 |
Journal of scientists, physicists, mathematicians, engineers, inventors, nature, biology, technology, animal kingdoms, and science projects.
Home
ANC News
Animals
Biographies
Biology
Chemistry
Environment
Free Updates
General Science
Headlines
Human Body
Inventors
Kids to 12
Physics
Questions& Answers
Quantum
Resources
Projects & Experiments
Science@NASA
Submission Guideline
Tables
Technology
US Geological Survey
If you have questions concerning this website, contact webmaster@light-science.com
| Carl Sagan's COSMOS is one of the most influential science programs ever made.
Strange Science. Rocky road to biology and paleontology.
Genetic Science Learning Center. Resources for students, teachers, and families.
The Biology Project. Kids corner of interactive lessons with lesson plans by teachers.
College Physics for Students of Biology and Chemistry. Textbook with Java applets.
Biology Online. Dictionary and tutorials online.
|
 |
 |
CELLULAR PATHWAY CONTAINS A 'CLOCK' THAT STEERS GENE ACTIVITY:
Understanding the Timed Messages Within Cells Could Lead to New
Medical
by Johns Hopkins University
Researchers from The Johns Hopkins University and other institutions
have
discovered a biochemical "clock" that appears to play a
crucial role in the
way information is sent from the surface of a cell to its nucleus.
These
messages can cause the cell to thrive or commit suicide, and
manipulating
them could lead to new treatments for cancer and other diseases, the
researchers say.
The findings, based on lab experiments conducted at Cal Tech and
computer
models developed at Johns Hopkins, are reported in the Nov. 8 issue
of the
journal "Science."
Scientists have known that living cells send messages from their
surfaces
to their nuclei by setting off a chain of chemical reactions that
pass the
information along like signals traveling over a telephone wire. Such
reaction chains are called signaling pathways. But while studying one
such
reaction chain called the NF-kappaB pathway within mouse cells, the
university researchers learned that the signal transmission process
is even
more complicated.
"We found that if the pathway was activated for a short time, a
single
pulse of activity was delivered to the nucleus, like a single tick of
a
clock, activating a set of genes," said Andre Levchenko,
assistant
professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Johns
Hopkins.
"But longer activation could produce more pulses and induce a
larger gene
set. We believe that the timing between pulses is critical. If too
much or
too little time elapsed, the genetic machinery would not respond
properly."
Levchenko, a lead author on the "Science" paper, and his
colleagues
concluded that the signaling pathway inside a cell was serving as
much more
than a simple wire. "It was not just carrying the information,
it was
processing it," he said. "The pathway was operating like a
clock with a
pendulum, delivering the signal at particular intervals of time in a
way
that could resonate with the behavior of the genes in the
nucleus."

When information moves through a cell pathway to genes in the
nucleus, it
prompts the genes to send out their own instructions, directing the
cell to
assemble proteins to carry out various tasks. By developing a better
understanding of the way information travels along a pathway,
Levchenko
said, researchers may be able to create drugs that disrupt or change
this
line of communication, and in turn affect overall functioning within
the
cell. For example, a drug designed to shut down the NF-kappaB pathway
might
cause a cancer cell to commit suicide through a biological process
called
apoptosis. "We know that cancer cells use this pathway," he
said. "If we
can find a smart way to cut this 'wire,' it will be much easier to
kill the
cancer cells."
Levchenko and his colleagues made their discovery by first developing
a
computer model showing how they believed the pathway operates. Then
they
verified their results by studying live cells in the lab. Finally,
they
used the validated model to guide further experiments. Although mouse
cells
called fibroblasts were used, Levchenko said the findings should also
hold
true for human fibroblasts and other cell types.
Because the computer model has been validated, it could be used to
speed up
the development of pharmaceuticals that might affect the cell
pathway, said
Levchenko, who is a part of a computational biology research team
based at
the Whitaker Biomedical Engineering Institute at Johns Hopkins. He
said
drug developers could use the computer model to quickly test how
various
compounds may affect the cell behavior before launching more
time-consuming
lab tests with live cells. "This has given us a very good tool
to predict
things that may happen when the pathway properties are altered,
reducing
the need to engage in exhaustive animal tests," Levchenko said.
The other lead author of the Science paper was Alexander Hoffman, who
engaged in the research as a postdoctoral scholar at Cal Tech and now
is an
assistant professor of biology at the University of California, San
Diego.
The co-authors were Martin L. Scott, who conducted research at MIT
and who
now is employed by Biogen Inc.; and David Baltimore, president of Cal
Tech.
|
 |
 |
Please visit our affiliate partners that
keeps our site up.
 |
 |