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STEM

黑料不打烊 scientists discover new hitch to link nerve cell motors to their cargo

Wednesday, May 25, 2011, By News Staff
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College of Arts and SciencesResearch and Creative

With every bodily movement鈥攆rom the blink of an eye to running a marathon鈥攏erve cells transmit signals to muscle cells. To do that, nerve cells rely on tiny molecular motors to transport chemical messengers (neurotransmitters) that excite muscles cells into action. It鈥檚 a complex process, which scientists are still trying to understand. A new study by 黑料不打烊 researchers has uncovered an important piece of the puzzle.聽

The study, published in the April 22 issue of the describes the discovery of a protein that is involved in the motor-cargo mechanism that carries neurotransmitter chemicals to the nerve cell鈥檚 synapse. The synapse is the junction at which electrical and chemical signals are transmitted from one nerve cell to another cell. JBC is the premier journal of the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.聽

LangfordThe discovery was made by a team of scientists led by George M. Langford, a cell biologist and dean of . Team members included research associate Torsten Wollert and assistant professor Michael Cosgrove in the Department of Biology; and collaborators from Dartmouth College, the Marine Biological Laboratory at Woods Hole, and the McLaughlin Research Institute. The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health.聽

鈥淭he transportation of neurotransmitter vesicles to the synapse is critical to nerve cell function,鈥 Langford says. 鈥淲e want to better understand all of the molecular components involved in the transport process. We have discovered another 鈥榟itch鈥 that links the motor to its cargo.鈥澛

New insights into how the chemicals are transported could result in new kinds of drug therapy for such illnesses as Parkinson鈥檚 disease, depression and injuries to the neuromuscular system, Langford says.聽

Neurotransmitters, produced by nerve cells, are used to signal cells in every organ system in the body鈥攆rom muscles to metabolism. The chemicals are packaged in small sacs called synaptic vesicles. The motors transporting these vesicles are composed of a protein called myosin-Va (Myo5a). Until now, it was not clearly understood how the Myo5a motor attached to the vesicle. In a series of experiments, Langford鈥檚 team demonstrated, for the first time, that Myo5a forms a complex with the protein Rab3A, which serves as the 鈥榟itch鈥 that snags the synaptic vesicle.聽

By understanding how the process works in normal cells, it鈥檚 possible for scientists to find ways to turn off a malfunctioning transportation system, Langford says.聽 For example, over-production of the neurotransmitter dopamine has been linked to depression and other mental illnesses. It may be desirable to develop drugs that prevent dopamine from being transported. Likewise preventing the transportation of muscle-contracting neurotransmitters could ease painful muscle spasms associated with Parkinson鈥檚 disease and severe, nervous system injuries.

Langford鈥檚 research has been dedicated to understanding how organelles move within cells. He was the first to observe the movement of synaptic vesicles on actin filaments in addition to their previously known transportation on microtubules within nerve cells.聽 Actin filaments and microtubules are the roads on which the molecular motors transport their cargo. 鈥淭hink of microtubules as the expressways in the nerve cells and the actin filaments as the local streets,鈥 Langford says.聽

In addition to his work on cellular transport mechanisms, Langford is researching ways to produce more effective drugs to treat Candida albicans, a fungus that causes infections in humans.

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