Skip to main content

Thank you for visiting nature.com. You are using a browser version with limited support for CSS. To obtain the best experience, we recommend you use a more up to date browser (or turn off compatibility mode in Internet Explorer). In the meantime, to ensure continued support, we are displaying the site without styles and JavaScript.

Volume 10 Issue 7, July 2004

Bone marrow-derived cells can therapeutically fuse with hepatocytes in the fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase (Fah)-deficient mouse, a model of liver disease. On page 744 of this issue, Willenbring et al. show that myelomonocytic cells, including macrophages, are effective fusion partners for hepatocytes in vivo. The cover is a stylized depiction of a fused hepatocyte (stained orange for Fah) containing three nuclei stained for presence of the X chromosome (green) and host-derived Y chromosomes (pink). Total magnification, x1,500.

Editorial

Top of page ⤴

News

Top of page ⤴

Correspondence

Top of page ⤴

Commentary

  • Biobanks will have a crucial role in the identification of genes associated with disease — a prerequisite to designing adequate diagnostic and therapeutic tools. To maximize their impact and chances of success, collaboration at a global scale is highly desirable.

    • Hans-E Hagen
    • Jan Carlstedt-Duke
    Commentary
Top of page ⤴

Book Review

Top of page ⤴

News & Views

  • After bone marrow transplantation, signs of donor cells appear in the liver of recipients. Two studies support the notion that these cells arise through cellular fusion with the liver, and identify the source: macrophages derived from hematopoietic stem cells. A third study examines another viewpoint, that donor cells differentiate directly into liver cells (pages 744–748).

    • George Q Daley
    News & Views
  • Narcoleptic individuals experience episodes of cataplexy, in which they retain consciousness but have no muscle tone. Consciousness and muscle tone are controlled by distinct brain regions, now delineated by research on narcoleptic dogs.

    • J Gregor Sutcliffe
    • Luis de Lecea
    News & Views
  • A single injection of the neurosteroid allopregnanolone can delay the onset of neurological symptoms, decrease neuronal cell death and double the lifespan of mice with Niemann–Pick type C disease (pages 704–711).

    • Mark P Burns
    • Karen Duff
    News & Views
  • Several forms of muscular dystrophy are associated with mutations in genes that regulate glycosylation of α-dystroglycan. Forced overexpression of one of these genes, LARGE, in mice overcomes the defective glycosylation present in this group of disorders (pages 696–703).

    • Francesco Muntoni
    • Martin Brockington
    • Susan C Brown
    News & Views
  • Cannabinoids inhibit motility and secretion in the intestine. They are now assigned the additional task of curbing excessive inflammation, suggesting that drugs targeting the endogenous cannabinoid system could be exploited for inflammatory bowel disease.

    • George Kunos
    • Pál Pacher
    News & Views
  • Intracellular antigens—from viruses, tumors, bacteria and other sources—pose a challenge to the immune response and to vaccine development. How do such antigens enter antigen-presenting cells? Three new studies examine this process, implicating whole proteins instead of small peptides as key intermediaries.

    • Keith S Bahjat
    • Stephen P Schoenberger
    News & Views
  • Treatment with α-lipoic acid, found naturally in our diets, decreases food intake in rats and keeps them slim by inhibiting AMP activated protein kinase (AMPK) in the hypothalamus. The findings reinforce the emerging status of AMPK as a cellular integrator that senses signals for food intake and whole body energy status (pages 727–733).

    • Caroline J Small
    • David Carling
    • Stephen R Bloom
    News & Views
Top of page ⤴

Review Article

  • Antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) are commonly prescribed for nonepileptic conditions, including migraine headache, chronic neuropathic pain, mood disorders, schizophrenia and various neuromuscular syndromes. In many of these conditions, as in epilepsy, the drugs act by modifying the excitability of nerve (or muscle) through effects on voltage-gated sodium and calcium channels or by promoting inhibition mediated by γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) A receptors. In neuropathic pain, chronic nerve injury is associated with the redistribution and altered subunit compositions of sodium and calcium channels that predispose neurons in sensory pathways to fire spontaneously or at inappropriately high frequencies, often from ectopic sites. AEDs may counteract this abnormal activity by selectively affecting pain-specific firing; for example, many AEDs suppress high-frequency action potentials by blocking voltage-activated sodium channels in a use-dependent fashion. Alternatively, AEDs may specifically target pathological channels; for example, gabapentin is a ligand of α2δ voltage-activated calcium channel subunits that are overexpressed in sensory neurons after nerve injury. Emerging evidence suggests that effects on signaling pathways that regulate neuronal plasticity and survival may be a factor in the delayed clinical efficacy of AEDs in some neuropsychiatric conditions, including bipolar affective disorder.

    • Michael A Rogawski
    • Wolfgang Löscher
    Review Article
Top of page ⤴

Brief Communication

Top of page ⤴

Article

Top of page ⤴

Letter

Top of page ⤴

Technical Report

Top of page ⤴

Erratum

Top of page ⤴

On the Market

Top of page ⤴

Focus

Top of page ⤴

Search

Quick links