Regulatory role of key molecule discovered

September 17, 2009
Regulatory role of key molecule discovered at Hebrew U.

This is Nurit Yanay-Cohen, one of the researchers who discovered a key molecule involved in gene expression. Credit: Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Discovery by Hebrew University of Jerusalem researchers of an additional role for a key molecule in our bodies provides a further step in world-wide efforts to develop genetic regulation aimed at controlling many diseases, including AIDS and various types of cancers.

The molecule, known as Lysyl-tRNA synthetase (or LysRS in brief) is one of the most ancient in the cell, where it has long been recognized for its contribution in the translation of the information contained in RNA into the that make up proteins. Amino acids are which are present in and vital to every living cell.

Now, the Hebrew University scientists have discovered that LysRS plays an important additional role as a central regulator controlling expression of various genes. In this additional role, LysRS ceases its previous function at a certain point and participates in a chain of events that causes the freeing of inhibitors that prevent expression of certain genes.

The researchers say that this research has particularly great importance, since LysRS is known to be involved in diseases such as AIDS and cancers. The virus HIV uses the host's cellular LysRS in the process of replication. High levels of LysRS also have been observed in certain cancers, such as . The specific molecular mechanisms in these contexts remain to be discovered.

An ability to understand the regulatory effect played by LysRS in various diseases could make an important contribution to the worldwide search for therapies that would control the "turning on" or "turning off" of specific genes that are operative in those diseases, they emphasize.

This work was published in the journal Molecular Cell.

Source: The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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