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Prions found outside nervous system
Yale scientists find a genetic connection
to age-related macular degeneration
Et cetera
MicroRNA linked to oncogene
Smoking turns receptor on and off

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Prions found outside
nervous system
Finding suggests more stringent monitoring of farm animals may be needed
to protect the public.
Nancy H. Ruddle, Ph.D. ’68, the John Rodman Paul Professor of Epidemiology
and Public Health and professor of immunobiology, is the first to admit
that she’s no expert on mad cows. Her laboratory studies the human
lymphoid system and how it mediates chronic infection and autoimmune diseases
such as diabetes and multiple sclerosis. But Ruddle’s recent collaboration
with pathologist Adriano Aguzzi, M.D., Ph.D., in Switzerland has overturned
one of the major tenets of public health efforts to curb mad cow disease.

More formally known as bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), mad cow
disease is caused by prions—misfolded protein fragments that clump
together and destroy the brain. Other animals, such as sheep, goats and
mink, are also susceptible to prion diseases. In fact, researchers believe
that the mad cow epidemic started because animal feed was contaminated
with the brains of sheep infected with the prion disease scrapie. In humans,
contraction of the variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease has been attributed
to eating BSE-infected beef—specifically, the animals’ brain,
spinal cord and immune system tissues such as the spleen and lymph nodes.
Experts have assumed that other parts of the animal were safe to eat.

Aguzzi, a professor of neuropathology and molecular biology at the University
of Zurich, has long been on the trail of prion diseases. In 1997 his team
showed that the immune system’s B cells, or B lymphocytes, which
are activated when the body mounts an immune response against common infections,
may cause prions to replicate and spread. But no one knew how far.

Ruddle’s team was working with mouse models of inflammation in the
kidneys, pancreas and liver. Her work had shown that in chronic immune
diseases, T and B cells can form outposts outside of the immune system
that are very similar to lymph nodes. Since prion levels are known to
be high in lymph nodes, the international team hypothesized that the organized
outposts may allow spread of prions to other organs of the body beyond
the nervous and immune systems. Sure enough, the researchers reported
in January in the journal Science that when Ruddle’s mice were infected
with prions, their inflamed kidneys, pancreases and livers carried enormous
prion levels—as high as those found in diseased spleens.

“It was thought that even if a cow was infected (with BSE), what
was most important was that the brain didn’t get into the feed.
But if you have a chronic infection in that animal, you need to think
about that, too,” Ruddle said. The work may have far-reaching implications,
such as the need for increased monitoring of farm animals, says Ruddle.
Although cattle are routinely checked for fever, some inflammatory conditions
such as early forms of diabetes, she notes, would not necessarily have
visible symptoms.

—Alla Katsnelson


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On this genome map of a subject with age-related macular degeneration,
red and white squares represent strong matches with probes that find gene
variants.
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Yale scientists find
a genetic connection to age-related macular degeneration
Biomedical research into the genetic basis of disease has progressed
at a rapid clip since the sequence of the human genome was announced in
2000, but this past March 10 saw the scientific equivalent of a triple
play.

Three research teams, including one led by Josephine J. Hoh, Ph.D., an
assistant professor in Yale’s Department of Epidemiology and Public
Health, simultaneously announced that they had identified a gene variant
associated with a greatly increased risk of age-related macular degeneration
(AMD), a progressive disease leading to blindness that affects more than
10 million elderly Americans.

The human genome can be thought of as a vast string of 3 billion letters
in which each letter represents one of the four nucleotides that provide
instructions to the body’s protein-building machinery. The genome
is 99.8 percent identical among humans, but after every 100- to 300-letter
stretch on average are single nucleotide polymorphisms, or SNPs (pronounced
“snips”), sites where one letter is substituted for another.
Scientists believe that SNPs may help explain why some people are predisposed
to certain diseases or respond differently to drug therapies.

Remarkably, all three of the teams who published their findings in March
independently zeroed in on precisely the same SNP, a spot on chromosome
1 that is home to a gene that codes for an immune system protein known
as complement factor H (CFH). In its usual form, CFH acts as a brake on
the complement system, a component of the body’s innate immune response.

According to Hoh, whose group scanned the full genomes of 96 individuals
with AMD and those of 50 controls, those who carry two copies of the newly
identified variant in the CFH gene are nearly 7.5 times more likely than
the rest of the population to develop AMD. “This is only an association,”
Hoh emphasized. “It doesn’t really tell you that this is the
cause of the disease.”

Nonetheless, a faulty version of CFH may indeed be a culprit in AMD. For
example, yellowish deposits at the back of the eye known as drusen, the
clinical hallmark of AMD, contain complement proteins.

Hoh credits the Raymond and Beverly Sackler Fund for the Arts and Sciences
for making the study possible. “This particular kind of study is
expensive, not the normal thing a junior faculty member can perform,”
she said. “I am extremely grateful for the support from the Sackler
Family.”

Michael B. Bracken, M.P.H. ’70, Ph.D. ’74, the Susan Dwight
Bliss Professor of Epidemiology and Hoh’s collaborator, adds that
the work represents an entirely new way of doing epidemiology. “For
the past 100 years, we’ve used a hypothesis-testing approach, where
hypotheses were generated from animal studies or small human studies and
then we did large epidemiology studies.”

By contrast, whole-genome searches for SNPs are “hypothesis-free”:
“The association between a gene and disease is established first,
and the biology is done after,” Bracken said. “This takes
all that we’ve thought about doing science and turns it on its head,
and it’s likely to have major payoffs in the future.”

—Peter Farley


et cetera
MicroRNA linked to oncogene
A Yale scientist has identified a microRNA, let-7, that controls
an oncogene implicated in about 20 percent of cancers, including lung
cancer. The finding, reported in March in the journals Cell and
Developmental Cell, presents new possibilities for diagnosis and
treatment, according to Frank J. Slack, Ph.D., assistant professor of
molecular, cellular and developmental biology.

Oncogenes are segments of DNA that can induce uncontrolled cell growth
and, ultimately, the formation of cancerous tumors. MicroRNAs regulate
gene expression. Let-7, said Slack, stops the oncogene known as
Ras from producing the Ras protein. In the absence of let-7
RNA, cells in the nematode C. elegans continued to divide instead
of differentiating normally. Let-7 in humans, Slack said, is almost
identical to the worm sequence.

Lung cancer has a poor prognosis, said Slack, “but gene therapy
with let-7 may be a way to alleviate it or slow it down.”

—John Curtis


Smoking turns receptor on and off
Cigarette smoking turns on and then inactivates brain receptors that
are critical to the effectiveness of antidepressants, according to a study
published by Yale scientists in Biological Psychiatry last fall.

Finding a way to manipulate those receptors could make antidepressants
work more quickly—most now take up to three weeks to bring emotional
relief. “This finding has implications for those patients who are
depressed to the point of being suicidal and for the 30 percent of people
who are not responsive to antidepressants that are now available,”
said Marina R. Picciotto, Ph.D., associate professor of psychiatry, pharmacology
and neurobiology, and senior author of the study.

The next step, Picciotto said, will be to study the role of these nicotine
receptors, nAChRs, in regulating behavioral and cellular responses to
antidepressants. The receptors may have a direct effect in mediating responses
or they may act indirectly, by modulating neurotransmission in other cell
types.

—J.C.

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