Guest guest Posted March 18, 2006 Report Share Posted March 18, 2006 A Crucial Step in Unravelling Molecular Mechanism behind CMT--Defects in the YARS Gene Antwerp, Belgium - February 2006: Researchers of the Flanders Interuniversity Institute for Biotechnology (VIB) at the University of Antwerp have again taken a crucial step in unravelling the molecular mechanism behind the Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disorder, which is a disease of the nervous system that leads to muscular atrophy. Dr. Albena Jordanova, a Bulgarian guest researcher at the University of Antwerp, discovered that CMT patients have a specific mutation in an enzyme (YARS) that plays an important role in protein synthesis in all forms of life. This suggests that YARS is involved in disorders of the peripheral nervous system, which in turn may open the way to methods for preventing or treating CMT. The focus of the research team led by Prof. Timmerman (VIB Molecular Genetics Department, University of Antwerp) is identifying and studying genes that are involved in CMT and other hereditary disorders of the peripheral nervous system. Research recently conducted by Bulgarian guest researcher Dr. Albena Jordanova has now revealed a new aspect of the molecular process behind CMT. Defects in the YARS gene Dr. Jordanova studied two families, one in Bulgaria and one in America, in which CMT has been present for several generations. She studied archives and interviewed affected persons and other, healthy family members. In this manner, she was able to reconstruct two enormous family trees that showed how the disease was passed on by inheritance during the past 200 years. In genetic material from the Bulgarian and American CMT families, she localized the disorder to chromosome 1. After a long investigation of this chromosome, she discovered that the affected family members hadsystematic defects in the gene that codes for the YARS enzyme (tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase). Two mutations of the YARS gene were found in the Bulgarian and American families. At the same time, it was found that the YARS protein of a Belgian CMT family was missing several amino acids. Those were important findings, because YARS is an important factor in the life of people, animals and plants everywhere in the world. It contributes to the production of essential proteins, and it was already present in the earliest forms of life on our planet. The discovery that deviant forms of YARS were present in CMT patients thus suggested that they suffered from some sort of shortcoming in a fundamental bodily process. In the next stage of her research, Dr. Jordanova investigated the consequences of this YARS mutation in living cells. Mutant YARS was introduced into yeast cells, and the growth of the yeast cultures was monitored. That revealed that the mutated YARS retarded the growth of the yeast cells. After this, she focused specifically on the activity of the YARS enzyme. That study showed that YARS has a reduced level of activity in CMT patients. She also discovered that YARS is localized in nerve tips, and that the amount of YARS present there is reduced if the cells have mutated with mutant YARS. As human peripheral nerves can be up to 1 meter long (such as the nerves that run from the spinal column to the feet), that led to the conjecture that YARS might be involved in transmitting signals from the nerve tips to the muscles. That formed an important hypothesis in unravelling the CMT puzzle, in which something goes wrong with the signals transmitted by the nerves to control muscle activity. The search continues Three years of scientific research have yielded an important clue in the battle against a frequently occurring hereditary disorder that can have drastic consequences. Reconstruction of the Bulgarian family tree – which required visiting family members in extremely remote mountain villages – was a monumental effort, and the subsequent studies were also very labor-intensive, but they have yielded truly worthwhile results. The next task is to understand the exact role of YARS, which can be helpful in establishing a diagnosis and determining the risk for a child with CMT. Particularly in Bulgaria, where CMT is the most commonly occurring neuromuscular disease, that can make a major difference in national health care. Dr. Jordanova, who was recently awarded the `Women in Science' prize in Bulgaria, is returning to the Medical University of Sofia after completing her research. There she will resume her position of Assistant Professor at the Laboratory of Molecular Pathology. However, she said she hoped to return to Antwerp some time to continue her research with what she called `the best people in the world in molecular genetics'. Relevant scientific publication: " Disrupted function and axonal distribution of mutant tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase in dominant intermediate Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy " in Nature Genetics 2006 (Jordanova et. al. – on line 22 January 2006) The research was performed in cooperation with research groups associated with the universities of Antwerp, Ghent and Leuven. Prof. Johan Thevelein and Prof. Van Dijck (VIB Department of Molecular Microbiology, C.U. Leuven) assisted in the yeast study. Prof. Jan Gettemans and Dr Kris Meerschaert (VIB Department of Medical Protein Research, U. Ghent) were involved in measuring the enzyme activity of YARS. The nerve cell research was supported by Prof. Wim Robberecht and Prof. Ludo Van den Bosch of the C.U. Leuven. The microscope studies were performed in the laboratory of Prof. Jean- Pierre Timmermans (University of Antwerp). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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