| Dear Friends,
Imagine my surprise... ;-)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-21091066
Be Well.
David
'Quadruple helix' DNA seen in human cells A representation of the four-stranded structure (L) with fluorescent markers revealing its presence inside cells (R)
Cambridge University scientists say they have seen four-stranded DNA at work in human cells for the first time.
The famous "molecule of life", which carries our genetic code, is more familiar to us as a double helix.
But researchers tell the journal Nature Chemistry that the "quadruple helix" is also present in our cells, and in ways that might possibly relate to cancer.
They suggest that control of the structures could provide novel ways to fight the disease.
"The existence of these structures may be loaded when the cell has a certain genotype or a certain dysfunctional state," said Prof Shankar Balasubramanian from Cambridge's department of chemistry.
"We need to prove that; but if that is the case, targeting them with synthetic molecules could be an interesting way of selectively targeting those cells that have this dysfunction," he told BBC News.
Tag and track
It will be exactly 60 years ago in February that James
Watson and Francis Crick famously burst into the pub next to their Cambridge
laboratory to announce the discovery of the "secret of life".
What they had actually done was describe the way in
which two long chemical chains wound up around each other to encode the
information cells need to build and maintain our bodies.
Today, the pair's modern counterparts in the
university city continue to work on DNA's complexities.
Balasubramanian's group has been pursuing a
four-stranded version of the molecule that scientists have produced in the test
tube now for a number of years.
It is called the G-quadruplex. The "G"
refers to guanine, one of the four chemical groups, or "bases", that
hold DNA together and which encode our genetic information (the others being
adenine, cytosine, and thymine).
The G-quadruplex seems to form in DNA where guanine
exists in substantial quantities.
And although ciliates, relatively simple microscopic
organisms, have displayed evidence for the incidence of such DNA, the new research
is said to be the first to firmly pinpoint the quadruple helix in human cells.
'Funny target'
The team, led by Giulia Biffi, a researcher in
Balasubramaninan's lab, produced antibody proteins that were designed
specifically to track down and bind to regions of human DNA that were rich in
the quadruplex structure. The antibodies were tagged with a fluorescence marker
so that the time and place of the structures' emergence in the cell cycle could
be noted and imaged.
This revealed the four-stranded DNA arose most
frequently during the so-called "s-phase" when a cell copies its DNA
just prior to dividing.
Prof Balasubramaninan said that was of key interest in
the study of cancers, which were usually driven by genes, or oncogenes, that
had mutated to increase DNA replication.
If the G-quadruplex could be implicated in the
development of some cancers, it might be possible, he said, to make synthetic
molecules that contained the structure and blocked the runaway cell
proliferation at the root of tumours.
"We've come a long way in 10 years, from simple
ideas to really seeing some substance in the existence and tractability of
targeting these funny structures," he told the BBC.
"I'm hoping now that the pharmaceutical companies
will bring this on to their radar and we can perhaps take a more serious look
at whether quadruplexes are indeed therapeutically viable targets."
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A representation of the four-stranded structure (L) with fluorescent markers revealing its presence inside cells (R)
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