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

Master gene affects neurons that govern breathing at birth and in adulthood

2012-09-06
(Press-News.org) HOUSTON - (Sept. 7, 2012) – When mice are born lacking the master gene Atoh1, none breathe well and all die in the newborn period. Why and how this occurs could provide new answers about sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), but the solution has remained elusive until now.

Research led by Baylor College of Medicine and the Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute at Texas Children's Hospital demonstrates that when the gene is lacking in a special population of neurons called RTN (retrotrapezoid nucleus), roughly half the young mice die at birth. Those who survive are less likely to respond to excess levels of carbon dioxide as adults. A report of their work appears online in the journal Neuron.

"The death of mice at birth clued us in that Atoh1 must be needed for the function of some neurons critical for neonatal breathing, so we set out to define these neurons," said Dr. Huda Zoghbi, senior author of the report and director of the Neurological Research Institute and a professor of molecular and human genetics, neuroscience, neurology and pediatrics at BCM. Zoghbi is also a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator.

"We took a genetic approach to find the critical neurons," said Wei-Hsiang Huang, a graduate student in the Program in Developmental Biology at BCM who works in Zoghbi's laboratory. With careful studies to "knockout" the activity of the gene in a narrower and narrower area in the brain, they slowly eliminated possible neurons to determine that loss of Atoh1 in the RTN neurons was the source of the problem.

"Discovering that Atoh1 is indeed critical for the RTN neurons to take their right place in the brainstem and connect with the breathing center helped us uncover why they are important for neonatal breathing," said Zoghbi.

"This population of neurons resides in the ventral brainstem," said Huang. "When there is a change in the makeup of the blood (lack of oxygen or buildup of carbon dioxide), the RTN neurons sense that and tell the body to change the way it breathes." A defect in these neurons can disrupt this response.

"Without Atoh1 the mice have significant breathing problems because they do not automatically adjust their breathing to decrease carbon dioxide and oxygenate the blood," he said.

It turns out the findings from this mouse study are relevant to human studies.

"A paper just published reports that developmental abnormalities in the RTN neurons of children with sudden infant death syndrome or sudden unexplained intrauterine death may be linked to altered ventilatory response to carbon dioxide", said Huang (Lavezzi, A.M., et al., Developmental alterations of the respiratory human retrotrapezoid nucleus in sudden unexplained fetal and infant death, Auton. Neurosci. (2012), doi:10.1016/j.autneu.2012.06.005).

INFORMATION: Others who took part in this work include, Teng-Wei Huang, Christopher S. Ward, Jeffrey Neul and Tiemo J. Klisch, all of BCM; Srinivasan Tupal and Paul A. Gray of Washington University School of Medicine.

Funding for this work came from the American Heart Association Southwest Affiliate, a National Institutes of Health Ruth L. Kirstein Research Service Award, the Baylor College of Medicine Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Center, the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas, the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

For more information on basic science at Baylor College of Medicine, please go to www.bcm.edu/fromthelab.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Scientists create germ cell-supporting embryonic Sertoli-like cells from skin cells

2012-09-06
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (September 6, 2012) – Using a stepwise trans-differentiation process, Whitehead Institute researchers have turned skin cells into embryonic Sertoli-like cells. The main role of mature Sertoli cells is to provide support and nutrition to the developing sperm cells. Furthermore, Sertoli cells have been demonstrated to possess trophic properties, which have been utilized for the protection of non-testicular cellular grafts in transplantations. However, mature Sertoli cells are mitotically inactive, and the primary immature Sertoli cells during prolonged ...

Wild bees: Champions for food security and protecting our biodiversity

Wild bees: Champions for food security and protecting our biodiversity
2012-09-06
Pollinating insects contribute to agricultural production in 150 (84%) European crops. These crops depend partly or entirely upon insects for their pollination and yield. The value of insect pollinators is estimated to be €22 billion a year in Europe. Declines in managed pollinators, such as honeybees, and wild pollinator such bumblebees, solitary bees and hoverflies, are therefore of growing concern as we need to protect food production and the maintain wildflower diversity. Scientists involved in STEP, a large-scale project funded by the 7th Framework Program (FP7) ...

Study: Married lung cancer patients survive longer than single patients after treatment

2012-09-06
CHICAGO – Sept. 6, 2012. Married patients with locally advanced lung cancer are likely to survive longer after treatment than patients who are single, according to a study by researchers at the University of Maryland Marlene and Stewart Greenebaum Cancer Center in Baltimore. The results of the retrospective study are being presented at the 2012 Chicago Multidisciplinary Symposium in Thoracic Oncology. The University of Maryland researchers studied 168 patients with Stage III non-small cell lung cancer, the most common type of lung cancer, who were treated with chemotherapy ...

New research: Soluble corn fiber plays important role in gut health and calcium absorption

2012-09-06
Chicago – (Sept. 6, 2012) – Savvy consumers and health professionals know that fibre is an essential nutrient associated with important health benefits, yet barriers such as overall poor tolerance to higher-fibre diets may be why average intake is far less than experts recommend (1). Two new research studies supported by Tate & Lyle, the global provider of specialty food ingredients and solutions, provide further evidence that certain higher-fibre diets can in fact be well-tolerated, and that fibre may play an important role in supporting a healthy gut as well as promoting ...

Breast cancer screening saves lives, new study shows

2012-09-06
The study, published today in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers and Prevention is the largest of its kind in Australia and one of the largest in the world. It followed about 4,000 women in a study of the BreastScreen program in Western Australia. University of Melbourne Research Fellow Dr Carolyn Nickson and colleagues from the Melbourne School of Population Health said the findings reaffirmed the importance and efficacy of mammography. The study focused on women aged 50-69 years, who are in the target age range for screening. It included 427 cases where women had died ...

Chikyu sets a new world drilling-depth record of scientific ocean drilling

Chikyu sets a new world drilling-depth record of scientific ocean drilling
2012-09-06
Off Hachinohe, Japan—Scientific deep sea drilling vessel Chikyu sets a world new record by drilling down and obtains rock samples from deeper than 2,111 meters below the seafloor off Shimokita Peninsula of Japan in the northwest Pacific Ocean. The Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC), the implementing organization for scientific expedition aboard the Chikyu, announced this achievement on 6th September, 2012. Chikyu made this achievement during the Deep Coalbed Biosphere expedition, Expedition 337, conducted within the framework of an international ...

Almost 1 in 5 young children with cancer suffers from a trauma disorder

2012-09-06
People who suffer from posttraumatic stress disorder relive their traumatic experiences in the form of flashbacks and nightmares – and in childhood, also in traumatic plays during which they re-enact the experience over and over again. They avoid stimuli that remind them of the trauma or suffer from vegetative hyperarousal such as insomnia, hypervigilance or concentration problems. For the first time, researchers from the University of Zurich and the University Children's Hospital Zurich now show that infants and toddlers can also develop posttraumatic stress disorder in ...

Joint EACPR and AHA statement empowers health care professional to use Clinical Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing

2012-09-06
Sophia Antipolis, 6 September 2012: The European Association for Cardiovascular Prevention and Rehabilitation (EACPR), a registered branch of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC), and the American Heart Association (AHA) have today issued a joint scientific statement http://eurheartj.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2012/08/24/eurheartj.ehs221.short?rss=1 that sets out to produce easy-to-follow guidance on Clinical Cardiopulmonary Exercise (CPX) testing based on current scientific evidence. The document, which has been published simultaneously online in the European ...

Family literacy project exceeds expectations

2012-09-06
A unique approach to early literacy work with families where children develop their language skills and their ability to read and write from an early age has had a huge success. Researchers from the University of Sheffield funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) initially planned to use the approach with around 60 families, but discovered that around 6,000 had actually benefited from their work. Professor Cathy Nutbrown of the University of Sheffield, who led the project, shared her approach to family literacy with Early Years practitioners including ...

Advanced maternal age not harmful for adult children

Advanced maternal age not harmful for adult children
2012-09-06
This press release is available in German. It had been thought that mothers delivering later in life have children that are less healthy as adults, because the body of the mother had already degenerated due to physiological effects like decreasing oocyte quality or a weakened placenta. In fact, what affects the health of the grown-up children is not the age of their mother but her education and the number of years she survives after giving birth and thus spends with her offspring. This is the conclusion of a new study by Mikko Myrskylä from the Max Planck Institute for ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

DNA origami guides new possibilities in the fight against pancreatic cancer

PREPSOIL launches assessment tool for soil living lab and lighthouse initiatives

Lebanon crisis driving parents to seek unregulated “shadow” education, study shows

The AGA Research Foundation awards $2.4 million in digestive health research funding

A repurposed anti-inflammatory drug may help treat alcohol use disorder and related pain

Obesity disrupts “reaction time” to starvation in mice

Listening to an avatar makes you more likely to gamble

Facial expressions of avatars promote risky decision-making

PREPSOIL Final Event: Facilitating the deployment of the Mission Soil across European regions

Politecnico di Milano: a study in Earth’s future on agrivoltaics reducing the competition between food and energy

Listeners use gestures to predict upcoming words

An AI tool grounded in evidence-based medicine outperformed other AI tools — and most doctors — on USMLE exams

Adolescents who sleep longer perform better at cognitive tasks

A ‘dopamine detox’ is too simplistic, new study finds

Alcohol use and abusive or neglectful behaviors among family caregivers of patients with dementia

Childhood exposure to air pollution, BMI trajectories and insulin resistance among young adults

JMIR Aging launches new section focused on advance care planning for older adults

Astronomers discover a planet that’s rapidly disintegrating, producing a comet-like tail

Study reveals gaps in flu treatment for high-risk adults

Oil cleanup agents do not impede natural biodegradation

AI algorithm can help identify high-risk heart patients to quickly diagnose, expedite, and improve care

Telemedicine had an impact on carbon emissions equivalent to reducing up to 130,000 car trips each month in 2023

Journalist David Zweig analyzes American schools, the virus, and a story of bad decisions

Endocrine Society names Tena-Sempere as next Editor-in-Chief of Endocrinology

Three-dimensional gene hubs may promote brain cancer

Liquid biopsy: A breakthrough technology in early cancer screening

Soaring insurance costs top concern for Floridians, FAU survey finds

In US, saving money is top reason to embrace solar power

Antibiotic pollution in rivers

Join the nation of lifesavers at NFL draft in Green Bay

[Press-News.org] Master gene affects neurons that govern breathing at birth and in adulthood