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Volume 22 Issue 8, August 2012

Research Highlight

  • The cellular response to amino acids is controlled at the molecular level by TORC1. While many of the elements that participate in TORC1 signaling are known, we still have no clear idea how cells sense amino acids. Two recent studies found that leucyl-tRNA synthetase (LRS) is a leucine sensor for TORC1, in both yeast and mammalian cells.

    • Raúl V Durán
    • Michael N Hall
    Research Highlight

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  • A recent paper suggests that reduced exposure to germs results in the expansion of a cell type called natural killer T cells, which predisposes to colitis and asthma. Such a scenario could explain the Hygiene Hypothesis, which has been a puzzle for decades.

    • Dale T Umetsu
    Research Highlight
  • Emerging evidence suggests an involvement of nuclear pore components in the regulation of neural differentiation and aging. These findings will have far-ranging impacts on the understanding of the function of the nuclear envelope in physiological settings and in various neurological diseases.

    • Guang-Hui Liu
    • Mo Li
    • Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte
    Research Highlight
  • Initial studies linking Sirtuins to longevity in yeast initiated what is now a rich vein of aging research that is full of promise and fraught with controversy. Missing was a demonstration that enhanced Sirtuin expression extends lifespan in mammals. Now Kanfi et al. provide the evidence but with an interesting plot twist – the lesser known SIRT6 is the longevity factor.

    • Chen-Yu Liao
    • Brian K Kennedy
    Research Highlight
  • Aging is a key risk factor in neurodegenerative disease; however, little is known about cellular pathways that mediate age-associated degeneration of the brain. The Bonini lab has identified a conserved microRNA, miR-34, that plays a neuroprotective role in the aging Drosophila brain and suggests that it functions in temporal control of gene expression.

    • Sherry Aw
    • Stephen M Cohen
    Research Highlight
  • Efficient DNA damage sensing and repair is crucial to preserve genomic integrity and failure to detect or repair DNA breaks can cause mutations, contributing to the formation of tumors. One key protein required for mediating DNA repair is the tumor suppressor 53BP1. Recent studies now demonstrate the crucial role of K48-linked ubiquitination and protein degradation for 53BP1 recruitment at sites of DNA damage.

    • Frédérick A Mallette
    • Stéphane Richard
    Research Highlight
  • CUL4B, a member of the cullin-RING ubiquitin ligase family, is frequently mutated in X-linked mental retardation (XLMR) patients. The study by Liu et al. showed that Cul4b plays an essential developmental role in the extra-embryonic tissues, while it is dispensable in the embryo proper during mouse embryogenesis. Viable Cul4b-null mice provide the first animal model to study neuronal and behavioral deficiencies seen in human CUL4B XLMR patients.

    • Yongchao Zhao
    • Yi Sun
    Research Highlight
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