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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: cell + oxygen + pathway  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 10 of about 16 for cell oxygen pathway. (0.14 seconds) 
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Drug Topics Magazine
HPV Promotes Cancer Under Low Oxygen Conditions Virus activates ...
Drug Topics Magazine, NJ - Nov 5, 2008
... hypoxia (1 percent oxygen) to induce the NF-kappa-B cell signaling pathway, an established pathway in carcinogenesis, in 32 human cancer cell lines. ...
HPV makes some cancers harder to treat
United Press International - Nov 4, 2008
The research, done on cells in culture and in animal models, may lead to the development of new therapies that target the cell signaling pathway, ...
Key link in how plants adapt to climate discovered by Stanford ...
Eureka! Science News, Canada - Nov 25, 2008
This provides a unique mechanism for the signaling pathway to control SPEECHLESS activity in a set of stem-cell-like cells and hence the ultimate ...
Pathways affected by asbestos exposure in normal and tumour tissue ...
7thSpace Interactive (press release), NY - Nov 11, 2008
Studies on asbestos-induced tumourigenesis have indicated the role of, eg, reactive oxygen/nitrogen species, mitochondria, as well as NF-KB and MAPK ...
Fueling Enlightened Projects
Energy Central, CO - Nov 10, 2008
Such a fuel cell converts hydrogen and oxygen into water, and in the process it produces electricity. They have an electrical efficiency rate of 47 percent ...
Cancer Morphogenesis: Role of Mitochondrial Failure
Annals of Clinical & Laboratory Science (subscription), VT - Nov 6, 2008
... is mainly supplied by mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS), which is limited by available oxygen and modulated by cell signaling pathways. ...
Turning every home into a power station
Irish Times, Ireland - Nov 16, 2008
"That's the new part of the discovery: I got the leaf in the beaker and my discovery opens a door or pathway to personalised energy. ...
Identification of human thioredoxin as a novel IFN-gamma induced ...
7thSpace Interactive (press release), NY - Nov 5, 2008
The mechanism by which thioredoxin is induced by IFN-gamma and the signaling pathways involved in its induction were analyzed. In addition, the effects of ...

Johns Hopkins Gazette
Weekly Calendar
Johns Hopkins Gazette, MD - Nov 10, 2008
10, 12:15 pm "Sensing Sterol and Oxygen in the Control of Cell Metabolism," a Carnegie Institution Embryology seminar with Peter Espenshade, SoM. ...
Canonical Wnt Signaling Regulates Organ-Specific Assembly and ...
Science Magazine (subscription) - Nov 20, 2008
Using genetic mouse models, we found that these ligands directly target the vascular endothelium and that the CNS uses the canonical Wnt signaling pathway ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: cell + molecular + web  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)

Animal rights extremists have long evaded police
San Jose Mercury News,  USA - Aug 5, 2008
UCSC molecular biologist David Feldheim was at home with his wife and two children Saturday when his front porch was hit with a make-shift explosive. ...
Safeguard Scientifics Announces Second Quarter 2008 Financial Results
Business Wire (press release), CA - 50 minutes ago
Avid Radiopharmaceuticals, Inc., a leader in the development of molecular imaging products for neurodegenerative diseases, initiated Phase II clinical ...SFE
deCODE genetics Announces Second Quarter 2008 Financial Results
MarketWatch -
The substantial increase in risk they confer make them a valuable basis upon which to develop molecular diagnostic tests to complement standard clinical ...DCGN
Janie Gunn: Simple way to optimize your wellness: Drink more water
Noblesville Daily Times, IN -
3 ? Ionized water has a different molecular cluster size and it only contains 6 water molecules instead of the 10-13 in tap water. The smaller water cluster ...
ThermoGenesis Names Tiffany Olson to Board of Directors
Earthtimes (press release), UK -
Roche Diagnostics is a world-leader in in-vitro diagnostics and specializes in products and services for the molecular, chemistry, immunology, point-of care ...KOOL
Clinical Data Buys Adenosine
Private Equity Hub, MA -
AdenosineTherapeutics' molecular library consists of small molecules that act as selective agonists or antagonists at one of four adenosine receptor ...CLDA
Stanford Fruit-Fly Study Adds Weight to Theories About Another ...
MarketWatch - Jul 31, 2008
Weaver and Krasnow plan to compare molecular and genetic characteristics of the anterior dorsal branch stalk cells and the imaginal cells in the trachea in ...
BioInform's Surfing Report: Web-Based Tools and Algorithms ...
bio1nf0rm (subscription), NY - Aug 1, 2008
Chemical Entities of Biological Interest, ChEBI, is a freely available database of small molecular entities, a manually annotated chemoinformatics resource ...
VIRxSYS to Host a Web Conference to Announce Clinical Trial Update
MarketWatch - Jul 21, 2008
Unlike anti-retroviral drugs, VRX496 appears to bind to the RNA of HIV, changing the genetics and biology of the virus, including the molecular diversity of ...
Neuron Killers: Misfolded, clumping proteins evade conviction, but ...
Science News - Aug 1, 2008
Every protein in the body probably has the ability to form beta-pleated sheets given the right (or wrong) circumstances, says Erich Wanker, a molecular ...
Source: Google News

A Stem Cell Molecular Signature -
NB Ivanova, JT Dimos, C Schaniel, JA Hackney, KA … - Science, 2002 - sciencemag.org
... Search for citing articles in: ISI Web of Science (278) HighWire Press Journals.
Request permission to use this article. ... Reports. A Stem Cell Molecular Signature ...

CELL SAMPLING: Laser Capture Microdissection: Molecular Analysis of Tissue -
RF Bonner, M Emmert-Buck, K Cole, T Pohida, R … - Science, 1997 - sciencemag.org
... Quality control of multiplexed molecular microanalysis poses extreme ... for certain
disease processes or cellular pathways ... The Cancer Genome Anatomy Web site is www ...

Molecular framework for angiogenesis: a complex web of interactions between extravasated plasma … -
DR Senger - American Journal of Pathology, 1996 - ASIP
... Molecular framework for angiogenesis: a complex web of interactions between
extravasated plasma proteins and endothelial cell proteins induced by angiogenic ...

Embryonic neuronal markers in tuberous sclerosis: Single-cell molecular pathology -
PB Crino, JQ Trojanowski, MA Dichter, J Eberwine - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1996 - National Acad Sciences
Natl. Acad. Sci. USA Vol. 93, pp. 14152-14157, November 1996 Neurobiology. Embryonic
neuronal markers in tuberous sclerosis: Single-cell molecular pathology. ...

The Immunological Synapse: A Molecular Machine Controlling T Cell Activation -
A Grakoui, SK Bromley, C Sumen, MM Davis, AS Shaw, … - Science, 1999 - sciencemag.org
... cell activating system for optimal imaging of molecular interactions in the T cell
junction, we ... their free diffusion in the supported bilayer [Web movies 1 ...

A molecular and cellular theory of depression -
RS Duman, GR Heninger, EJ Nestler - Archives of General Psychiatry, 1997 - Am Med Assoc
You are seeing this message because your Web browser does not support basic
Web standards. ... A molecular and cellular theory of depression. ...

The Cell: A Molecular Approach, and Molecules, Cells, and Genes (BUNDLE) -
GM Cooper, RE Hausman - 2003 - Am Soc Microbiol
... Web links that guide students to useful and effective Web sites to ... Publisher: ASM
Press and Sinauer Associates Title: The Cell: A Molecular Approach, Third ...

… H'Stemness': Transcriptional Profiling of Embryonic and Adult Stem Cells? and HA Stem Cell Molecular -
NO Fortunel, HH Otu, HH Ng, J Chen, X Mu, T … - Science, 2003 - sciencemag.org
... that you are using a browser that does not support current Web standards. ... Profiling
of Embryonic and Adult Stem Cells" and "A Stem Cell Molecular Signature" (I ...

Planar polarity in the Drosophila eye: a multifaceted view of signaling specificity and cross-talk -
W Focuses, NPG Contact - The EMBO Journal, 1999 - nature.com
... However, on close inspection its requirement in the eye is opposite to that of fz
and dsh; stbm is required in R4 and not in the R3 cell. Molecular features of ...

Calcium signaling in neurons: molecular mechanisms and cellular consequences -
A Ghosh, ME Greenberg - Science, 1995 - sciencemag.org
... that you are using a browser that does not support current Web standards ... Calcium
signaling in neurons: molecular mechanisms and cellular consequences. ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Second molecular pathway that promotes cell survival in low-oxygen conditions, identified

Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine have identified a second molecular pathway that promotes cell survival in low-oxygen conditions.

By teasing apart the details of cellular adaptation during oxygen deprivation, or hypoxia, the researchers hope to gain a better understanding of the abnormal hypoxic environments that are characteristic of many diseases, including solid-tumor cancers and stroke.

Oxygen sensing, the ability of a cell to gauge the oxygen concentrations in its environment and to protect itself through internal regulation, is a fundamental process in most species of animals that depend entirely on oxygen to maintain cellular function. There are multiple, oxygen-dependent pathways in the cell that are regulated by changes in oxygen levels.

By starving human cells of oxygen, Celeste Simon, at Penn and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute ( HHMI ) investigator, and colleagues discovered an oxygen-sensitive cellular pathway that leads to a decrease in protein synthesis.

This finding is the second hypoxic cellular pathway to be identified by this research team. Simon, who is also a member of Penn's Abramson Cancer Center, and colleagues report their most recent findings in the journal Molecular Cell.

In order to promote cellular adaptations to hypoxia, the cell must first recognize the presence of a low-oxygen environment.
Previous genetic studies from Simon's laboratory helped to establish that the mitochondria–the energy center of the cell–play a major role in oxygen sensing.
Like an alarm, mitochondria alert the cells when oxygen levels fall too low, resulting in hypoxic cells activating a protein called hypoxia-inducible factor ( HIF ).
HIF, in turn, signals for physiological changes in nearby tissue that serve to protect oxygen-deprived cells. These changes include an increase in the number of red blood cells and blood vessels, the dilation of vessels, and changes in cell motility.

" These physiological changes make biological sense," explains Simon. " The changes allow the affected cell, or tissue, to withstand the stress of low oxygen. Changes in the blood cells and vasculature enhance the ability of the blood stream to carry oxygen to the effected regions."

In their most recent studies, Simon's group revealed the ability of cells to adapt to low-oxygen concentrations through a second molecular pathway. In order to protect itself during hypoxic conditions, a cell will conserve energy by greatly reducing protein synthesis.
By exposing human cells to low-oxygen conditions, the researchers observed the inactivation of mTOR, a central regulator of global protein synthesis. Further genetic testing revealed that the mTOR pathway operates independent of the HIF pathway.

Though paradoxical, Simon's findings suggest that the HIF pathway leads to the activation and translation of nearly 200 target genes essential to the cell's protective physiological changes, while the second and most recently discovered pathway–the mTOR pathway–inhibits protein synthesis. " The cell needs to take what energy it has to redirect to the molecular response that results in the necessary physiological changes," Simon suggests.

" There is something about the messenger RNAs present in the HIF pathway that allows them to escape inhibition of global protein synthesis," Simon notes. She believes that the directions for these mRNAs to move forward and make protein, while many are left behind, lies in the genetic makeup of mRNA. Her lab is currently working to identify these molecular directions.

Although hypoxic conditions exist throughout early embryonic development, the presence of hypoxic environments in adult tissue is often a response to disease. As Simon explains, " A lot of the major Western world scourges involve a decrease in oxygen availability that falls below the threshold that cells need to remain healthy and carry out their functions." Hypoxia is a prominent component of solid tumors, myocardial infarctions, stroke, diabetic retinopathy, inflammation, and atherosclerosis.

In addition to hypoxia, solid cancer tumors are comprised of abnormal cells and convoluted blood vessels, which allow the tumors to resist chemotherapy and radiation treatments. New treatments for cancer are now aiming to turn off HIF and mTOR activity, halting the ability of the cell to signal its low-oxygen alert system and undergo protein synthesis.

" If we are able to create a treatment for tumors by inactivating the factor that is promoting cell survival and tumor cell motility – a key regulator of tumor metastasis – we may have another option to treat solid tumors," notes Simon.

Source: University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, 2006

 
 
 
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