বুধবার, ৩০ মে, ২০১২

Key gene found responsible for chronic inflammation, accelerated aging and cancer

Home Reports Life Sciences Content
next article
25.05.2012

"This was certainly an unexpected finding," said principal investigator Robert J. Schneider, PhD, the Albert Sabin Professor of Molecular Pathogenesis, associate director for translational research and co-director of the Breast Cancer Program at NYU Langone Medical Center.

"It is rather uncommon for one gene to have two very different and very significant functions that tie together control of aging and inflammation. The two, if not regulated properly, can eventually lead to cancer development. It's an exciting scientific find."

The study, funded by the National Institutes of Health, appears online ahead of print today in Molecular Cell and is scheduled for the July 13 print issue.

For decades, the scientific community has known that inflammation, accelerated aging and cancer are somehow intertwined, but the connection between them has remained largely a mystery, Dr. Schneider said. What was known, due in part to past studies by Schneider and his team, was that a gene called AUF1 controls inflammation by turning off the inflammatory response to stop the onset of septic shock. But this finding, while significant, did not explain a connection to accelerated aging and cancer.

When the researchers deleted the AUF1 gene, accelerated aging occurred, so they continued to focus their research efforts on the gene. Now, more than a decade in the making, the mystery surrounding the connection between inflammation, advanced aging and cancer is finally being unraveled.

The current study reveals that AUF1, a family of four related genes, not only controls the inflammatory response, but also maintains the integrity of chromosomes by activating the enzyme telomerase to repair the ends of chromosomes, thereby simultaneously reducing inflammation, preventing rapid aging and the development of cancer, Dr. Schneider explained.

"AUF1 is a medical and scientific trinity," Dr. Schneider said. "Nature has designed a way to simultaneously turn off harmful inflammation and repair our chromosomes, thereby suppressing aging at the cellular level and in the whole animal."

With this new information, Dr. Schneider and colleagues are examining human populations for specific types of genetic alterations in the AUF1 gene that are associated with the co-development of certain immune diseases, increased rates of aging and higher cancer incidence in individuals to determine exactly how the alterations manifest and present themselves clinically.

About NYU School of Medicine:

NYU School of Medicine is one of the nation's preeminent academic institutions dedicated to achieving world class medical educational excellence. For 170 years, NYU School of Medicine has trained thousands of physicians and scientists who have helped to shape the course of medical history and enrich the lives of countless people. An integral part of NYU Langone Medical Center, the School of Medicine at its core is committed to improving the human condition through medical education, scientific research and direct patient care. The School also maintains academic affiliations with area hospitals, including Bellevue Hospital, one of the nation's finest municipal hospitals where its students, residents and faculty provide the clinical and emergency care to New York City's diverse population, which enhances the scope and quality of their medical education and training. Additional information about the NYU School of Medicine is available at http://school.med.nyu.edu/.

Jessica Guenzel | Source: EurekAlert!
Further information: www.nyumc.org

next article

Overview of the latest five Focus news of the innovations-report:

In the focus: 'Metamaterials,' quantum dots show promise for new technologies

Researchers are edging toward the creation of new optical technologies using "nanostructured metamaterials" capable of ultra-efficient transmission of light, with potential applications including advanced solar cells and quantum computing.

The metamaterial - layers of silver and titanium oxide and tiny components called quantum dots - dramatically changes the properties of light. The light becomes "hyperbolic," which increases the output of light from the quantum dots.

Such materials could find applications in solar cells, light emitting diodes and quantum information ...

In the focus: New Species Top 10 List Draws Attention to Diverse Biosphere

Sneezing monkey, SpongeBob mushroom, night-blooming orchid and teensy attack wasp make 2012 list

The International Institute for Species Exploration at Arizona State University and a committee of scientists from around the world announced their picks for the top 10 new species described in 2011. This is the fifth year for the top 10 new species list, which was released May 23 to coincide ...

In the focus: Linking crystal growth to volcano seismicity

Autopsy of an eruption
Researchers from RUB and Bristol report in Science

How processes below a volcano are linked to seismic signals at the surface is described by scientists from the petrology group of the Ruhr-Universit?t Bochum and their colleagues from Bristol in a paper published today in Science. They analyzed the growth of crystals in the magma chamber and used results ...

In the focus: Elusive Quasiparticles Realized

In quantum physics physical processes in condensed matter and other many-body systems can often be described with quasiparticles.

In Innsbruck, for the first time Rudolf Grimm?s team of physicists has succeeded in experimentally realizing a new quasiparticle ? a repulsive polaron ? in an ultracold quantum gas. The scientists have published their results in the online issue of the journal Nature.

Ultracold quantum gases are an ideal experimental model ...

In the focus: Deterring Signals: Tobacco Plants Advertise their Defensive Readiness to Attacking Leafhoppers

Like blood-sucking insects, herbivores evaluate their host?s readiness for defense

A few minutes after an herbivore attack, plants produce jasmonic acid, a hormone which activates the plants? defenses to insect attacks, with the result that toxic substances like nicotine or digestion inhibitors accumulate in the leaves.

Scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology in Jena, Germany, have now found ...

kim jong il kim jong il vaclav havel vaclav havel kim jong ii dead snapdragon snapdragon

কোন মন্তব্য নেই:

একটি মন্তব্য পোস্ট করুন