Curing Death
  Recent News |  Archives |  Tags |  About |  Newsletter |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Subscribe to CuringDeath.com RSS Fee Subscribe

Diet and lifestyle critical to recovery, says study (1/19/2008)

Tags:
diet, genes

Diet and lifestyle may play a much more significant role in a person's ability to respond favourably to certain drugs, including some cancer therapies, than previously understood, say scientists.

Writing in Nature Genetics, University of Manchester researchers have shown how the nutrients in the environment are critical to the fitness of cells that carry genetic mutations caused by diseases.

The findings for the first time provide a scientific insight into why some people might respond better to certain medications than others and form the foundations for more individualised drug therapy in the future.

The team used baker's yeast - a model organism studied by biologists to reveal molecular processes in higher organisms - to explore the relationship between environment and genetic background.

The large-scale study involved removing one of the two copies of all yeast genes - similar to removing one parent's set of genes in a human - and analysing the resulting fitness under different dietary restrictions.

"If the gene targeted is quantitatively important, you would normally expect the yeast to show a reduction in fitness," said Dr Daniela Delneri, who carried out the research in the University's Faculty of Life Sciences.

"But what we found was that in certain environmental conditions, removing one copy of certain genes actually produced the opposite effect and surprisingly the yeast cells grew more quickly and were healthier."

The team further established that this effect was mainly occurring in genes involved in the proteasome - the quality-control system within the cell that degrades unwanted proteins.

"The proteasome is important as it maintains the equilibrium of the cell," said Dr Delneri. "When this equilibrium is lost it can result in a number of diseases, including cancer, diabetes, Huntingdon's, Alzheimer's and Parkinson's.

"For example, in rapidly-growing cancerous cells the high proteasome activity renders the tumour cells immortal, so drugs that block or inhibit the proteasome's actions are currently used as therapeutic compounds.

"Our study shows that reduced proteasome activity could be either advantageous or damaging to the cell depending on the nutrients available to it in the surrounding environment."

The findings suggest that, ideally, when therapeutic drugs are administered to alter the proteasome activity, the environment - governed by the type of tissue or a person's diet and lifestyle - should be taken into consideration to assure the correct beneficial effect.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the University of Manchester

Credit Card Consolidation - Credit Card - Mortgage - Scottsdale Landscaping

Post Comments:

Search

Recent Articles
Once Suspect Protein Found to Promote DNA Repair, Prevent Cancer 7/25/2008

Exercise could be the heart's fountain of youth 7/25/2008

Gene clue to statins side effect 7/25/2008

Circadian rhythm-metabolism link discovered 7/25/2008

Identification of protein able to stimulate production of T-cells 7/24/2008

Using Heparin After Cardioembolic Stroke Increases Risk Of Severe Bleeding 7/24/2008

Sex and lifespan linked in worms 7/24/2008

Plants make vaccine for treating type of cancer 7/23/2008

New breast cancer test under study 7/23/2008

Checking more lymph nodes linked to cancer patient survival 7/23/2008

Researchers offer glimpse of rare mutant cells 7/23/2008

Viral recombination another way HIV fools the immune system 7/22/2008

Cranberry juice creates energy barrier that keeps bacteria away from cells, study shows 7/22/2008

Scientists figure out how the immune system and brain communicate to control disease 7/22/2008

Blood-related genetic mechanisms found important in Parkinson's disease 7/22/2008

  Archives |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Contact Us |  Links
All contents © 2000 - 2009 Web Doodle, LLC. All rights reserved.
Web Doodle, LLC does not provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Please read our disclaimer