Scientists Propose a Molecular Explanation for Degenerative Disease
Aug 19, 2013
An international collaboration jointly led by scientists from Trinity College Dublin has shed new light on the origins and molecular causes of age related degenerative conditions including Motor Neurone Disease (MND). The new perspective provided by this work may lead the way to new treatments and early diagnoses.
The article which has just been published in the leading peer reviewed,
international journal Cell, offers new opportunities for early diagnosis
of age related degenerative diseases before symptoms appear, including through
the identification of disease causing genes. It also suggests specific
strategies for developing therapies which might have both preventative and
therapeutic benefits for this class of degenerative disease.
Commenting on the significance of the findings co-lead author Professor
Mani Ramaswami, Professor of Neurogenetics at the School of Genetics and
Microbiology, Trinity College Dublin said: “Degenerative diseases, such as MND,
are a poorly understood and largely untreatable set of life limiting diseases
which can leave people unable to do the everyday things that the rest of us,
particularly the young, take for granted. These age-associated diseases have
far-reaching socioeconomic impacts. If you can predict the disease you may be
in a position to slow down its onset and progression through therapeutic
interventions. With these types of diseases this is significantly more
effective than trying to treat the condition once symptoms have appeared. The
potential for early diagnosis and delaying the onset of motor or cognitive
decline by perhaps ten years is of potentially profound importance in an ageing
society.”
There are nearly 120,000 cases of MND diagnosed worldwide each year with
about 300 people in Ireland living with the disease at any one time.
The research just published proposes that the
normal biology of mRNA regulation in neurones, in
which RNA is generally silenced and only activated in the correct place and
time, makes it susceptible to both age-related decline and disturbance by
genetic mutation. Altered RNA regulation (ribostasis), therefore, may be a
frequent causative factor in degenerative disease. While normal RNA
regulation involves regulated and reversible assembly of RNA-protein particles,
both increased cellular age and mutation push the process towards
hyperassembly, which leads to altered pools of RNA or RNA regulatory proteins
in neurones that contribute to their eventual death.
Co-authors of the publication, Professors Ramaswami, Taylor (St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Memphis) and Parker (University of Colorado)* have based their model on a synthesis of findings from their collaborations and recent work by their individual research groups. Research on neuronal RNA regulation in Professor Ramaswami's lab is funded by Science Foundation Ireland and benefits from collaborations with the National Centre for Biological Sciences Bangalore.
Co-authors of the publication, Professors Ramaswami, Taylor (St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Memphis) and Parker (University of Colorado)* have based their model on a synthesis of findings from their collaborations and recent work by their individual research groups. Research on neuronal RNA regulation in Professor Ramaswami's lab is funded by Science Foundation Ireland and benefits from collaborations with the National Centre for Biological Sciences Bangalore.
The full article by Professor Mani Ramaswami of the School of
Genetics and Microbiology and School of Natural Sciences, Smurfit Institute of
Genetics and Trinity College Institute of Neuroscience, Trinity College Dublin,
J. Paul Taylor of Professor of Developmental Neurobiology, St. Jude Children’s
Research Hospital, Memphis, and Roy Parker HHMI Investigator and Cech-Leinwand Professor in the Department of
Biochemistry and Chemistry, University of Colorado is entitled ‘Altered
'Ribostasis': RNA-protein granule formation or persistence in the development
of degenerative disorders.’ is available at http://www.cell.com/abstract/S0092-8674(13)00946-X
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RNA-protein assemblies in a cultured neuron