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RNA-associated introns guide nerve-cell channel production
February 06, 2008
PHILADELPHIA - Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine have discovered that introns, or junk DNA to some, associated with RNA are an important molecular guide to making nerve-cell electrical channels. Senior author James Eberwine, PhD, Elmer Bobst Professor of Pharmacology, and lead authors Kevin Miyashiro, and Thomas J. Bell, PhD, both in Eberwine's lab, report their findings in this week's early online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. In nerve cells, some ion channels are located in the dendrite, which branch from the cell body of the neuron. Dendrites detect the electrical and chemical signals transmitted to the neuron by the axons of other neurons. Abnormalities in the dendrite electrical channel are involved in epilepsy, neurodegenerative diseases, and cognitive disorders, among others. Introns are commonly looked on as sequences of "junk" DNA found in the middle of gene sequences, which after being made in RNA are simply excised in the nucleus before the messenger RNA is transported to the cytoplasm and translated into a protein. In 2005, the Penn group first found that dendrites have the capacity to splice messenger RNA, a process once believed to only take place in the nucleus of cells. Now, in the current study, the group has found that an RNA encoding for a nerve-cell electrical channel, called the BK channel, contains an intron that is present outside the nucleus. This intron plays an important role in ensuring that functional BK channels are made in the appropriate place in the cell. When this intron-containing RNA was knocked out, leaving the maturely spliced RNA in the cell, the electrical properties of the cell became abnormal. "We think the intron-containing mRNA is targeted to the dendrite where it is spliced into the channel protein and inserted locally into the region of the dendrite called the dendritic spine. The dendritic spine is where a majority of axons from other cells touch a particular neuron to facilitate neuronal communication" says Eberwine. "This is the first evidence that an intron-containing RNA outside of the nucleus serves a critical cellular function." "The intron acts like a guide or gatekeeper," says Eberwine. "It keys the messenger RNA to the dendrite for local control of gene expression and final removal of the intron before the channel protein is made. Just because the intron is not in the final channel protein doesn't mean that it doesn't have an important purpose." The group surmises that the intron may control how many mRNAs are brought to the dendrite and translated into functional channel proteins. The correct number of channels is just as important for electrical impulses as having a properly formed channel. The investigators believe that this is a general mechanism for the regulation of cytoplasmic RNAs in neurons. Given the central role of dendrites in various physiological functions they hope to relate this new knowledge to understanding the molecular underpinnings of memory and learning, as well as components of cognitive dysfunction resulting from neurological disease. University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
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PEG-Intron.(Brief Article): An article from: Family Practice News
by Elizabeth Mechcatie (Author)
This digital document is an article from Family Practice News, published by International Medical News Group on March 15, 2001. The length of the article is 470 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details Title: PEG-Intron.(Brief Article) Author: Elizabeth Mechcatie Publication: Family Practice News (Magazine/Journal) Date: March 15, 2001 Publisher: International Medical News Group Volume: 31 Issue: 6 Page: 27
Article Type: Brief Article
Distributed by Thomson...
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PEG-Intron and Rebetol.(Brief Article): An article from: Family Practice News
by Elizabeth Mechcatie (Author)
This digital document is an article from Family Practice News, published by International Medical News Group on September 15, 2001. The length of the article is 448 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details Title: PEG-Intron and Rebetol.(Brief Article) Author: Elizabeth Mechcatie Publication: Family Practice News (Magazine/Journal) Date: September 15, 2001 Publisher: International Medical News Group Volume: 31 Issue: 18 Page: 18
Article Type: Brief Article
Distributed by Thomson...
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Intron Depot 1 (v. 1)
by Masamune Shirow (Author)
Japanese artist Masamune Shirow is well known to discriminating comics readers. American editions of his spectacular graphic epics have been highly praised and voraciously collected. Now, his gorgeous and highly detailed color art has been collected for the first time into a single, handsome trade paperback. Beautifully printed in Japan and featuring text in both Japanese and English, this package features nearly two hundred full-color Shirow works, 47 published for the first time anywhere in the world! This book is a nearly complete archive of Shirow's color work from 1981 to 1991, including material from Appleseed, Dominion, Black Magic, Orion, and much more. This is an absolute must for fans of Shirow, science-fiction and fantasy art, and manga.
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Intron Depot 4: Bullets (v. 4)
by Masamune Shirow (Author)
The next volume in Masamune Shirow's best-selling art book series is orbiting cyberspace and preparing to touch down onto bookstore shelves in late Summer. This volume concentrates primarily on Shirow's character, robot and vehicle designs for interactive games. Shirow is world famous for being equally skilled and creative in the realms of computer-generated graphics and traditional drawing and painting. It is logical then that his unique and imaginative studies are among the most interesting being done in the high-tech game field. With commentary in both English and Japanese, this new collection provides a fascinating insight into the creative process of one of Japan's premiere talents.
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Exons, Introns, and Talking Genes: The Science Behind the Human Genome Project
by Christopher Wills (Author)
This study reveals the inside story of the Human Genome Project. When completed in the next century, it will have mapped out every gene sequence in the human body, illuminating some central problems in human biology - the genesis of cancer, how foetuses develop and the mechanisms of aging. Christopher Wills is the author of "The Wisdom of the Genes".
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Intron Depot 1
by Masamune Shirow (Author)
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Introns: Webster's Facts and Phrases
by Icon Group International (Author)
Ever need a fact or quotation on "introns"? Designed for speechwriters, journalists, writers, researchers, students, professors, teachers, historians, academics, scrapbookers, trivia buffs and word lovers, this is the largest book ever created for this word. It represents a compilation of "single sentences" and/or "short paragraphs" from a variety of sources with a linguistic emphasis on anything relating to the term "introns," including non-conventional usage and alternative meanings which capture ambiguities. This is not an encyclopedic book, but rather a collage of statements made using the word "introns," or related words (e.g. inflections, synonyms or antonyms). This title is one of a series of books that considers all major vocabulary words. The entries in each book cover all parts...
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Intron Depot, Volume 2: Blades
by Masamune Shirow (Author)
Description: Masamune Shirow is the undisputed master of manga, the illustration style developed in Japan after World War II--his very name is synonymous with the genre. Masamune Shirow brings together some of Shirow's best work during the last decade, including full-color images from the new book Intron Depot 3: Ballistics. Notes: The Shirow calendar was one of our most popular titles in 2003. This year's edition should prove to be even more popular, as many of the images have not been seen before by the majority of Shirow's fan base. Japan's most famous illustrator, Masamune Shirow is a pioneer of Japanese manga and anime. These markets in the US are worth almost $600 million, an indicator of their popularity. He is the creator of the immensely popular Ghost in the Shell, which has sold...
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Intron Depot, Vol. 2: Blades, A Collection of Masamune Shirow's Full Color Works (1992-1998) (English and Japanese Edition)
by Masamune Shiro (Author)
Masamune Shirow is an internationally renowned manga artis. Masamune Shirow is a pen name, based on a famous swordsmith, Masamune. He is best known for the manga Ghost in the Shell, which has since been turned into two theatrical anime movies, two anime TV series, an anime TV movie, and several video games. Shirow is also known for creating erotic art.
Born in the Hy?go Prefecture capital city of Kobe, he studied oil painting at Osaka University of Arts. While in college, he developed an interest in manga, which led him to create his own complete work, Black Magic, which was published in the manga fanzine Atlas. His work caught the eye of Seishinsha President Harumichi Aoki, who offered to publish him. The result was Appleseed, a full volume of densely-plotted drama taking place in...
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Intron Depot 3: Ballistics
by Masamune Shirow (Author)
The third volume of Masamune Shirow's best-selling art book series features spectacular full-color illustrations featuring high-caliber treatments. Often a sci-fi military theme is evoked, with special emphasis on detailed weaponry, but there is also a healthy batch of fantasy themes and outer space action.
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