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Biochemical Pathway to Repair DNA Discover


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#1 Ethan

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Posted 09 August 2008 - 12:11 AM


<H1 class=story>New Biochemical Pathway That Triggers Critical Repairs In DNA Replication Process Discovered</H1>http://www.scienceda...80806184903.htm


ScienceDaily (Aug. 8, 2008) — A Scripps Research team has unraveled a new biochemical pathway that triggers a critical repair response to correct errors in the DNA replication process that could otherwise lead to harmful or fatal mutations in cells.

See also: Health & MedicinePlants & AnimalsReferenceThough the work focused on yeast cells, the team expects to find an analogous system in human cells that could be exploited as a target for potential therapies for cancers, which are often caused by such repair mechanisms going off course.

The cell cycle, which allows cells to replicate their DNA and produce new cells, is controlled by a complex concert of enzymes and other components. In addition there are "checkpoint" mechanisms that can block continuation of the process if something goes amiss. Via mechanisms still poorly understood, a checkpoint in the reproduction process can detect problems that interfere with DNA copying. This detection can in turn trigger several potential responses.

"If the cycle is paused because the cell is having some problem," says study lead Professor Curt Wittenberg, of the Scripps Research Departments of Molecular Biology and Cell Biology, "it can't stop and go back, so it either kills the new cell or repairs the problem."

The checkpoint mechanisms that control the cell cycle are of great interest not only because they are such a fundamental aspect of biology, but also because problems in the cycle and its DNA repair mechanisms can lead to mutations that cause the unchecked proliferation of cells associated with various cancers.

The Wittenberg group recently identified a protein dubbed Nrm1 that appeared to play important roles in a yeast cell's successful transition from the G1 phase, in which cells prepare to replicate DNA, to actual replication during the S phase. Now, in the new paper, the Wittenberg group in collaboration with colleagues in the Scripps Research laboratories of Professors Paul Russell and John Yates show what some of those roles are.

At specific points in the cell cycle, groups of genes are turned on and off to produce the enzymes and other components needed for progression into the next cell cycle phase, and a healthy cell will only move forward into the next phase of the cycle if certain standards are met.

However, if a problem arises in the DNA replication process during the S phase, the entire process stalls.

"If either the replicating enzymes run into damage, or if there are insufficient precursors for making DNA, then this checkpoint response will be activated," says Wittenberg. "There are two aspects to this response. One is to prevent the cycle from proceeding, and the other is to prepare the cell to deal with the damage."

Wittenberg and his colleagues have found that during normal cell division, Nrm1's binding to DNA represses the activity of genes expressed during the G1 phase, in preparation for the subsequent S phase. The team has now shown that when such stalls occur, collectively referred to as DNA stress, Nrm1's repression of the G1 genes is blocked, allowing those genes to be turned back on. This presumably enables production of proteins needed to correct the problem that caused the stall.

"So, now you have cells in the S phase, which don't typically express these genes, expressing them," says Wittenberg.

The researchers were able to tease out Nrm1's specific activities through experiments where they intentionally blocked the cell cycle in yeast cells by robbing them of the precursors needed for DNA replication. They were able to show that, as a result of this induced stress, Nrm1 was chemically altered by a known checkpoint enzyme, resulting in the loss of binding to G1 genes. This resulted in expression of the G1 genes during S phase. Because those genes encode replication and repair enzymes, re-expression of the G1 genes facilitates re-starting of DNA replication.

Because the onset of cancer is so intimately tied to problems in the cell cycle, numerous cancer drugs currently under development target checkpoint mechanisms, with the goals of making cells more sensitive to chemotherapeutic agents that damage DNA, and in some cases protecting normal proliferating cells from cell cycle arrest and death. Given that, once Nrm1's human analog and its activity are identified, Wittenberg and his colleagues are hopeful the information could provide fruitful targets for new cancer therapies tied to the mechanism involved.

Journal reference:

  • de Bruin et al. DNA replication checkpoint promotes G1-S transcription by inactivating the MBF repressor Nrm1. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0801106105


#2 Luna

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Posted 10 August 2008 - 07:52 PM

Interesting

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#3 Lazarus Long

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Posted 10 August 2008 - 08:26 PM

I found this article today and thought it merited posting. Then I saw your thread and found the serendipity of the two findings together too important to ignore. According to the BBC this article is also in the latest Nature - Medicine. Only this one has developed a genetic mechanism to keep cells young. If applied to the *next* generation it might have dramatic life extension capability for our offspring as a consequence.

This might also off new mechanisms for halting cellular aging by pinpointing the mechanisms that can be manipulated synthetically.

Perhaps someone with access could provide a direct link and also some relevant excerpts.


Cell change 'keeps organs young'

Sunday, 10 August 2008 18:05 UK

Researchers may have found a way to halt the biological clock which slows down our bodies over the decades. A US team thinks it may have found the genetic levers to help boost a system vital to cleaning up faulty proteins within our cells. The journal Nature Medicine reported that the livers of genetically-altered older mice worked as well as those in younger animals.

They suggested it might one day help people with progressive brain diseases. The researchers, from Yeshiva University in New York, are focusing on a process which is central to the proper working of cells. The fundamental chemicals of cells - proteins - often have very short working lives, and need to be cleared away and recycled as soon as possible.

The body has a system for doing just that, but it becomes progressively less efficient as we get older. This leads to progressive falls in the function of major organs - the heart, liver and brain, some of which contribute to the diseases of old age.

Dr Ana Maria Cuervo, from Yeshiva, created a mouse with two genetic alterations. The first, when activated, boosted the number of specific cell receptors linked to this protein recycling function, while the second allowed the first to be turned on whenever Dr Cuervo wished simply by modifying the animal's diet.


Switched on

She waited until the mice were six months old - the point at which age-related decline in the protein-recycling system begins - then turned on the receptor gene. When examined at two years old, the liver cells of these mice were far more effective at recycling protein compared with normal mice.

When the overall liver function of the very old genetically-modified mice was tested, they performed at a comparable level to much younger mice. Dr Cuervo said: "These results show it's possible to correct this protein 'logjam' that occurs in our cells as we get older, thereby perhaps helping us to enjoy healthier lives well into old age."

She now plans to test animal models of Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases, believing that the abnormal protein deposits in Alzheimer's in particular might be dealt with more effectively this way. Thomas von Zglinicki, Professor of Cellular Gerontology at Newcastle University, said that the results were "very exciting".

"It's not often you see studies where they have managed to improve function in this way. What they seem to have managed is to maintain the mice at this young stage, and both restore and maintain normal activity."

He said that it should, in theory, be possible to achieve the same effect across the whole body.

A spokesman for the Alzheimer's Society said: "As we age we have an increase in protein misfolding and general faults in protein processing, so the ability to maintain an effective system to clear these would be beneficial.

"However, a direct line to the clearance of defective proteins in the brain is not so clear from this research."



#4 krillin

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Posted 10 August 2008 - 10:40 PM

It looks to me like they're describing autophagy, and Pubmed shows a lot of recent papers by Cuervo on autophagy. I found one (and only one) paper on supplements that might be useful in this regard. Berberine is in oregon grape root.

Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2008 Feb 1;70(2):529-42.
Synergistic tumor-killing effect of radiation and berberine combined treatment in lung cancer: the contribution of autophagic cell death.
Peng PL, Kuo WH, Tseng HC, Chou FP.
Institute of Biochemistry and Biotechnology, College of Medicine, Chung Shan Medical University, Taichung, Taiwan.

PURPOSE: Radiotherapy is the most efficacious strategies for lung cancer. The radiation-enhancing effects and the underlying mechanisms of berberine were investigated both in vitro and in vivo. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Clonogenic survival assays were used to evaluate the radio-sensitivity of berberine on non-small-cell lung cancer. Electron microscopic observation of the features of cell death, flow cytometry of acidic vascular organelles formation, mitochondria membrane potential and cell-cycle progression, and Western blotting of caspase 3, PARP, and LC3 were performed to identify the mechanisms underlying the enhancing effects. Lewis lung carcinoma model in mice was conducted to evaluate the possible application of berberine in synergistic treatment with irradiation. RESULTS: Compared with radiation alone (SF2 = 0.423; D(0) = 5.29 Gy), berberine at 5 and 10 muM concentrations in combination with radiation showed significant enhancement on radiation-induced clonogenic inhibition (SF2 = 0.215: D(0) = 2.70 Gy and SF2 = 0.099: D(0) = 1.24 Gy) on A549 cells. The cellular ultrastructure showed the presence of autophagosome and an increased proportion of acridine orange stain-positive cells, demonstrating that berberine enhanced radiosensitivity via autophagy. The process involved LC3 modification and mitochondrial disruption. The animal model verified the synergistic cytotoxic effect of berberine and irradiation resulting in a substantial shrinkage of tumor volume. CONCLUSION: Supplement of berberine enhanced the cytotoxicity of radiation in both in vivo and in vitro models of lung cancer. The mechanisms underlying this synergistic effect involved the induction of autophagy. It suggests that berberine could be used as adjuvant therapy to treat lung cancer.

PMID: 18207031

#5 100YearsToGo

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Posted 01 October 2008 - 01:13 AM

It looks to me like they're describing autophagy, and Pubmed shows a lot of recent papers by Cuervo on autophagy. I found one (and only one) paper on supplements that might be useful in this regard. Berberine is in oregon grape root.

Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2008 Feb 1;70(2):529-42.
Synergistic tumor-killing effect of radiation and berberine combined treatment in lung cancer: the contribution of autophagic cell death.
Peng PL, Kuo WH, Tseng HC, Chou FP.
Institute of Biochemistry and Biotechnology, College of Medicine, Chung Shan Medical University, Taichung, Taiwan.

PURPOSE: Radiotherapy is the most efficacious strategies for lung cancer. The radiation-enhancing effects and the underlying mechanisms of berberine were investigated both in vitro and in vivo. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Clonogenic survival assays were used to evaluate the radio-sensitivity of berberine on non-small-cell lung cancer. Electron microscopic observation of the features of cell death, flow cytometry of acidic vascular organelles formation, mitochondria membrane potential and cell-cycle progression, and Western blotting of caspase 3, PARP, and LC3 were performed to identify the mechanisms underlying the enhancing effects. Lewis lung carcinoma model in mice was conducted to evaluate the possible application of berberine in synergistic treatment with irradiation. RESULTS: Compared with radiation alone (SF2 = 0.423; D(0) = 5.29 Gy), berberine at 5 and 10 muM concentrations in combination with radiation showed significant enhancement on radiation-induced clonogenic inhibition (SF2 = 0.215: D(0) = 2.70 Gy and SF2 = 0.099: D(0) = 1.24 Gy) on A549 cells. The cellular ultrastructure showed the presence of autophagosome and an increased proportion of acridine orange stain-positive cells, demonstrating that berberine enhanced radiosensitivity via autophagy. The process involved LC3 modification and mitochondrial disruption. The animal model verified the synergistic cytotoxic effect of berberine and irradiation resulting in a substantial shrinkage of tumor volume. CONCLUSION: Supplement of berberine enhanced the cytotoxicity of radiation in both in vivo and in vitro models of lung cancer. The mechanisms underlying this synergistic effect involved the induction of autophagy. It suggests that berberine could be used as adjuvant therapy to treat lung cancer.

PMID: 18207031



Yes you are right. Autophagy is macro-, micro- and chaperone-mediated. The study by cuervo targeted chaperone mediated autophagy. It is indeed responsable for degradation of aproximately 30% of cytosolic proteins in some tisues including the liver.

Cuervo is smart. This research paper confirms she is targeting the right type of Autophagy:

http://www.landesbio...gy/article/6556

The only type that extended life was shaparone mediated. We need to find a supplement that supports this. I don't see berberine as a canditate yet as it is not clear what type of autophagy it induces. Usually when autophagy is mentioned alone they mean Macro.

#6 caston

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Posted 01 October 2008 - 05:22 AM

Cuervo is smart. This research paper confirms she is targeting the right type of Autophagy:

http://www.landesbio...gy/article/6556

The only type that extended life was shaparone mediated.




Do you mean Chaperone-mediated Autophagy e.g. CMA?

http://www.aecom.yu....o/chaperone.htm

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#7 100YearsToGo

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Posted 01 October 2008 - 02:16 PM

Cuervo is smart. This research paper confirms she is targeting the right type of Autophagy:

http://www.landesbio...gy/article/6556

The only type that extended life was shaparone mediated.




Do you mean Chaperone-mediated Autophagy e.g. CMA?

http://www.aecom.yu....o/chaperone.htm


Yes..This study also partly explains why calorie restriction works to extend life. During starvation the body searches for any energy source and building blocks it can find. When the signal of starvation is received the body (over) activates autophagy in all it's forms, Micro, Micro and chaperone mediated, to sequester cytoplasm, cell organelles, damaged protein. The captured carbage is then broken down to produce usefull amino acids, fatty acids, sugars etc. Those are then used to combat the starvation problem. In the process your organs and tissues are cleaned of garbage, restoring optimal function. Cuervo activated an extra copy of the gene responsible for Chaperone Mediated Autophagy achieving the same effect.

Other studies show that the different types of autophagy take over some of the functions when another type is suppressed. This explains why over activating one type works to cleanup the whole liver of garbage. This type of activity together with telomerase activation is very promising stuff.

Ok so how Chaperon Mediated Autophagy Works?

The damaged protein (or whatever) is chaperoned to a lysome: "Specialised molecules, the "chaperones", ferry the harmful material to membrane-bound sacs of enzymes within the cells known as lysosomes. Once the cargo has been "docked", a receptor molecule transfers the protein into the sac, where it is rapidly digested."

The receptor molecule is called LAMP-2A and the levels of this molecule decrease with age causing CMA function to decline also. The problem is the receptor levels. Cuervo added genes for extra receptors boosting CMA.

Ok now give me a drug/supplement that boost the level of LAMP-2A receptors.

Edited by 100YearsToGo, 01 October 2008 - 03:11 PM.


#8 caston

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Posted 03 October 2008 - 07:14 AM

Ok now give me a drug/supplement that boost the level of LAMP-2A receptors.



Chris Patil from ouroboros seems to suggest it may be possible to find a small molecule that can boost CMA in cells.

http://ouroboros.wor...ting-autophagy/

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#9 100YearsToGo

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Posted 03 October 2008 - 03:28 PM

Ok now give me a drug/supplement that boost the level of LAMP-2A receptors.



Chris Patil from ouroboros seems to suggest it may be possible to find a small molecule that can boost CMA in cells.

http://ouroboros.wor...ting-autophagy/


I found drugs that induce autophagy:

F.Y.I.

http://hdlighthouse....ticleNumber=559

"A potential treatment strategy would be to safely induce autophagy to enhance the clearance of the HD protein. The one known way to induce autophagy with a medication has been through rapamycin, an old antibiotic. Studies reported here on the Lighthouse have shown that rapamycin is helpful in a variety of animal models of Huntington's Disease.Researchers have been reluctant to bring rapamycin to clinical trials because the drug would need to be taken over many years and it has side effects at the levels needed for it to be effective, one of which is suppressing the immune system. The search has been on for alternatives and in an exciting new study, Professor David Rubinsztein and colleagues report that several drugs that are already FDA approved for other purposes also stimulate autophagy



They screened 256 existing drugs in use for other medical conditions and found several which induce autophagy. Two drugs are of particular interest, verapamil and clonidine. Verapamil is prescribed for high blood pressure and many people take it for years. It is an L-type calcium channel antagonist and stimulates autophagy by reducing the influx of calcium into cells. Calcium handling is known to be a problem in HD.

Clonidine is prescribed for migraines. It is a regular of inositol trisphosphate (IP3) levels. It induces autophagy through the reduction of cAMP. cAMP, which stands for cyclic adenosine monophosphate, is a molecule which is responsible for a number of functions in the cell, including regulating the passage of calcium through ion channels. cAMP is known to be elevated in HD.

Although these drugs work differently, they both affect different parts of the same cyclical pathway in which cAMP regulates IP3 levels which increase calpain activity, which cleaves and then activates Gs alpha, which in turn regulates cAMP levels. Intervention at any point was shown to be effective in inducing autophagy in the study. Interestingly, this pathway is independent of the one in which rapamycin induces autophagy.

The results for verapamil and clonidine look good in fruitflies and zebrafish and the drugs will be tried next in a mouse model.

One treatment possibility they suggest is a combination of one of the drugs identified in the study and rapamycin since they work by different pathways. The idea is that a lower dose would be needed for each, reducing side effects."




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