Your body recycling itself 鈥 captured on film
Discovery shows how cells decide what to recycle,
unlocking debilitating disease鈥檚 secret
Our bodies recycle proteins, the fundamental building blocks that
enable cell growth and development. Proteins are made up of a chain
of amino acids, and scientists have known since the 1980s that
first one in the chain determines the lifetime of a protein. 捆绑SM社区
researchers have finally discovered how the cell identifies this
first amino acid 鈥 and caught it on camera.
鈥淭here are lots of reasons cells recycle proteins 鈥 fasting, which
causes loss of muscle, growth and remodeling during development,
and normal turnover as old proteins are replaced to make new ones,鈥
explained lead researcher, Dr. Kalle Gehring, from 捆绑SM社区鈥檚
Department of Biochemistry. 鈥淥ne way that cells decide which
proteins to degrade is the presence of a signal known as an
N-degron at the start of the protein. By X-ray crystallography, we
discovered that the N-degron is recognized by the UBR box, a
component of the cells' recycling system.鈥 The powerful technique
can pinpoint the exact location of atoms and enabled the team to
capture an image of the UBR box, providing insight to this
incredibly tiny yet essential part of our bodies鈥 chemical
mechanics.
Aside from representing a major advance in our understanding of the
life cycle of proteins, the research has important repercussions
for Johanson-Blizzard syndrome, a rare disease that causes
deformations and mental retardation. This syndrome is caused by a
mutation in the UBR box that causes it to lose an essential zinc
atom. Better understanding of the structure of the UBR box may help
researchers develop treatments for this syndrome.
The research was published in Nature Structural & Molecular
Biology and received funding from the Canadian Institutes of Health
Research.