Caenorhabditis Elegans

Caenorhabditis Elegans

Caenorhabditis elegans

Photo credit: Unknown. All earliest source links (circa 2008) are dead.

More Posts from Invincibleworld and Others

3 months ago

pssssst...

guess what.

you deserve to be happy.

pass it on.

3 months ago

It shifts

Grief

I don’t know how or when

But at some point

The happy memories

Become more of a comfort

Than a pain

Not every day

And not all the time

But some days

Grief shifts

6 months ago
ID Credit: Divingfirst On 小红书
ID Credit: Divingfirst On 小红书

ID credit: divingfirst on 小红书

(please like, reblog and give proper credit if you use any of my gifs!)

5 months ago
Suspicions Confirmed: Common Cause For Brain Tumors In Children

Suspicions confirmed: Common cause for brain tumors in children

An overactive signaling pathway is a common cause in cases of pilocytic astrocytoma, the most frequent type of brain cancer in children. This was discovered by a network of scientists coordinated by the German Cancer Research Center (as part of the International Cancer Genome Consortium, ICGC). In all 96 cases studied, the researchers found defects in genes involved in a particular pathway. Hence, drugs can be used to help affected children by blocking components of the signaling cascade. The project is funded by the German Cancer Aid (Deutsche Krebshilfe) and the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF). The findings are published in the latest issue of the journal “Nature Genetics”.

Brain cancer is the primary cause of cancer mortality in children. Even in cases when the cancer is cured, young patients suffer from the stress of a treatment that can be harmful to the developing brain. In a search for new target structures that would create more gentle treatments, cancer researchers are systematically analyzing all alterations in the genetic material of these tumors. This is the mission of the PedBrain consortium, which was launched in 2010. Led by Professor Stefan Pfister from the German Cancer Research Center (Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum, DKFZ), the PedBrain researchers have now published the results of the first 96 genome analyses of pilocytic astrocytomas.

Pilocytic astrocytomas are the most common childhood brain tumors. These tumors usually grow very slowly. However, they are often difficult to access by surgery and cannot be completely removed, which means that they can recur. The disease may thus become chronic and have debilitating effects for affected children.

In previous work, teams of researchers led by Professor Dr. Stefan Pfister and Dr. David Jones had already discovered characteristic mutations in a major proportion of pilocytic astrocytomas. All of the changes involved a key cellular signaling pathway known as the MAPK signaling cascade. MAPK is an abbreviation for “mitogen-activated protein kinase.” This signaling pathway comprises a cascade of phosphate group additions (phosphorylation) from one protein to the next – a universal method used by cells to transfer messages to the nucleus. MAPK signaling regulates numerous basic biological processes such as embryonic development and differentiation and the growth and death of cells.

“A couple of years ago, we had already hypothesized that pilocytic astrocytomas generally arise from a defective activation of MAPK signaling,” says David Jones, first author of the publication. “However, in about one fifth of the cases we had not initially discovered these mutations. In a whole-genome analysis of 96 tumors we have now discovered activating defects in three other genes involved in the MAPK signaling pathway that have not previously been described in astrocytoma.“

“Aside from MAPK mutations, we do not find any other frequent mutations that could promote cancer growth in the tumors. This is a very clear indication that overactive MAPK signals are necessary for a pilocytic astrocytoma to develop,” says study director Stefan Pfister. The disease thus is a prototype for rare cancers that are based on defects in a single biological signaling process.

In total, the genomes of pilocytic astrocytomas contain far fewer mutations than are found, for example, in medulloblastomas, a much more malignant pediatric brain tumor. This finding is in accordance with the more benign growth behavior of astrocytomas. The number of mutations increases with the age of the affected individuals.

About one half of pilocytic astrocytomas develop in the cerebellum, the other 50 percent in various other brain regions. Cerebellar astrocytomas are genetically even more homogenous than other cases of the disease: In 48 out of 49 cases that were studied, the researchers found fusions between the BRAF gene, a central component of the MAPK signaling pathway, and various other fusion partners.

“The most important conclusion from our results,” says study director Stefan Pfister, “is that targeted agents for all pilocytic astrocytomas are potentially available to block an overactive MAPK signaling cascade at various points. We might thus in the future be able to also help children whose tumors are difficult to access by surgery.”

10 months ago
Wake Up Babe New Fish Dropped
Wake Up Babe New Fish Dropped
Wake Up Babe New Fish Dropped
Wake Up Babe New Fish Dropped

Wake up babe new fish dropped

5 months ago
Pleural Fluid - Cytospin Slide Stained With Wrights Stain - Lung Cancer
Pleural Fluid - Cytospin Slide Stained With Wrights Stain - Lung Cancer
Pleural Fluid - Cytospin Slide Stained With Wrights Stain - Lung Cancer

Pleural fluid - cytospin slide stained with wrights stain - lung cancer

4 months ago

I am the owner

Of this damage, the weapon

Fired to make the wound

Eyes full of apologies

Belie my gunpowder smile

10 months ago

Ammonites were some of the most diverse organisms in the ancient ocean. The Museum holds one of the world’s largest collections of ammonites, containing nearly two million specimens that represent 300 million years of Earth’s history!

10 months ago
Nothing Like A Good Case Of Ringworm To Make You Aware Of Literally Every Itchy Part On Your Body
Nothing Like A Good Case Of Ringworm To Make You Aware Of Literally Every Itchy Part On Your Body

Nothing like a good case of ringworm to make you aware of literally every itchy part on your body

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invincibleworld - Invincible World
Invincible World

Science nerd 🧪 | History buff 📜 | Dog & cat person 🐾always curious!

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