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Andres Villu Maricq, a biologist and physician affiliated
with the Brain Institute at the University of Utah,
is among researchers who discovered a gene that controls
the timing of basic rhythmic activities in a worm's life,
including swallowing, ovulating and pooping.
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October 6, 2005 -
University of Utah biologists found a gene that controls rhythmic events
in a worm's life: swallowing food, laying eggs and pooping.
If the gene is disabled, the worms can't swallow, so they die. If the gene is
partly restored so the worms can swallow, they
have trouble reproducing and get constipated.
"We have found a gene that is important for the control of fundamental rhythms in
nematode worms," says biology professor and physician Andres Villu Maricq, a
member of the Brain Institute at the University of Utah. "The same gene
products that control the fundamental processes of life in mammals also are found
in the worm, so our study suggests this gene and related genes may have critical
roles in controlling rhythmic behaviors in humans and other animals."
Discovery of the gene is reported in the October 7, 2005, issue of the journal
Cell. The study deals with seconds, to hours-long ultradian rhythms that
control such body functions as heart rate, breathing, swallowing and contraction
of the intestines. Much less is known about ultradian rhythms than about circadian
rhythms, which regulate the 24-hour cycle of sleeping, waking and activity, Villu
says.
The gene that controls ultradian rhythms in worms is related to other genes that,
when mutated, cause uncontrolled growth of mammalian cells, a hallmark of cancer.
By learning how the gene works, researchers may learn how to interfere with it, a
possible way to find new cancer drugs.
Villu and colleagues studied Caenorhabditis elegans, a millimeter-long
(one 25th of an inch) nematode worm that is found in soil, eats bacteria and
frequently is used by geneticists. The researchers discovered a worm gene they
named vav-1, which is related to three similar human genes. The study
showed that the gene controlled the rhythmic contractions of smooth muscle in
three parts of the worm's body by regularly raising and lowering calcium levels in
the muscle cells:
* The pharynx, which is the worm equivalent of the throat and must undergo a
wave-like expansion and contraction
every one or two seconds so the worm can swallow.
* The gonadal sheath, a tube-like smooth muscle structure that contracts every
seven seconds during ovulation,
squeezing out eggs so they can be fertilized by sperm.
* The intestines, which must pressurize and then release so the worm can
defecate every 45 to 50 seconds.
When the scientists disabled the vav-1 gene, the worms could not swallow
food and died before the end of the first of four larval stages, or 10 to 12 hours
into their normal two-week life span.
When the researchers restored the vav-1 gene just in the pharynx so worm
larvae could eat, survive and grow to adulthood, the worms rarely were able to
produce offspring and their 50-second defecation cycle became irregular, with the
mean time between poops increasing to 195 seconds, or 3 1Ú4 minutes.
"The worm can swallow and live and grow up to be an adult with really bad
constipation," Villu says. "Mutants sometimes have to wait six to 10
minutes."
The Brain Institute "is interested in the molecular control of behavior, how our
nervous system works," Villu says. "Vav is found in the brain, and we now
show this gene, vav-1, is of central importance for the control of rhythmic
behaviors [in worms]."
Scientists do not know if vav genes control human swallowing, ovulating or
defecating, "but it will be an obvious avenue for further research," he adds.
"Almost all of our behaviors are rhythmic: breathing, swallowing, heartbeats and
brain activity."
Villu conducted the study with biologist Mary Beckerle, deputy director and senior
director for laboratory research at the University of Utah's Huntsman Cancer
Institute; Kenneth Norman, a postdoctoral fellow; and Robert Fazzio and Jerry
Mellem, both biology graduate students when the study was conducted. Other
coauthors are Maria Espelt and Kevin Strange at Vanderbilt University in
Nashville, Tennessee. The study was funded by the American Cancer Society,
National Institutes of Health, National Science Foundation, American Heart
Association and the Huntsman Cancer Foundation.
The Cancer Connection
The cancer groups financed the study because the worm vav-1 gene is
analogous to known "proto-oncogenes" in mammals, genes that are used by the body
for various normal processes, but, when mutated, may become an oncogene, or
cancer-causing gene.
Mutant vav genes have been shown to cause cancer-like changes in cells, but
it has not yet been shown they cause cancer in humans, who have three vav
genes.
"We don't know that much about what they do," except that when immune cells are
stimulated by bacteria or other invaders, vav genes help increase the
cells' calcium levels, which sends a wake-up signal to the rest of the immune
system, Villu says.
Other genes and their proteins turn vav-1 on and off. When such control is
eliminated, vav-1 is unleashed, so cells grow out of control and may become
cancerous.
Thus, vav-1 is one of the "players in the cascade of events that may lead
to cancer," Villu says. "The reason you want to know the players is that each one
represents a potential target for drugs, a potential way to stop the
process."
"Worms with cancer-causing vav-1 might be used to test possible new anti-
cancer drugs. If the oncogene causes a change in the worm's rhythmic behavior,
then drugs that stop the behavior change also might work against cancer", Villu
says.
Finding the Rhythm Gene
Villu's team discovered the vav-1 gene in worms by starting with the mammal
version of the gene, then looking in the worm's genetic blueprint, for similar
genes.
Next, the researchers determined where vav-1 worked by tagging it with
green fluorescent protein. The pharynx, gonadal sheath and intestines glowed
green.
To test what the vav-1 gene did, the researchers bred worms that lacked the
gene. "They were born, but died soon thereafter because they couldn't eat," Villu
says.
The worms were not missing the mouth or other body parts, "but there was no
pumping of the pharynx," he adds. As a test, the biologists inserted the gene back
into the pharynx, but not the rest of the worm. As a result, the worms could eat
and develop to adulthood, but then developed defects in ovulating and
pooping.
C. elegans worms are hermaphrodites, both male and female, and make their
own sperm and eggs. Rhythmic contractions control how the eggs are pushed down the
tube-like gonadal sheath and into the spermatheca, which contains sperm.
When vav-1 is disabled, the worms "have almost no progeny," Villu says.
"They don't have the proper synchronized ovulation. The egg has to be timed to
enter the spermatheca at the right time because the spermatheca is contracting. It
can cut eggs up when timing is off." And without proper rhythmic contractions,
eggs also may be too young or too old to be fertilized when they reach the
spermatheca.
As part of the study, the researchers shut down various genes to demonstrate the
chain of molecular events in which vav-1 acts like a switch to control
calcium levels in cells and thus the contractions responsible for swallowing,
ovulating and defecating.
The chain begins when the vav-1 gene is used to make the protein VAV-1. The
protein activates other proteins made by what are known as Rho/Rac genes. Then the
Rho/Rac proteins turn other genes and proteins on and off.
The study found that when Rho/Rac proteins are turned on, levels of a chemical
named IP3 increase in cells. IP3 attaches to "receptors" on the endoplasmic
reticulum, a calcium-filled membrane bag inside each cell. IP3 makes the
endoplasmic reticulum release calcium into the cell. Ups and downs in calcium
levels control the rhythmic contractions responsible for swallowing, ovulating and
pooping in worms.
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