Cloning Resources
  Recent News |  Tags |  Organ & Tissue Cloning |  Animal Cloning |  Definitions |  Archives |  About |  Newsletter |  Subscribe to CloningResources.com RSS Fee Subscribe

Three Proteins May Play Important Role in Nerve-Cell Repair (4/12/2007)

Tags:
nerves, genes

Some mature brain cells can grow new extensions when the amount of three particular proteins on their surface increases, a new study shows. The research examined three related receptor proteins, called GPR3, GPR6 and GPR12, on nerve cells in the brains of rats.

When researchers increased the amount of the three proteins, the cells grew extensions that were up to three times longer than those on nerve cells with normal levels of the proteins, and the extensions grew four to eight times faster than in control cells.

"Our findings suggest that these three proteins could be important targets for treating stroke, brain and spinal cord injuries and also neurodegenerative diseases," says principal investigator Yoshinaga Saeki of the Ohio State University Medical Center.

The study is published in the April 6 issue of the Journal of Biological Chemistry.

Increased amounts of the proteins were associated with a significant rise in the level of an important signaling molecule inside the nerve cells called cAMP. This molecule plays a key role in regulating nerve-cell growth, differentiation and survival, and the regeneration of long parts of the cell called axons that carry the nerve impulses.

Levels of cAMP drop in mammalian nerve cells as they mature, and this is thought to explain, in part, why mature nerve cells cannot regenerate damaged axons.

"Our findings provide additional evidence that cAMP plays an important role in axon growth and suggest that these receptors are likely to play a major role in regulating cAMP production in nerve cells," says Saeki, an associate professor of neurological surgery and chief of Ohio State’s Dardinger Laboratory for Neuro-oncology and Neurosciences.

In this study, first author Shigeru Tanaka, a postdoctoral fellow in Saeki’s laboratory, and his colleagues used nerve cells obtained from the brain tissue of rats and mouse neuroblastoma cells growing in culture to learn more about the three proteins and their involvement in cAMP regulation.

The researchers added additional copies of the three genes to the cells to increase the levels of the proteins, and then used a laboratory technique called RNA intereference to turn off production of the proteins.

Of the three molecules, GPR3 was the most abundant in the nerve cells, while GPR12 was the most potent at stimulating growth of the nerve extensions. The study showed that blocking GPR3 greatly slows the growth of the nerve extensions. The researchers reversed this effect by restoring either GPR3 or GPR12 in the cells.

High levels of the three proteins were also linked to higher levels of cAMP, with GPR6 and GPR12 increasing the level twofold to threefold.

"Taken together," Saeki says, "our findings indicate that these three proteins improve growth of neuronal extensions even in the presence of inhibitory molecules, and we are very keen to find out whether the approach can be translated in preclinical animal models of stroke or spinal cord injury."

Funding from the National Institute for Neurological Diseases and Stroke, the Gerlach Foundation and the Dardinger Center Fund for Neuro-oncology Research supported this research.

Other OSU researchers involved in this study were Kazue Kasai and Sung Ok Yoon.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the Ohio State University

Secured Loan - Car Insurance - United Specialties - Wills

Post Comments:

Search

Recent Articles
Putting microRNAs on the stem cell map 8/8/2008

Protein Key to Control Growth of Blood Cells 8/7/2008

Study finds molecule triggers hair growth in mouse embryos 8/6/2008

New $8.9 million project aims to unlock stem cell secrets 8/5/2008

Stanford fruit-fly study adds weight to theories about another type of adult stem cell 8/3/2008

First disease-specific stem cells from human skin cells 8/2/2008

Stem Cell Foundation plays critical funding role in major new ALS research announced today 8/1/2008

Redundant System Keeps Embryo in Stitches 7/31/2008

ohn Gearhart, Stem Cell Pioneer, Named Penn's Institute for Regenerative Medicine Director and PIK Professor 7/30/2008

Researchers tap into a new and potentially better source of platelets for transfusion 7/29/2008

Opening up wound secrets to avoid scarring 7/28/2008

Adult stem cells activated in mammalian brain 7/28/2008

Researchers Discover Key Gene for Making Motor Neurons 7/27/2008

Sugar study is sweetener for stem cell science 7/27/2008

Researchers prove that insulin-producing cells can give rise to stem-like cells in-vitro 7/26/2008

  Archives |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Contact Us |  Links
All contents © 2000 - 2009 Web Doodle, LLC. All rights reserved.
Web Doodle, LLC does not provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Please read our disclaimer