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Why The Thumb Of The Right Hand Is On The Left Hand Side

Date:
May 26, 2009
Source:
University of Innsbruck
Summary:
It is the concentration of a few signaling molecules that determines the fate of individual cells during the early development of organisms. Molecular biologists report that a variety of molecular mechanisms accounts for the interpretation of the concentration of the signaling molecule Hedgehog.
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It is the concentration of a few signaling molecules that determines the fate of individual cells during the early development of organisms. In the journal Current Biology, a team of molecular biologists led by Pia Aanstad of the University of Innsbruck reports that a variety of molecular mechanisms accounts for the interpretation of the concentration of the signaling molecule Hedgehog.

The development of an organism is a complex process to which a dozen or hundreds of signaling molecules contribute. Some of these molecules have dozens of functions in the fruit fly and in humans alike. One of these molecules – Hedgehog – controls the development of, for example, the extremities, the central nervous system, the teeth, eyes, hair, lung and the gastrointestinal tract. “What is most remarkable: The cells are told what to do not only because the molecule is present but also by the different concentrations of the molecules in the tissue,” says group leader Pia Aanstad of the Institute for Molecular Biology of the University of Innsbruck.

“The concentration of Hedgehog makes the thumb of the right hand grow on the left hand side and the thumb of the left hand grow on the right hand side.” Thus, scientists define Hedgehog as a morphogen – a signal that is concentration-dependent and controls the pattern formation of an organism. A mutation in this signaling pathway induces dramatic and embryonically lethal malformations in the early developmental stage such as the formation of just one central eye.

Defects in the Hedgehog signaling pathway in humans are a cause for one of the most common birth defects – holoprosencephaly. “Hedgehog genes are not new in evolution and the signaling pathway functions in the fly, mouse, fish and in humans similarly”, says Pia Aanstad. In her research work she focuses on the zebra danio or zebra fish. Due to the short developmental cycle, the scientists are able to observe the development of the small tropic fish in fast motion. “We want to better understand how the cells process the signals of the signaling molecules and how they react.”

Mutants do not react to high concentrations

Already during her time as a post doc in San Francisco, U.S., Pia Aanstad discovered a mutated zebra fish whose Hedgehog signaling pathway was disrupted. The fish showed a genetic alteration at the so-called Smoothened (Smo) protein, which is located at the cell membrane and transfers the Hedgehog signal into the cell. In 2005, Aanstad and her colleagues published a paper in the renowned journal Nature, in which they showed that Smo is concentrated at cilia (cellular projections) and also functions at the cilium.

“By using high-resolution fluorescence microscopy, we have now shown that in the new mutants a small genetic alteration at the extracellular part of this protein inhibits localization in the cilia and that while the cells identify the Hedgehog signals, they interpret the concentration incorrectly”, explains Pia Aanstad. “This is evidence for the notion that cells use various molecular mechanisms for interpreting different Hedgehog concentrations.” This fact may also be of importance for the diagnosis and treatment of certain cancers (basal cell carcinoma), where the constant up-regulation of the Hedgehog signal is responsible for uncontrolled cell growth. Aanstad published the findings together with her colleagues from the University of California, San Francisco in the journal Current Biology.

Pia Aanstad started her research work at the Institute for Molecular Biology of the University of Innsbruck, headed by Prof. Dirk Meyer, last year. The Norwegian studied in England and continued her education at the Max-Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics in Berlin and at the Department of Biochemistry of the University of California. Together with her own research group in Innsbruck, she continues her research work on the Hedgehog signaling pathway.


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Materials provided by University of Innsbruck. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Aanstad P, Santos N, Corbit KC, Schwerz PJ, Trinh LA, Salvenmoser W, Huisken J, Reiter JF, Stainier DYR. The Extracellular Domain of Smoothened Regulates Ciliary Localisation and Is Required for High-Level Hh Signaling. Current Biology, 19, 1-6, June 23, 2009 DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2009.04.053

Cite This Page:

University of Innsbruck. "Why The Thumb Of The Right Hand Is On The Left Hand Side." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 26 May 2009. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/05/090522081347.htm>.
University of Innsbruck. (2009, May 26). Why The Thumb Of The Right Hand Is On The Left Hand Side. ScienceDaily. Retrieved November 22, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/05/090522081347.htm
University of Innsbruck. "Why The Thumb Of The Right Hand Is On The Left Hand Side." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/05/090522081347.htm (accessed November 22, 2024).

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