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A half century ago, antagonistic pleiotropy (AP) theory had solved a mystery of aging, by postulating genes beneficial early in life at the cost of aging. Recently it was argued however that there are very few clear-cut examples of antagonistically pleiotropic (AP) genes other than p53. In contrast, here I discuss that p53 is not a clear-cut example of AP genes but is rather an aging-suppressor (gerosuppressor). In contrast, clear-cut examples of AP genes are genes that encode the TOR (target of rapamycin) pathway. TOR itself is the ultimate example of AP gene because its deletion is lethal in embryogenesis. Early in life the TOR pathway drives developmental program, which persists later in life as an aimless quasi-program of aging and age-related diseases.  相似文献   

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Interbacterial communication can be mediated by soluble secreted factors and direct cell-cell contact. Recently, Aoki et al. identified a new contact-dependent communication pathway by which strains of uropathogenic Escherichia coli can inhibit the growth of other microbes within a mixed population. Two novel gene products--CdiA and CdiB, which seem to be members of a two-partner secretion family with homologs in many pathogens--mediate this contact-dependent inhibition (CDI). A third gene product, CdiI, provides immunity to CDI, as does expression of either P or S pili. The interplay between CDI and immunity factors could directly affect the course of an infection and modulate both the dispersion and the chronic persistence of bacterial pathogens within the host.  相似文献   

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Epithelial morphogenesis in embryos: asymmetries, motors and brakes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Epithelial cells play a central role in many embryonic morphogenetic processes, during which they undergo highly coordinated cell shape changes. Here, we review some common principles that have recently emerged through genetic and cellular analyses performed mainly with invertebrate genetic models, focusing on morphogenetic processes involving epithelial sheets. All available data argue that myosin II is the main motor that induces cell shape changes during morphogenesis. We discuss the control of myosin II activity during epithelial morphogenesis, as well as the recently described involvement of microtubules in this process. Finally, we examine how forces unleashed by myosin II can be measured, how embryos use specific brakes to control molecular motors and the potential input of mechano-sensation in morphogenesis.  相似文献   

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Mathis D  King GL 《Current biology : CB》2002,12(16):R554-R556
The phenotype of mice lacking the delta isoform of protein kinase C reveals that this isoform curtails signaling events after engagement of the antigen-specific receptor on B cells. The result is a state of non-responsiveness, termed anergy, that represents one form of immunological self-tolerance.  相似文献   

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Recent studies suggest that the human Kinesin-8 molecular motor Kif18A has a role in chromosome congression. Specifically, these studies find that Kif18A promotes chromosome congression by attenuating chromosome oscillation magnitudes. Together with recent modeling work, in vitro studies, and the analysis of in vivo yeast data, these reports reveal how Kinesin-8 molecular motors might control chromosome oscillation amplitudes by spatially regulating the dynamic instability of microtubule plus-ends within the mitotic spindle.  相似文献   

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Easing the brakes on spinal cord repair   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
McKerracher L  David S 《Nature medicine》2004,10(10):1052-1053
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The Arp2/3 complex is a powerful nucleator of actin filaments when activated. A recent study has now revealed that this complex is not only subject to positive control but that there also exists a brake on its activity. This brake can suppress both the basal activity of the Arp2/3 complex as well as its activation by nucleation-promoting factors.  相似文献   

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Günes C  Rudolph KL 《The EMBO journal》2012,31(13):2833-2834
EMBO J 31 13, 2839–2851 (2012); published online May082012Senescence represents a major tumour suppressor checkpoint activated by telomere dysfunction or cellular stress factors such as oncogene activation. In this issue of The EMBO Journal, Suram et al (2012) reveal a surprising interconnection between oncogene activation and telomere dysfunction induced senescence. The study supports an alternative model of tumour suppression, indicating that oncogene-induced accumulation of telomeric DNA damage contributes to the induction of senescence in telomerase-negative tumours.Telomere shortening limits the proliferative capacity of primary human cells after 50–70 cell divisions by induction of replicative senescence activated by critically short, dysfunctional telomeres. Different mechanisms were thought to initiate senescence in response to oncogene activation, which occurs abruptly within a few cell doublings (Serrano et al, 1997). Oncogene-induced senescence (OIS) involves an activation of DNA damage signals at stalled replication forks induced by DNA replication stress (Bartkova et al, 2006; Di Micco et al, 2006). Replication fork stalling in response to oncogene activation preferentially affects common fragile sites of the DNA (Tsantoulis et al, 2008). The ends of eukaryotic chromosomes—the telomeres–represent common fragile sites that are sensitive to replication fork stalling (Sfeir et al, 2009). These data made it tempting to speculate whether replication fork stalling at telomeres was causatively involved in OIS. Studies on replicative senescence in human fibroblast also supported this possibility showing that mitogenic signals amplify DNA damage responses in senescent cells (Satyanarayana et al, 2004).Multiple studies revealed experimental evidences that senescence suppresses tumour progression in mouse models and early human tumours (for review see Collado and Serrano, 2010). The relative contribution of OIS and telomere dysfunction induced senescence (TDIS) to tumour suppression and possible interconnections between the two pathways at the level of checkpoint induction were not investigated in previous studies. In this issue of The EMBO Journal, Suram et al (2012) describe the presence of TDIS in human precursor lesions but not in the corresponding malignant tumours. Mechanistically, the study shows that oncogenic signals cause replication fork stalling, resulting in telomeric DNA damage accumulation and activation of DNA damage checkpoints reminiscent to TDIS. Telomerase expression does not rescue replication fork stalling but prevents the accumulation of DNA damage at telomeres allowing a bypass of OIS.The study has several important implications for molecular pathways and therapeutic approaches in cancer that need to be further explored (Figure 1):Open in a separate windowFigure 1Traditional and new models of senescence in tumour suppression. (A) Traditional model of replicative senescence: Telomerase-negative tumour cell clones experience telomere shortening as a consequence of cell division. After a lack period depending on the initial telomere length, tumour cells accumulate telomere dysfunction and activation of senescence impairs tumour growth. Telomerase activation represents a late event allowing tumour progression. (B) New model of oncogene induced, telomere-dependent senescence: Oncogene activation leads to abrupt accumulation of DNA damage at telomeres resulting in senescence and tumour suppression. Telomerase-positive stem cells could be resistant to OIS and may be selected as the cell type of origin of tumour development.(i) Telomere length independent roles of telomeres in tumour suppressionThe classical model of telomere-dependent tumour suppression indicates that proliferation-dependent telomere shortening leads to telomere dysfunction, activation of DNA damage checkpoints, and induction of senescence suppressing the growth of telomerase-negative tumour clones. Studies on mouse models supported this concept showing that telomere shortening impairs the progression of initiated tumours in a telomere length-dependent manner (Feldser and Greider, 2007). The new data from Suram et al (2012) indicate that oncogene-induced replication fork stalling activates a telomere-dependent senescence checkpoint, which is independent of telomere length. The study shows that replication forks stall in response to oncogene activation throughout the genome. However, stalled replication forks are resolved in non-telomeric regions, whereas fork stalling inside telomeres leads to un-repairable DNA damage in telomerase-negative cells. These findings are in line with recent publication showing accumulation of un-repairable DNA damage in telomeric DNA in response to aging and stress-induced DNA damage (Fumagalli et al, 2012).(ii) Telomere length independent roles of telomerase in tumour progressionFollowing the classical model telomeres in tumour suppression (Figure 1A), telomerase re-activation is required for tumour progression by limiting telomere dysfunction and the induction of DNA damage checkpoints in response to telomere shortening. The new data from Suram et al (2012) indicate that telomerase has an additional telomere length independent role in tumour progression. The study shows that catalytically active telomerase prevents the activation of DNA damage signals originating from stalled replication forks inside telomeres in response to oncogene activation (Figure 1B). The exact mechanisms of telomerase-dependent healing of stalled replication forks at telomeres remain to be elucidated. It is also unclear whether telomerase activity can prevent any type of DNA damage at telomeres as an over-expression of TERT could not suppress irradiation-induced cellular senescence or the persistence of telomeric DDR following irradiation, H2O2, or chemotherapy induced DNA damage (Hewitt et al, 2012).The data could provide a plausible explanation for the increased tumorigenesis in telomerase transgenic mice—a finding which is difficult to explain by telomere length dependent effects of telomerase given the long telomere reserves in mouse tissues (Gonzalez-Suarez et al, 2001). According to the findings of Suram et al (2012), anti-telomerase therapies could have immediate anti-cancer effects in tumours depending on telomerase-mediated healing of stalled replication forks at telomeres. Specific markers for this dependency could be of clinical value. In addition, the data support the concept that somatic stem cells could represent the cell type of origin of cancers. In contrast to differentiated somatic cells, tissues stem cells are often telomerase-positive, indicating that stem cells might be less sensitive to OIS.  相似文献   

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