Lost and found. (Biomedicine).If you call to say that you're having car trouble, your boss will most likely assume there's a mechanical problem. It might be, though, that your car has been stolen. Likewise, most mutations cause disease by altering a crucial protein's function. But in some diseases, such as cystic fibrosis cystic fibrosis (sĭs`tĭk fībrō`sĭs), inherited disorder of the exocrine glands (see gland), affecting children and young people; median survival is 25 years in females and 30 years in males. , the problem seems to be that a functioning protein goes astray. Ways to shepherd these missing proteins back into place may offer novel treatments for these diseases. In the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , about 30,000 people have cystic fibrosis. The disease can be caused by thousands of different mutations within a gene that encodes a cell-membrane channel for the chloride ion. The ensuing faulty intercellular intercellular /in·ter·cel·lu·lar/ (-sel´u-lar) between or among cells. in·ter·cel·lu·lar adj. Located among or between cells. movement of chloride, as well as sodium, somehow produces abnormally thick, sticky mucus that can dog organs such as the lungs and pancreas. More than 70 percent of people with cystic fibrosis have a single mutation that causes the chloride channel Chloride channels are a superfamily of poorly understood ion channels consisting of approximately 13 members. It is now recognised that chloride channels display a variety of important physiological and cellular roles that include regulation of pH, volume homeostasis, protein to go astray before it reaches its place in the cell membrane Cell membrane The membrane that surrounds the cytoplasm of a cell; it is also called the plasma membrane or, in a more general sense, a unit membrane. This is a very thin, semifluid, sheetlike structure made of four continuous monolayers of molecules. , says Pamela Zeitlin of the Johns Hopkins Noun 1. Johns Hopkins - United States financier and philanthropist who left money to found the university and hospital that bear his name in Baltimore (1795-1873) Hopkins 2. Medical Institutions in Baltimore. Her test tube studies suggest that a drug called buphenyl could guide the protein to where it belongs. She and her colleagues tested the drug in 19 adults with cystic fibrosis caused by this common mutation. After a week of thrice-daily pills, chloride-ion movement improved slightly in some of the volunteers and in the rest, reached almost healthy measures, Zeitlin reports in the July Molecular Therapy. "The next question is whether these changes in chloride transport translate into clinical effect," she says. Such studies are now under way. --D.C. |
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