|
January
27, 2005
UCSD-Salk Team Show Protein’s Gene-Silencing
Role In Development of Nervous System
By Sue Pondrom
The first evidence
that a group of proteins called phosphatases play a key role
in the development of the nervous system, has been shown in
fruit flies and mice by researchers at the University of California,
San Diego (UCSD) School of Medicine, in collaboration with scientists
at the Salk Institute, La Jolla, California. The phosphatases
are required for maintenance of neural stem cells and for silencing
expression of neuronal genes in non-nervous system tissues.
Published in the January
28, 2005 issue of the journal Science, the study found that
the phosphatases, called small carboxyl-terminal domain phosphatases
(SCPs) are expressed in almost all tissues of the body. In their
“on” position, the phosphatases prevent neuronal
genes from being expressed in areas of the body, such as the
heart and liver, where they shouldn’t be. When these phosphatases
are shut off in the nervous system, neuronal stem cells can
develop into specialized neurons.
The researchers determined
that SCPs are a component of a previously identified master
gene complex called REST/NRSF, which is known to control neuronal
genes. In their investigations with mice and fruit flies, the
scientists found that REST/NRSF recruits SCPs only to neuronal
genes.
“These findings
suggest a way to expand the pool of neuronal stem cells, which
could lead to new therapeutic strategies for neurological disorders,”
said the study’s senior author, Gordon Gill, M.D., UCSD
professor of medicine.
The ability of SCPs
to silence genes was first shown by Gill and his post-doctoral
fellow Michele Yeo, Ph.D., in an April 28, 2003 study published
in the Journal of Biological Chemistry. Yeo is co-first
author of the new study in Science, along with Soo-Kyung
Lee, Ph.D., a post-doctoral fellow in the lab of Samuel L. Pfaff,
Ph.D., associate professor, Salk Institute. Additional authors
are Bora Lee, Ph.D. and Esmeralda C. Ruiz, B.S., Salk Institute.
The study was supported
by a grant from the National Institutes of Health.
Media Contact; Sue
Pondrom (619) 543-6163
|