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Fri May 9 13:01:49 2003 Pacific Time
Tiny Protein Prevents Disease-Related Cell Death

       LA JOLLA, Calif., May 9 (AScribe Newswire) -- A team of
researchers led by The Burnham Institute's John C. Reed, M.D., Ph.D.,
has found that humanin, a small, 24-amino acid protein recently
discovered in studies of Alzheimer's Disease, suppresses activation
of the protein Bax. Bax triggers pathologic cell death in a number of
diseases, including Parkinson's, stroke, heart attack and
degeneration of ovaries during menopause. These results, to be
published later this month in the journal Nature (currently available
at the journal's website), suggest a novel target for therapeutic
design based on inhibiting the cell destructive activity of Bax.

       Bax protein is known to promote the cell death program (also
known as apoptosis) latent in all cells. It does so by attacking the
cell's powerhouse, called "mitochondria", resulting in the cell's
demise. Apoptosis is critical for normal development and maintaining
cell balance. Many diseases are identified with malfunction of
apoptosis: too much cell death is associated with degenerative
diseases of the nervous system, stroke and heart attack; failure to
activate the cell death program is one of the hallmarks of cancer.

       Dr. Reed's laboratory identified humanin as a Bax-interactive
protein. In the current study, they showed that humanin bound to Bax,
which prevented its targeting to mitochondria and blocked its ability
to cause cell death.

       "Our results demonstrate that Bax is the target of humanin,
and they suggest at least three novel ways of designing therapeutics
that could prevent or arrest diseases associated with activation of
Bax," says Dr. Reed.

       Dr. Reed envisions that the tiny protein humanin could be
synthesized and developed as an injectable drug for acute situations,
such as heart attack or stroke, because humanin has the unique
ability to readily enter cells. Gene therapy that exploits humanin's
ability to translocate from cell to cell could also be developed to
protect cells in the vicinity of the gene's injection, such as the
heart or certain regions of the brain. Structural information about
humanin could be used to pattern chemicals developed into pill form,
for more convenient administration protecting against pathological
cell death.

       Dr. Reed is President and CEO of The Burnham Institute, and
Professor in the Institute's Del E. Webb Center for Neuroscience and
Aging Research and in the Cancer Center.

       Co-author Arnold Satterthwait, Ph.D., Burnham Institute
Professor, synthesized peptides used in this study.

       This research was supported by grants from the National
Institutes of Health, and the Department of Defense.

       The Burnham Institute is an independent, nonprofit, public
benefit organization dedicated to basic biomedical research
principally in the areas of cancer, aging, and the neurosciences. The
Institute ranks consistently among the world's most influential
research organizations for the impact of its research in analyses
conducted annually by the Institute for Scientific Information.

      -30-

SOURCE: AScribe - The Public Interest Newswire
http://www.ascribe.org/cgi-
bin/spew4th.pl?ascribeid=20030509.124948&time=13%2001%20PDT&year=2003&
public=1

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