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Fly sensory organ precursor cells may shed new light on human immunological disorder.


Byline: ANI

London, June 22 (ANI): Researchers at Baylor College of Medicine Baylor College of Medicine is a private medical school located in Houston, Texas, USA on the grounds of the Texas Medical Center. It has been consistently rated the top medical school in Texas and among the best in the United States.  say that they have made a new finding regarding the Notch signalling pathway in sensory organ precursor cells in the fruit fly that may help unravel the mystery behind an immunological disorder called WisKott-Aldrich syndrome Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome Definition

Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS) is a rare inherited disorder marked by a low level of blood platelets, eczema, recurrent infections, and a high risk of leukemia or lymph node tumors.
.

Notch signalling helps determine the fate of a number of different cell types in a variety of organisms, including humans.

"This finding provides a model for how Wiskott Aldrich syndrome Al·drich syndrome
n.
See Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome.


Aldrich syndrome An X-R condition characterized by thrombocytopenia, eczema, bloody diarrhea–melena, ↑ risk of bacterial infection; death is due to
 - a form of selective immunodeficiency in children - occurs," Nature magazine quoted Dr. Hugo Bellen, professor of molecular and human genetics Human genetics

A discipline concerned with genetically determined resemblances and differences among human beings. Technological advances in the visualization of human chromosomes have shown that abnormalities of chromosome number or structure are surprisingly
 and director of the Program in Developmental Biology at BCM BCM Baylor College of Medicine
BCM Become
BCM Business Communications Manager (Nortel)
BCM Broadcom Corporation
BCM Business Continuity Management
BCM Business Contact Manager (Microsoft) 
, as saying.

The researchers point out that two daughter cells arise from a single sensory organ precursor mother cell in the fly peripheral nervous system peripheral nervous system: see nervous system. , and that among the daughter cells, Notch is activated in one and not in the other.

The differential activation of signalling leads to two different kinds of cells which arise from the same mother cell, a reason why the researchers used the fruit flies sensory organ precursor cell division as a model to understand how Notch signalling is activated during asymmetric cell division An asymmetric cell division produces two daughter cells with different properties. This is in contrast to normal cell divisions, which give rise to equivalent daughter cells. .

Two graduate students in Bellen's laboratory-Akhila Rajan and An-chi Tien-screened fruit fly mutants that have disrupted peripheral nervous system development and identified a mutant with a cluster of neurons.

According to the researchers, this occurs when there is a problem in Notch signalling.

The researchers say that their study has shown that mutations in the Actin-related protein 3 (Arp3), a component of the seven protein Arp2/3 complex, resulted in the loss of Notch signalling.

They say that this occurs because the ligand Delta, a protein that activates the Notch pathway, cannot travel properly within the sensory organ cells in the absence of Arp3 protein.

The research team have also found that, under normal conditions, vesicles or tiny bubbles containing the Notch activating protein Delta travel to the top of the daughter cell to a structure rich in actin.

They reveal that the specialized actin structure contains many membrane protrusions that increase the surface area of cells called microvilli microvilli
(mī´krōvil´ē),
n.pl tiny hairlike processes that extend from the surface of many cells. They are usually so small as to be visible only with an electron microscope.
.

Delta containing vesicles traffic to the microvilli under normal circumstances.

In the Arp3 mutants, there are significantly fewer microvilli, but the transport of Delta is compromised in Arp3 mutants, affecting the ability of Delta to activate Notch.

Calling it an important part of the research team's work, Bellen said that Delta is normally presented at the top of the actin structure. It is then encapsulated in the vesicles and travels to the basal, or bottom, of the structure. Delta then travels back to the top of the daughter cells.

Bellen's research team have discovered that the Arp2/3 complex and its activator WASp (Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein The Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome Protein (WASp) is a 502-amino acid protein that is expressed in cells of the hematopoietic system. In the inactive state, WASp exists in an auto-inhibited conformation with sequences near its C-terminus binding to a region near its N-terminus. ) function in these daughter cells to transport Delta vesicles to the apical apical /ap·i·cal/ (ap´i-k'l) pertaining to an apex.

a·pi·cal
adj.
1. Relating to the apex of a pyramidal or pointed structure.

2.
 region of the daughter cells.

The researchers say that the ability of Delta to activate Notch is compromised when this complicated trafficking of Delta does not occur.

"It is likely that whatever we have discovered here has a relationship to what is happening in the patients with Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome. The patients with Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome have mutations in a gene called WASp. WASp is an activator of the Arp2/3 complex. In our work we found that WASp is also required for the trafficking of Delta to the top of the actin structure," said Bellen.

Given that the gene WASp is mutated in the patients with Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, Bellen and his colleagues' work suggests that defects in the presentation of Delta could explain the loss and dysfunction of T-cells in patients with Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome. (ANI)

Copyright 2009 Asian News International The Asian News International (ANI) agency provides multimedia news to China and 50 bureaus in India. It covers virtually all of South Asia since its foundation and presently claims, on its official website, to be the leading South Asia-wide news agency.  (ANI) - All Rights Reserved.

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Publication:Asian News International
Date:Jun 22, 2009
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