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

Location, location, location: Membrane 'residence' gives proteases novel abilities

Location, location, location: Membrane 'residence' gives proteases novel abilities
2012-11-16
(Press-News.org) Johns Hopkins scientists have discovered a new mode of action for enzymes immersed in cellular membranes. Their experiments suggest that instead of recognizing and clipping proteins based on sequences of amino acids, these proteases' location within membranes gives them the unique ability to recognize and cut proteins with unstable structures.

In a report published online Nov. 13 in the new journal eLife, the Johns Hopkins scientists say their study results are the first to shed light on how these enzymes make use of their native environment to function. The particular "cellular scissors" that they studied, known as rhomboid proteases, are unusual among proteases because they cut their target proteins from inside cellular membranes. And because these and other membrane proteases have roles to play in everything from malaria to Parkinson's disease, uncovering their "inside" work could have profound implications for human health, the scientists note.

"The evolution of these proteases, which are found in all types of living organisms, gave cells a whole new set of tools for regulating biology," says principal investigator Sinisa Urban, Ph.D., associate professor of molecular biology and genetics at the Institute for Basic Biomedical Sciences at Johns Hopkins.

Proteases cut proteins for many reasons. The stomach relies on them to indiscriminately break down and digest various proteins people eat. Other proteases are more specialized and help regulate the immune system, for example. Each of these specialized proteases recognizes only specific protein "clients" and only cuts its clients at one specific site.

"Until we did this work, it was thought that specialized proteases decided which proteins to cut based on the presence or absence of a specific sequence of amino acids they recognized," says Urban. "But while most proteases work in watery environments, rhomboid proteases work in oily membranes. Their unique environment suggested to us that they may also have unique properties within the cell."

Urban notes that rhomboid proteases are like barrels with a gate that only allows certain proteins inside. Once proteins get past the gate, they interact with the "scissors" inside the barrel and get clipped and released.

For their research, Urban and his team analyzed the activity of rhomboid proteases in microscopic gel-like droplets, which are traditionally used as substitutes for cell membranes, but which are incomplete imitations. To more thoroughly assess the role of the protease's environment in its function, they also developed ways to reassemble rhomboid proteases and their clients in real cell membranes. This allowed them to use cutting-edge biophysical techniques to compare how the enzymes and clients behaved in real membranes versus membrane substitutes.

They report that rhomboid proteases allow more proteins through their gates – and cut them at different places – when they are in the gel than when they are in the membrane. "That told us that these proteases are less accurate in recognizing which proteins to cut in the artificial environment than in their natural one," says Urban. "The membrane clearly helps to keep the gate from swinging open and letting unnatural sites to be cut."

The researchers then took a series of different proteins and changed their makeups in a variety of ways to see which ones the rhomboid proteases could cut in living cells. By analyzing dozens of individual changes to various proteins, they found that specific sequences were not the main thing that determined which proteins were cut. Instead, the key factor was whether the protein target was unstable in a watery environment.

Urban explains that when a protein contains a segment that crosses the viscous, oily cell membrane, that segment takes on a curly cue shape, like a slinky, even if it's floppy and shapeless outside the membrane in a watery environment. "Rhomboid proteases have watery inner chambers. If the slinky shape falls apart inside, the protein gets cut. If the slinky shape remains intact, it doesn't get cut."

This insight, says Urban, opens possibilities for better understanding several diseases and ultimately for developing treatments. For example, he says, the protein that builds up in the brain of Alzheimer's patients is a target for another type of membrane-resident protease that isn't well understood either.



INFORMATION:

Co-authors of the report are Syed Moin and Sinisa Urban from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

The research was supported by grants from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (AI066025) and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

On the Web:

Link to article: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.00173.002

Urban Lab: http://www.mbg.jhmi.edu/Pages/people/profile.aspx?PID=193

Urban HHMI page: http://www.hhmi.org/research/ecs/urban_bio.html

Media Contacts: Catherine Kolf; 443-287-2251; ckolf@jhmi.edu

Vanessa McMains; 410-502-9410; vmcmain1@jhmi.edu

Shawna Williams; 410-955-8236; shawna@jhmi.edu


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Location, location, location: Membrane 'residence' gives proteases novel abilities

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study offers clues to cause of kids' brain tumors

2012-11-16
Insights from a genetic condition that causes brain cancer are helping scientists better understand the most common type of brain tumor in children. In new research, scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have identified a cell growth pathway that is unusually active in pediatric brain tumors known as gliomas. They previously identified the same growth pathway as a critical contributor to brain tumor formation and growth in neurofibromatosis-1 (NF1), an inherited cancer predisposition syndrome. "This suggests that the tools we've been developing ...

Himalayan glaciers will shrink even if temperatures hold steady

2012-11-16
Come rain or shine (or even snow), some glaciers of the Himalayas will continue shrinking for many years to come. The forecast by Brigham Young University geology professor Summer Rupper comes after her research on Bhutan, a region in the bull's-eye of the monsoonal Himalayas. Published in Geophysical Research Letters, Rupper's most conservative findings indicate that even if climate remained steady, almost 10 percent of Bhutan's glaciers would vanish within the next few decades. What's more, the amount of melt water coming off these glaciers could drop by 30 percent. Rupper ...

Fetus suffers when mother lacks vitamin C

2012-11-16
Maternal vitamin C deficiency during pregnancy can have serious consequences for the foetal brain. And once brain damage has occurred, it cannot be reversed by vitamin C supplements after birth. This is shown through new research at the University of Copenhagen just published in the scientific journal PLOS ONE. Population studies show that between 10-20 per cent of all adults in the developed world suffer from vitamin C deficiency. Therefore, pregnant women should think twice about omitting the daily vitamin pill. "Even marginal vitamin C deficiency in the mother stunts ...

Children who swim start smarter

2012-11-16
Children who learn how to swim at a young age are reaching many developmental milestones earlier than the norm. Researchers from the Griffith Institute for Educational Research surveyed parents of 7000 under-fives from Australia, New Zealand and the US over three years. A further 180 children aged 3, 4 and 5 years have been involved in intensive testing, making it the world's most comprehensive study into early-years swimming. Lead researcher Professor Robyn Jorgensen says the study shows young children who participate in early-years swimming achieve a wide range ...

Into the magnetic resonance scanner with a cuddly toy

2012-11-16
For the first time, Bochum clinicians have been able to show on the basis of a large sample, that it is possible to examine children's heads in the MRI scanner without general anaesthesia or other medical sedation. In many cases it was sufficient to prepare the young patients for the examination in an age-appropriate manner in order to take away their fear of the tube. And the results speak for themselves: of the 2461 image sequences recorded with 326 patients, the participating radiologists classified 97 percent as "diagnostically relevant". At the same time, through his ...

Improving quality of life for the bedridden

2012-11-16
The skin is the most versatile of our organs: It protects the body from environmental effects, contributes to the body's immune system and supports metabolic functions such as breathing. The skin is always in action. Lack of movement is anathema to it. If a patient does not move, the ever higher moisture levels, pressure and effects of gravity lead to circulatory disorders. This increases the amount of toxic tissue, resulting in ulcers which can lead to life-threatening complications. This affects two groups of patients in particular: the elderly and paraplegics. There ...

GOCE's second mission improving gravity map

2012-11-16
ESA's GOCE gravity satellite has already delivered the most accurate gravity map of Earth, but its orbit is now being lowered in order to obtain even better results. The Gravity field and steady-state Ocean Circulation Explorer (GOCE) has been orbiting Earth since March 2009, reaching its ambitious objective to map our planet's gravity with unrivalled precision. Although the planned mission has been completed, the fuel consumption was much lower than anticipated because of the low solar activity over the last two years. This has enabled ESA to extend GOCE's life, improving ...

Fear of the dentist is passed on to children by their parents

2012-11-16
Fear of visiting the dentist is a frequent problem in paediatric dentistry. A new study confirms the emotional transmission of dentist fear among family members and analyses the different roles that mothers and fathers might play. A new study conducted by scientists at the Rey Juan Carlos University of Madrid highlights the important role that parents play in the transmission of dentist fear in their family. Previous studies had already identified the association between the fear levels of parents and their children, but they never explored the different roles that ...

Important progress for spintronics

Important progress for spintronics
2012-11-16
A fundamental cornerstone for spintronics that has been missing up until now has been constructed by a team of physicists at Linköping University in Sweden. It's the world's first spin amplifier that can be used at room temperature. Great hopes have been placed on spintronics as the next big paradigm shift in the field of electronics. Spintronics combines microelectronics, which is built on the charge of electrons, with the magnetism that originates in the electrons' spin. This lays the foundation for entirely new applications that fire the imagination. The word "spin" ...

Melt water on Mars could sustain life

2012-11-16
Near surface water has shaped the landscape of Mars. Areas of the planet's northern and southern hemispheres have alternately thawed and frozen in recent geologic history and comprise striking similarities to the landscape of Svalbard. This suggests that water has played a more extensive role than previously envisioned, and that environments capable of sustaining life could exist, according to new research from the University of Gothenburg, Sweden. Mars is a changing planet, and in recent geological time repeated freeze and thaw cycles has played a greater role than expected ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Bacterial cellulose promotes plant tissue regeneration

Biohybrid hand gestures with human muscles

Diabetes can drive the evolution of antibiotic resistance

ChatGPT has the potential to improve psychotherapeutic processes

Prioritise vaccine boosters for vulnerable immunocompromised patients and prevent emergence of new COVID variants, say scientists

California's most economically and culturally important species among those most vulnerable to projected climate change

Scientists develop novel self-healing electronic skin for health monitoring

Models show intensifying wildfires in a warming world due to changes in vegetation and humidity; only a minor role for lightning

Unraveling the complex role of climate in dengue dynamics

INSEAD celebrates five years of impact in North America during its second Americas Conference 2025

MAGE-4 promotes tumor progression by halting antitumor responses

Economically, culturally important marine species vulnerable to changing climate, new study shows

Tennessee professor receives SAEA Emerging Scholar Award

Sea turtles’ secret GPS: researchers uncover how sea turtles learn locations using Earth's magnetic field

Mayo Clinic researchers and surgeons test virtual reality to calm presurgery jitters

Mothers with incarcerated children shoulder emotional and financial burdens

Adults can learn absolute pitch: new research challenges long-held musical belief

Loneliness and social isolation linked to increased risk of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, study finds

Exotic observations with neutrons at the ILL

Scientists discover new gene-to-gene interaction increasing risk of alopecia

Chinese scientists find key genes to fight against crop parasites

Lung cancer cells can go ‘off grid’

An RNA inhibitor may effectively reduce a high-risk type of cholesterol in patients with cardiovascular disease

Research spotlight: Mapping lesions that cause psychosis to a human brain circuit and proposed stimulation target

New study identifies brain region that can prevent aggressive social behavior and induce pro social behavior

Telehealth may be closing the care gap for people with substance use disorder in rural areas

Stronger, safer, smarter: pioneering Zinc-based dissolvable implants for bone repair

Could peripheral neuropathy be stopped before it starts?

China Jurassic fossil discovery sheds light on bird origin

Long-term yogurt consumption tied to decreased incidence of certain types of colorectal cancer

[Press-News.org] Location, location, location: Membrane 'residence' gives proteases novel abilities