Islamabad, Feb 8 : One of the big mysteries in biology is why cells age. Now scientists
at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies report that they have discovered a
weakness in a component of brain cells that may explain how the aging process
occurs in the brain.
The scientists discovered that certain proteins,
called extremely long-lived proteins (ELLPs), which are found on the surface of
the nucleus of neurons, have a remarkably long lifespan.
While the
lifespan of most proteins totals two days or less, the Salk Institute
researchers identified ELLPs in the rat brain that were as old as the organism,
a finding they reported February 3 in Science.
The Salk scientists are
the first to discover an essential intracellular machine whose components
include proteins of this age. Their results suggest the proteins last an entire
lifetime, without being replaced.
ELLPs make up the transport channels on
the surface of the nucleus; gates that control what materials enter and exit.
Their long lifespan might be an advantage if not for the wear-and-tear that
these proteins experience over time. Unlike other proteins in the body, ELLPs
are not replaced when they incur aberrant chemical modifications and other
damage.
Damage to the ELLPs weakens the ability of the three-dimensional
transport channels that are composed of these proteins to safeguard the cell's
nucleus from toxins, says Martin Hetzer, a professor in Salk's Molecular and
Cell Biology Laboratory, who headed the research. These toxins may alter the
cell's DNA and thereby the activity of genes, resulting in cellular
aging.
Funded by the Ellison Medical Foundation and the Glenn Foundation
for Medical Research, Hetzer's research group is the only lab in the world that
is investigating the role of these transport channels, called the nuclear pore
complex (NPC), in the aging process.
Previous studies have revealed that
alterations in gene expression underlie the aging process. But, until the Hetzer
lab's discovery that mammals' NPCs possess an Achilles' heel that allows
DNA-damaging toxins to enter the nucleus, the scientific community has had few
solid clues about how these gene alterations occur.
"The fundamental
defining feature of aging is an overall decline in the functional capacity of
various organs such as the heart and the brain," says Hetzer. "This decline
results from deterioration of the homeostasis, or internal stability, within the
constituent cells of those organs. Recent research in several laboratories has
linked breakdown of protein homeostasis to declining cell function."
The
results that Hetzer and his team just report suggest that declining neuron
function may originate in ELLPs that deteriorate as a result of damage over
time.
"Most cells, but not neurons, combat functional deterioration of
their protein components through the process of protein turnover, in which the
potentially impaired parts of the proteins are replaced with new functional
copies," says Hetzer.
"Our results also suggest that nuclear pore
deterioration might be a general aging mechanism leading to age-related defects
in nuclear function, such as the loss of youthful gene expression programs," he
adds.
The findings may prove relevant to understanding the molecular
origins of aging and such neurodegenerative disorders as Alzheimer's disease and
Parkinson's disease.
In previous studies, Hetzer and his team discovered
large filaments in the nuclei of neurons of old mice and rats, whose origins
they traced to the cytoplasm. Such filaments have been linked to various
neurological disorders including Parkinson's disease. Whether the misplaced
molecules are a cause, or a result, of the disease has not yet been
determined.
Also in previous studies, Hetzer and his team documented
age-dependent declines in the functioning of NPCs in the neurons of healthy
aging rats, which are laboratory models of human biology.
Hetzer's team
includes his colleagues at the Salk Institute as well as John Yates III, a
professor in the Department of Chemical Physiology of The Scripps Research
Institute.
When Hetzer decided three years ago to investigate whether the
NPC plays a role in initiating or contributing to the onset of aging and certain
neurodegenerative diseases, some members of the scientific community warned him
that such a study was too bold and would be difficult and expensive to conduct.
But Hetzer was determined despite the
warnings.
Ends
SA/EN
Home »
» Why do cells age? Discovery of extremely long-lived proteins may provide insight into cell aging and neurodegenerative diseases
Why do cells age? Discovery of extremely long-lived proteins may provide insight into cell aging and neurodegenerative diseases
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment