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Curr Top Dev Biol,
2000]
The main advantage of C. elegans as an experimental model lies in its simplicity. The full-grown adult is about 1 mm in length and composed of fewer than 1000 somatic nuclei. It has a short reproductive cycle of approximately 3 days and simple nutritional requirements, feeding primarily on bacteria....
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Nature,
2004]
The recent discoveries of RNA interference and the related RNA silencing pathways have revolutionized our understanding of gene regulation. RNA interference has been used as a research tool to control the expression of specific genes in numerous experimental organisms and has potential as a therapeutic strategy to reduce the expression of problem genes. At the heart of RNA interference lies a remarkable RNA processing mechanism that is now known to underlie many distinct biological
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Trends in Cell Biology,
1996]
Cellular microtubules assemble and disassemble at a variety of rates and frequencies, and these properties contribute directly to the cell-cycle-associated rearrangements of the microtubule cytoskeleton and to the molecular basis of mitosis. The kinetics of assembly/disassembly are governed, in part, by the hydrolysis of GTP bound to the B-tubulin nucleotide-binding site. The B-tubulin GTP-binding site, therefore, lies at the heart of microtubule assembly-disassembly kinetics, and the elucidation of its structure is central to an understanding of the cellular behaviour of microtubules. Unfortunately, the crystallographic structure of B-tubulin is not yet available. In this review, we describe the progress being made using mutagenesis and biochemical studies to understand the structure of this unusual GTP-binding site.
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Biochim Biophys Acta,
2012]
The 7 subtype of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) is one of the most abundant members of the Cys-loop family of receptors present in the central nervous system. It participates in various physiological processes and has received much attention as a potential therapeutic target for a variety of pathologies. The importance of understanding the mechanisms controlling AChR assembly and cell-surface delivery lies in the fact that these two processes are key to determining the functional pool of receptors actively engaged in synaptic transmission. Here we review recent studies showing that RIC-3, a protein originally identified in the worm Caenorhabditis elegans, modulates the expression of 7 AChRs in a subtype-specific manner. Potentiation of AChR expression by post-transcriptional events is also critically assessed.
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Curr Opin Cell Biol,
2013]
Correct positioning of the spindle governs placement of the cytokinesis furrow and thus plays a crucial role in the partitioning of fate determinants and the disposition of daughter cells in a tissue. Converging evidence indicates that spindle positioning is often dictated by interactions between the plus-end of astral microtubules that emanate from the spindle poles and an evolutionary conserved cortical machinery that serves to pull on them. At the heart of this machinery lies a ternary complex (LIN-5/GPR-1/2/G in Caenorhabditis elegans and NuMA/LGN/Gi in Homo sapiens) that promotes the presence of the motor protein dynein at the cell cortex. In this review, we discuss how the above components contribute to spindle positioning and how the underlying mechanisms are precisely regulated to ensure the proper execution of this crucial process in metazoan organisms.
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Biogerontology,
2015]
In C. elegans, mutations in the conserved insulin/IGF-1 signaling (IIS) pathway lead to a robust extension in lifespan, improved late life health, and protection from age-related disease. These effects are mediated by the FoxO transcription factor DAF-16 which lies downstream of the IIS kinase cascade. Identifying and functionally testing DAF-16 target genes has been a focal point of ageing research for the last 10years. Here, I review the recent advances in identifying and understanding IIS/DAF-16 targets. These studies continue to reveal the intricate nature of the IIS/DAF-16 gene regulation network and are helping us to understand the mechanisms that control lifespan. Ageing and age related disease is an area of intense public interest, and the biochemical characterization of the genes involved will be critical for identifying drugs to improve the health of our ageing population.
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Aging (Milano),
1993]
A central theme underlies this review: "Genetics offers an important tool for identifying key molecular events that are involved in specifying biological functions." This approach has been used repeatedly to understand such diverse biological phenomena as oncogenesis, development, and the cell cycle, but has only recently been applied to the analysis of organismic aging and senescence. The power of the genetic approach lies in the ability to integrate phenomena that are displayed at multiple observational levels (i.e., from the molecular to the whole organism), and the power to reveal causal factors that are not dependent upon the prejudice of the investigator. I discuss several areas where genetics has been fruitfully applied to the study of the aging processes: human genes identified by "segmental progeroid" mutations; neurological diseases of the elderly; the limited proliferative life span of human somatic cells in tissue culture; studies on the life span of the mouse; and genetic analysis of life span in shorter-lived metazoans (Drosophila melanogaster and Caenorhabditis elegans), and the yeast Saccaromyces cerevisiae.
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Curr Opin Anaesthesiol,
2012]
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Although general anesthetics have been provided effectively for many years, their exact molecular underpinnings remain relatively unknown. In this article, we discuss the recent findings associated with resistance to anesthetic effects as a way of shedding light on these mechanisms. RECENT FINDINGS: The original theories of anesthetic action based upon their effects on cellular membranes have given way to specific theories concerning direct effects on ion channel proteins. These molecular targets are intimately involved in the conduct of neuronal signaling within the central nervous system and are thought to be essential in the modulation of conscious states. It is the lack of a thorough understanding of unperturbed consciousness that fosters great difficulty in understanding how anesthetics alter this conscious state. However, one very fruitful line of analysis in the quest for such answers lies in the examination of both in-vitro and in-vivo ion channel systems that seem to maintain variable levels of resistance to anesthetics. SUMMARY: Information about the possible targets and molecular nature of anesthetic action is being derived from studies of anesthetic resistance in aminobutyric acid receptors, tandem pore potassium channels, and an apparently wide variety of protein systems within the nematode, Caenorhabditis elegans.
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Mech Ageing Dev,
2002]
It strikes me that among our relatively small community of gerontologists concerned with genetic approaches to our science, there is somewhat of a dichotomization. On the one hand, there are those of us, like myself, who tend to be dour ''complificationists''. Journalists talk to us, but are usually disappointed by the encounter. We are perhaps too impressed with the enormous diversity of genetic modulations of human senescence and with our interpretations of the implications of the evolutionary biological theory of senescence, namely that senescent phenotypes per se are non-adaptive, non-determinative, subject to stochastic events as well as highly polygenic modulations, with resulting wide variability in mechanisms of senescence among and within species. Quite happily, however, there are wonderful optimists among us. They seem to be convinced that there are likely to be a rather small number of major gene effects for a few major mechanisms. They include most Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Caenorhabditis elegans geneticists, some Drosophila melanogaster geneticists, and some mouse geneticists. They also include caloric restriction enthusiasts. Let''s call these colleagues ''simplificationists''. Journalists and friends generally find them to be delightful companions. Where does the truth lie? Perhaps the truth lies somewhere between these two extremes and is largely dependent upon the organisms and the range of environments being investigated.
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WormBook,
2005]
Genetic suppression has provided a very powerful tool for analyzing C. elegans. Suppression experiments are facilitated by the ability to handle very large numbers of individuals and to apply powerful selections. Because the animal grows as a self-fertilizing diploid, both dominant and recessive suppressors can be recovered. Many different kinds of suppression have been reported. These are discussed by category, with examples, together with discussion of how suppressors can be used to interpret the underlying biology, and to enable further experimentation. Suppression phenomena can be divided into intragenic and extragenic classes, depending on whether the suppressor lies in the same gene as the starting mutation, or in a different gene. Intragenic types include same-site replacement, compensatory mutation, alteration in splicing, and reversion of dominant mutations by cis- knockout. Extragenic suppression can occur by a variety of informational mechanisms, such as alterations in splicing, translation or nonsense-mediated decay. In addition, extragenic suppression can occur by bypass, dosage effects, product interaction, or removal of toxic products. Within signaling pathways, suppression can occur by modulating the strength of signal transmission, or by epistatic interactions that can reveal the underlying regulatory hierarchies. In C. elegans biology, the processes of muscle development, vulva formation and sex determination have provided remarkably rich arenas for the investigation and exploitation of suppression.