Pular para o conteúdo principal

How protein interactions drive cellular death

Stephanie Bleicken researches the complex interplay of proteins.
Credit: © RUB, Kramer
Researchers at the Universities of Tübingen and Konstanz, the Ruhr-Universität Bochum, the Max Planck Institute of Intelligent Systems in Stuttgart, and the German Cancer Research Centers have worked together to gain new insights into a protein network which regulates the programmed break down of cells, also known as apoptosis. These Bcl-2 proteins are difficult to investigate as they exchange between the cell's watery cytoplasm and its oil-like membranes. There are only a few methods which can be used to analyze protein interactions in both environments. With a special type of spectroscopic analysis the team decoded the complex interplay of three components in the network. Their findings are published in the latest Nature Communications.
Cell suicide squad
"Our good health depends on the strict regulation of cell division and cell death," says Dr. Stephanie Bleicken, who has recently moved from the University of Tübingen to Bochum's "Resolv" excellence cluster and the research group for electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. When these mechanisms fail, cancer and neurodegenerative disorders can result. "Apoptosis -- a kind of suicide plan for cells -- is an important safety mechanism for the body to get rid of damaged, aged, or unneeded cells," Bleicken says.
The Bcl-2 protein family determines when apoptosis begins. Some members of the family set off processes in the cell which lead to cellular death, for example by opening pores in the membrane of the mitochondria -- the cell's power plants. These pores release substances which set off apoptosis as an unstoppable process. Other members of the Bcl-2 family prevent the pores opening -- thereby preventing the cellular death process. So interaction between Bcl-2 proteins is key to understanding apoptosis.
A playground for proteins
In a new study the researchers shed light on the coordination of the Bcl-2 network, using fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. In their simplified laboratory model they produced three of the protein network's main components and investigated them in an environment modeling roughly on that of the cell.
Living cells are made up of thousands of different molecules which carry out countless interactions and can set off uncounted reactions," says University of Tübingen's Professor Ana García-Sáez. "In order to understand individual components in this complex network, it helps to observe them initially in a highly simplified environment, to which you can keep adding new components." The researchers analyzed the proteins in environments which simulated the cytoplasm or the mitochondrial membrane.
Different interactions in the membrane and cytoplasm
The proteins' interactions were heavily dependent on their environment. Different interactions were possible in the membranes compared to the cytoplasm. "That was an important finding because the interactions in the membrane are essential in deciding whether apoptosis begins," García-Sáez says. "But this environment is technically much more difficult to investigate than the cytoplasm."
Because the researchers could compare proteins in both environments, they were able to reconcile and incorporate earlier findings which had appeared to yield contradictory results. "The Bcl-2 proteins regulate apoptosis, which in turn is closely linked with diseases such as cancer. Better understanding of the functions of these proteins is critical to achieve a good starting-point for the development of new medications," the researchers say.
Postado por David Araripe

Comentários

Postagens mais visitadas deste blog

CONSERVAÇÃO DE ALIMENTOS E A EQUAÇÃO DE ARRHENIUS por Carlos Bravo Diaz, Universidade de Vigo, Espanha

Traduzido por Natanael F. França Rocha, Florianópolis, Brasil  A conservação de alimentos sempre foi uma das principais preocupações do ser humano. Conhecemos, já há bastante tempo, formas de armazenar cereais e também a utilização de azeite para evitar o contato do alimento com o oxigênio do ar e minimizar sua oxidação. Neste blog, podemos encontrar diversos ensaios sobre os métodos tradicionais de conservação de alimentos. Com o passar do tempo, os alimentos sofrem alterações que resultam em variações em diferentes parâmetros que vão definir sua "qualidade". Por exemplo, podem sofrer reações químicas (oxidação lipídica, Maillard, etc.) e bioquímicas (escurecimento enzimático, lipólise, etc.), microbianas (que podem ser úteis, por exemplo a fermentação, ou indesejáveis caso haja crescimento de agentes patogênicos) e por alterações físicas (coalescência, agregação, etc.). Vamos observar agora a tabela abaixo sobre a conservação de alimentos. Por que usamo...

Two new proteins connected to plant development discovered by scientists

The discovery in the model plant Arabidopsis of two new proteins, RICE1 and RICE2, could lead to better ways to regulate plant structure and the ability to resist crop stresses such as drought, and ultimately to improve agricultural productivity, according to researchers at Texas A&M AgriLife Research. Credit: Graphic courtesy of Dr. Xiuren Zhang, Texas A&M AgriLife Research The discovery of two new proteins could lead to better ways to regulate plant structure and the ability to resist crop stresses such as drought, thus improving agriculture productivity, according to researchers at Texas A&M AgriLife Research. The two proteins, named RICE1 and RICE2, are described in the May issue of the journal eLife, based on the work of Dr. Xiuren Zhang, AgriLife Research biochemist in College Station. Zhang explained that DNA contains all the information needed to build a body, and molecules of RNA take that how-to information to the sites in the cell where they can be used...

Fármaco brasileiro aprovado nos Estados Unidos

  Em fotomicrografia, um macho de Schistosoma mansoni, causador da esquistossomose CDC/G. Healy A agência que regula a produção de alimentos e medicamentos dos Estados Unidos, a FDA, concedeu o status de orphan drug para o fármaco imunomodulador P-Mapa, desenvolvido pela rede de pesquisa Farmabrasilis, para uso no tratamento de esquistossomose.  A concessão desse status é uma forma de o governo norte-americano incentivar o desenvolvimento de medicamentos para doenças com mercado restrito, com uma prevalência de até 200 mil pessoas nos Estados Unidos, embora em outros países possa ser maior. Globalmente, a esquistossomose é uma das principais doenças negligenciadas, que atinge cerca de 200 milhões de pessoas no mundo e cerca de 7 milhões no Brasil.  Entre outros benefícios, o status de orphan drug confere facilidades para a realização de ensaios clínicos, após os quais, se bem-sucedidos, o fármaco poderá ser registrado e distribuído nos Estados Unidos, no Brasil e em outro...