Iconocast Logo

Welcome To Iconocast

How to add a URL link from your web site to the Iconocast web sites

Virtual tour of Southern California



 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: new + research + molecule  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

New technology may have aided FBI probe
Baltimore Sun, United States -
Steven A. Hofstadler, vice president for research at Ibis, told The Sun yesterday that he could "neither confirm nor deny" that his company has assisted the ...
Memory, Depression, Insomnia -- And Worms?
Science Daily (press release) -
But a new study may have uncovered key insights into the origins of these and other conditions by examining a most unlikely research subject: worms. ...
CombiMatrix Receives New Contract From US Department of Defense
FOXBusiness -
This program is focused on the development of a new application of CombiMatrix's microarray technology and involves the synthesis of molecules known as ...CBMX - OTC:CMTX
Research Exposes New Target For Malaria Drugs
Science Daily (press release) -
When the infected RBC gets close to chondroitin sulphate, a structural molecule on blood vessels, the variable region moves aside and ever so briefly ...

South Dakota State University
SDSU research: Organic LEDs and organic photovoltaics
South Dakota State University, SD -
The new technology is sometimes referred to as ?molecular electronics? or ?organic electronics? ? ?organic? because it relies on carbon-based polymers and ...
GE Healthcare Introduces Newest Technology in Pre-Clinical ...
MarketWatch -
"We are excited to introduce this brand-new scanner design for the drug development and research market," said Jim Mitchell, general manager for molecular ...
Schizophrenia costly byproduct of brain evolution
IndiaEduNews.net, India -
According to Khaitovich: "Our new research suggests that schizophrenia is a byproduct of the increased metabolic demands brought about during human brain ...

New York Times
FBI investigates new attacks on Calif. scientists
The Associated Press - Aug 3, 2008
Molecular biologist David Feldheim, whose front door was charred, was listed in the pamphlet. According to his Web site, Feldheim's lab uses mice to study ...
Firebombs target UC-Santa Cruz scientists who use animals in research San Jose Mercury News
FBI investigates new attacks on Calif. scientists Fox 28
Authorities Investigate the Latest Attacks on California Researchers eFluxMedia
The Associated Press
all 559 news articles »
NEW $8.9 MILLION PROJECT AIMS TO UNLOCK STEM CELL SECRETS
Wisbusiness.com, WI -
"The project promises to advance the field of stem cell research by revealing new information about the protein modifications necessary for gene expression ...
LSR Announces Second Quarter Results
Business Wire (press release), CA -
Our clear drive to excel in these areas, coupled with an increasing depth and breadth of scientific expertise across the full range of new molecules being ...LSR
Source: Google News

PhysioBank, PhysioToolkit, and PhysioNet Components of a New Research Resource for Complex … -
AL Goldberger, LAN Amaral, L Glass, JM Hausdorff, … - Circulation, 2000 - Am Heart Assoc
... offered to molecular biology by GenBank. The central mission of the resource is
to accelerate current research progress and to stimulate and bootstrap new ...

Organic molecular crystals: interaction, localization and transport phenomena. -
EA SILINSH, V C?PEK - Acta Cryst, 1997 - za.iucr.org
... title Theory of Molecular Excitons (New York: McGraw ... major thrust into molecular
crystal research by chemists ... of even relatively complex molecules were found ...

A new family of mesoporous molecular sieves prepared with liquid crystal templates -
JS Beck, JC Vartuli, WJ Roth, ME Leonowicz, CT … - Journal of the American Chemical Society, 1992 - pubs.acs.org
... in their microstructures which allow molecules access to ... Recently, a new family of
mesoporous molecular ... sieves, possesses ' Mobil Research and Development ...

[BOOK] Bacterial pathogenesis: a molecular approach -
AA Salyers, DD Whitt - 1994 - Am Soc Microbiol
... revised and updated to capture new research findings and the new perspective on
the host ... material from pathogenic microbiology, molecular biology, immunology ...

Helical microtubules of graphitic carbon -
S Iijima? - Nature, 1991 - nature.com
... NEC Corporation, Fundamental Research Laboratories, 34 Miyukigaoka, Tsukuba, Ibaraki ...
I report the preparation of a new type of ... such as the C 60 molecule 6?8 ...

Supramolecular chemistry -
JM Lehn - Journal of Chemical Sciences, 1994 - Springer
... the emergence of molecular recognition as a new domain of chemical research that
expanded ... with the development of synthetic receptor molecules of numerous ...

Linked: The New Science of Networks -
AL Barab?si, RE Crandall - American Journal of Physics, 2003 - link.aip.org
... bonds somehow manage to hold relatively large water molecules together. ... and reworkings
of the nodes and links, as his research continued to offer new ideas. ...

[BOOK] The New Production of Knowledge: The Dynamics of Science and Research in Contemporary Societies -
M Gibbons - 1994 - books.google.com
... British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Gibbons, Michael New Production
of Knowledge: Dynamics of Science and Research in Contemporary Societies I. ...

Angiogenesis -
J Folkman, Y Shing - Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1992 - ASBMB
... Several low molecular weight factors are also angiogenic. ... Also, most of these molecules
have other effects, and ... are also the basis of much new research in this ...

Small molecule activators of sirtuins extend Saccharomyces cerevisiae lifespan -
KT Howitz, KJ Bitterman, HY Cohen, DW Lamming, S … - Nature, 2003 - nature.com
... is an Ellison Medical Research Foundation New Research Scholar ... EP & Goldberg, DM
Resveratrol: a molecule whose time ... Top of page. BIOMOL Research Laboratories, Inc ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

Molecule That Destroys Bone Also Protects It, New Research Shows

BUFFALO, N.Y. -- An immune system component that is a primary cause of bone destruction and inflammation in autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis actually protects bone in the oral cavity from infectious pathogens that play a major role in periodontal disease in humans, research at the University at Buffalo has shown.

The component, IL-17, was recognized only in the past 18 months to be a primary cause of bone destruction and inflammation in autoimmune diseases. Therapies that target IL-17 or its cellular receptor currently are being developed.

However, a UB molecular biologist has discovered that, in contrast to its action in rheumatoid arthritis(RA), IL-17 actually protects bone in the oral cavity from infectious pathogens such as Porphyromonas gingivalis, a bacterium that plays a major role in most periodontal disease in humans.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

The research findings appear in the current (May) issue of the journal Blood.

Sarah L. Gaffen, Ph.D., associate professor of oral biology in the UB School of Dental Medicine and associate professor of microbiology and immunology in the UB School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, is senior author. Jeffrey J. Yu, a medical student and doctoral candidate who is a researcher working in Gaffen's lab, is first author.

Gaffen and colleagues conducted the research in mice bred to have no receptors for IL-17. Other researchers had shown previously, using rats and mice as animal models, that blocking the receptor for IL-17 could be an effective therapy for RA and possibly for other autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis, colitis, psoriasis and lupus.

The effects of an IL-17 deficiency in periodontal disease, however, were unknown, so Gaffen's lab set out to investigate.

"I predicted these mice without the IL-17 receptor were going to be protected from periodontal bone loss, just like they're protected from arthritic bone loss," Gaffen said. "In fact, we got the opposite result. The mice without IL-17 were much more susceptible to bone loss caused by periodontal disease, compared to normal mice.

"What's the difference between an autoimmune disease like RA and periodontal disease? Periodontal disease is an infectious disease, and as with most infectious diseases, white blood cells of the innate immune system called neutrophils play a critical role in fighting infections. In fact, humans with neutrophil defects usually lose all their teeth by the time they are 20 due to severe periodontal disease.

"It turns out that IL-17 is really important in regulating neutrophils by causing other cells in the vicinity to recruit these infection fighters to the infection site," Gaffen said.

IL-17 is a cytokine, a protein hormone made by "T helper" cells of the immune system that stimulate immunity. Gaffen noted that until recently, immunologists believed there were only two major types of "T helper" cells -- TH1 and TH2 -- which were believed to be responsible for nearly all immune system activities.

"This paradigm underwent a sea change in 2005 with the discovery of a new type of T cell that produces IL-17, now called TH-17," she said. "We know now that almost all autoimmune diseases, at least in the mouse model, are caused by TH-17 cells. This new information has forced scientists to revise completely how they view their favorite disease. Everyone now has to rethink the causative mechanism."

Gaffen said IL-17 likely would be toxic if given systemically, so it may not be a therapeutic candidate to increase immunity. But inhibitors of IL-17 are considered important targets for drugs to treat autoimmune diseases such as RA and psoriasis.

On the down side, however, this new finding indicates that inhibiting IL-17 too much could put people taking such a drug at risk for opportunistic infections such as periodontal disease and tuberculosis, she noted.

"Developing knowledge about the molecules that contribute to host defense versus pathology is very important for gaining a fundamental understanding of the immune system," Gaffen said, "but also because the consequences of therapies that target these cytokines need to be understood."

Contributing authors, in addition to Gaffen and Yu, were Matthew J. Ruddy, Ph.D., a former graduate student in Gaffen's lab, now at the University of Chicago; Grace C. Wong, Cornelia Sfintescu and Richard Todd Evans, Ph.D., from the UB Department of Oral Biology; Pamela J. Baker, Ph.D., from Bates College, Lewiston, Maine; and Jeffrey B. Smith, M.D., from David Geffen School of Medicine, Los Angeles, Calif.

The research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health to Gaffen and Baker and by an oral biology training grant to Yu.

The University at Buffalo is a premier research-intensive public university, the largest and most comprehensive campus in the State University of New York. The School of Dental Medicine and School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences are two of five schools that constitute UB's Academic Health Center.

 
 
 
Google
Web www.iconocast.com
 
 
Continue News With: News7 ; News8 ; News9 ; News9A


ADVERTISEMENT

Iconocast is about learning and teaching without borders; we offer eMarketing, Internet Advertising, Internet Marketing, Search Engine Optimization, Search Engine Marketing, Online Branding, and eMarketing News Services.

 

Iconocast Home Page

 © 2002-2006

Keywords:

Contact Iconocast