariant natural killer T cells (iNKT cells) have been proposed to contribute to lipid overload and insulin resistance in response to high fat diet, but the role of these cells in insulin resistance remains somewhat unclear. Dr. Marianne Boes and colleagues at UMC Utrecht in the Netherlands sought to examine the role of iNKT cells in insulin resistance in the absence of a high fat diet. They found that low fat diet-fed mice lacking iNKT cells displayed insulin resistance, but showed no obvious evidence of adipose tissue inflammation. However, these mice were characterized by an increase in the proliferation of adipocytes and dysregulated levels of the endocrine hormones leptin and adiponectin. Their data supports that iNKT cells in adipose tissue promote healthy tissue through direct crosstalk with adipocytes.
TITLE:
Natural killer T cells in adipose tissue prevent insulin resistance
AUTHOR CONTACT:
Marianne Boes
UMC Utrecht, Utrecht, , NLD
Phone: +31633089284; E-mail: mboes@umcutrecht.nl
View this article at: http://www.jci.org/articles/view/62739?key=733445fe8021b9a60221
### END
JCI early table of contents for Aug. 6, 2012
2012-08-06
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Identifying a new target for ALS treatment
2012-08-06
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressive disease wherein the cells of the central nervous system (CNS) involved in movement and coordination are destroyed. Although the mechanism of ALS is not completely understood, inflammation is believed to play a role in the disease process. A recent study by Howard Weiner and colleagues at Harvard Medical School and Tufts School of Medicine investigated the role of inflammation in a mouse model of ALS. Weiner and colleagues found that the recruitment of activated immune cells known as monocytes into the spinal cord correlated ...
Virtual nanoscopy: Like 'Google Earth' for cell biologists
2012-08-06
Just as users of Google Earth can zoom in from space to a view of their own backyard, researchers can now navigate biological tissues from a whole embryo down to its subcellular structures thanks to recent advances in electron microscopy and image processing, as described in The Journal of Cell Biology (JCB). An upgrade to the JCB DataViewer (http://jcb-dataviewer.rupress.org), JCB's browser-based image presentation tool, now also makes these data publicly accessible for exploration and discovery.
Since the early days of cell biology, electron microscopy has revealed ...
Researchers discover blood biomarker for Lou Gehrig's disease, could lead to new treatments
2012-08-06
BOSTON, MA—Researchers from Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) are the first to discover that changes in monocytes (a type of white blood cell) are a biomarker for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), or Lou Gehrig's disease. This finding also brings the medical community a step closer toward a new treatment for the debilitating neurological disease that affects approximately 30,000 Americans.
The study will be published online in The Journal of Clinical Investigation on August 6, 2012.
In pre-clinical studies involving mice with an ALS gene mutation, the researchers ...
The genetic cause of a severe skeletal disease in Brazilian Terrier puppies revealed
2012-08-06
The genetics research group led by Professor Hannes Lohi, based at the University of Helsinki and the Folkhälsan Research Center, has, in collaboration with Adjunct Professor Kirsi Sainio's research group, discovered the cause of a life-threatening skeletal disorder affecting Brazilian Terriers. The disease is caused by a mutation in the GUSB gene. Malfunction of the GUSB gene has previously been linked to a severe skeletal disorder in humans, called type VII mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS VII).
The gene discovery is yet another example of a shared disease heritage between ...
Anti-angina drug shows protective effects from carbon monoxide
2012-08-06
An international research team, led from the University of Leeds, has found that a common anti-angina drug could help protect the heart against carbon monoxide poisoning.
Animal studies have shown that the anti-angina drug ranolazine can significantly reduce the number of deaths from arrhythmias – irregular or abnormally paced heartbeats – that have been triggered by carbon monoxide.
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"When patients are ...
Researchers gain information advantage from surprising quantum source
2012-08-06
New research lends hope that a phenomenon called quantum discord could be harnessed to bring quantum technologies within easier reach than expected. The work, by an international team, is published 5 August in Nature Physics.
Up until a few years ago, researchers thought that realising quantum technologies would mean harnessing the most difficult-to-tame properties of the quantum world. For example, 'entanglement', the phenomenon referred to by Einstein as spooky-action-at-a-distance, was thought to be a resource required to run a quantum computer. This presents a challenge. ...
Taking a hit or 2
2012-08-06
Despite a huge amount of research effort, the molecular mechanisms that underlie the transition from a "normal" cell to a cancerous cell are only poorly understood. After the discovery of the first cancer-causing genes or oncogenes and the finding that they are mutated forms of normal cellular genes, it was widely believed that a single mutation was enough to cause cancer. Subsequent research, however, has revealed that most cancers only develop as a result of several mutations. A bewildering variety of combinations of mutations have been shown to have the potential ...
A KAIST research team has developed a high performance flexible solid state battery
2012-08-06
The team of Professor Keon Jae Lee from the Department of Materials Science and Engineering, KAIST has developed a high performance flexible all-solid-state battery, an essential energy source for flexible displays (see paper in Nano Letters: "Bendable Inorganic Thin-Film Battery for Fully Flexible Electronic Systems").
The technological advance of thin and light flexible display has encouraged the development of flexible batteries with a high power density and thermal stability. Although rechargeable lithium-ion batteries (LIB) have been regarded as a strong candidate ...
Too many Facebook friends bad news for charities
2012-08-06
New research suggests the more friends we have on Facebook, the less likely we are to share information about charitable causes.
Economist Professor Kimberley Scharf, from the Centre for Competitive Advantage in the Global Economy (CAGE) at the University of Warwick, claims when we have larger online social networks, we rely on other people to pass on information about opportunities to give. This phenomenon is called 'free riding'.
Professor Scharf also suggests we may even rely on others to donate. She will present her research paper 'Private Provision of Public Goods ...
Quantum physics: New insights into the remote control of quantum systems
2012-08-06
A fundamental characteristic of quantum physics is the fact that two or more particles can exhibit correlations stronger than classically allowed. This unique characteristic applies particularly to quantum entanglement: as soon as the quantum state of a particle is measured the state of its entangled partner changes accordingly, regardless of how far apart the two entangled particles might be. This feature allows for the remote quantum state preparation, which is an essential ingredient for applications in quantum communication, quantum cryptography, and quantum computation.
The ...