Annoying Species Gets New Lease on Life
But humans still may get something out of the deal. As reported online this week in Nature Chemical Biology, the discovery that a single protein can inhibit aging holds implications for human longevity and for treatment of some of the world’s most feared diseases.
“This work is important for two reasons,” said study author Richard Roberts, associate professor of chemistry, chemical engineering and biology at the USC.
“First, it demonstrates that a single inhibitor can dramatically alter lifespan, a very complex trait. It is remarkable that you can alter it with a single genetic change.
“We don’t really need to make fruit flies live longer, but if we understand how to do this, our approach may have direct application to higher organisms, such as ourselves.”
Secondly, Roberts said, the method used by his research group to make the inhibiting proteins “opens the possibility of developing a lot of new therapeutics.”
The study describes a new method for blocking receptors involved in aging and disease across many species, including humans.
Receptors are proteins that transmit signals across a cell membrane. In the fruit fly, Roberts and his team manufactured short proteins that blocked a receptor involved in fruit fly aging, as previously demonstrated by co-author Seymour Benzer of Caltech.
Flies with a blocked receptor saw their lives extended by a third, with no apparent side effects.
The same blocking strategy should work in all such receptors, known as class B GPCRs (for G protein-coupled receptors). Many GPCRs figure prominently in disease as well as in normal development, Roberts said.
“It is the most targeted family of receptors” by drug manufacturers, Roberts said, estimating that a quarter of all pharmaceuticals focus on GPCRs.
“This approach should be generally applicable.”
And generally powerful, given that GPCRs are notoriously unstable and difficult to work with. The Roberts group went around the problem by cutting off the unstable part of the receptor and running experiments only on the part of the receptor that sticks out of the cell.
Although there were no guarantees that peptides sticking to one part would block the entire receptor, the strategy succeeded.
Roberts’ method builds on his co-discovery, in 1997, of a simple method for building libraries of trillions of short proteins, or peptides.
Unlike DNA, which can be copied and multiplied millions of times with polymerase chain reaction (PCR), proteins cannot be copied directly.
But Roberts and Jack Szostak of Massachusetts General Hospital thought of fusing peptides to the bits of messenger RNA that contained their sequence.
“Essentially, we developed a way to do PCR on proteins,” Roberts said.
The use of RNA-peptide fusions allowed the easy creation and multiplication of randomly generated peptides. Roberts termed this approach “Irrational Design.”
In the new study, Roberts and his group literally threw trillions of peptides at the receptor and saved the ones that stuck.
“We let the molecules themselves decide if they bind, rather than trying to design them rationally,” he said.
After multiple cycles, the researchers had a group of peptides that stuck to the receptor and not to any other protein.
Fruit flies genetically altered to produce such peptides lived longer, suggesting that the peptides were interfering with the Methuselah receptor’s normal function.
Why these particular peptides work, and why the receptor they target plays such an important role in fruit fly aging, remain the bigger and as yet unanswered questions.
Print publication of the Nature Chemical Biology study is expected later this summer.
The other co-authors on the study are William Ja and Anthony West, postdoctoral fellows at Caltech; Pamela Bjorkman, professor with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute at Caltech; and Silvia Delker, postdoctoral fellow at the University of California, Riverside.
Funding for the research came from the National Institutes of Health, the Beckman Foundation, the Glenn Foundation, the American Federation for Aging Research, and the John Douglas French Alzheimer’s Foundation.
In recognition of his work building libraries of proteins, Roberts received a Presidential Early Career Award in Science and Engineering from the National Science Foundation in 1999.
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Los Angeles Times reported that C.L. Max Nikias, USC executive vice president and provost, will become the 11th president of USC, succeeding President Steven B. Sample this August. Nikias, “a man well-known and well-liked on campus,” was chosen from a candidate pool of 75 educators and said he plans to build on Sample’s accomplishments by intensifying fundraising efforts. “It’s not a change of direction but an acceleration. This university is on the ascent under President Sample for 19 years. We can move the needle and move this university into what I call the pantheon of undisputed elite universities,” said Nikias, who has also served as dean of the USC Viterbi School. “USC will be in excellent hands with Max as president,” Sample said. Chairman of the USC Board of Trustees Ed Roski added: “He is a remarkable and inspiring leader, a brilliant scholar, and the best possible person to lead our university forward.” William Tierney of the USC Rossier School said the selection of Nikias was well received on campus because of his personal popularity and also because it promises a relatively seamless transition. Holden Slusher, USC Undergraduate Student Government president, said students are happy to have a new president who “knows exactly what we do here and is not going to revolutionize something we love.” The news was also covered by a second Los Angeles Times piece; ABC News Los Angeles affiliate KABC-TV; The Orange County Register; The Huffington Post, in a story from the USC Annenberg School’s Neon Tommy online news publication; Buffalo Business First; Socaltech; and the North County Times.
The Chronicle of Higher Education reported that the USC Shoah Foundation Institute for Visual History and Education will be auctioning off commercial rights to the patented technology used for indexing and searching its large video libraries. “This is an experiment for us,” said John Sweet, senior business development and licensing associate at the USC Stevens Institute for Innovation.
The New York Times ran an op-ed by Rudy Crew of the USC Rossier School about school size. “In my judgment school size is much less a determinant value than instruction,” Crew wrote. “Focusing on school size is simply looking at a big picture through a very small lens and missing the real opportunity to address the larger shifts needed in our public education system to recognize, accept, and respond to the challenges of declining revenues and student enrollment.”
The Washington Post ran an op-ed by Gillian Hadfield of the USC Gould School about making legal aid more affordable and accessible. “The United States stands largely alone in advanced-market democracies in drastically restricting where and how people can get help with their legal problems,” Hadfield wrote. “In all states, under rules created by bar associations and state supreme courts, only people with law degrees and who are admitted to the state bar can provide legal advice and services of any kind. In England, Australia and the Netherlands, by contrast, a wide variety of professionals and experts can provide legal assistance.”
The New York Times, in a widely carried Associated Press story, reported that the couple charged with killing USC student Adrianna Bachan and injuring USC student Marcus Garfinkle in a hit-and-run incident pleaded no contest in Los Angeles County Superior Court. The story was also covered by two Los Angeles Times stories (second link here), ABC News Los Angeles affiliate KABC-TV, CW News Los Angeles affiliate KTLA-TV, City News Service, the Contra Costa Times and ABC News Santa Barbara, Calif., affiliate KEYT-TV.
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