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September 29, 2000

Molecular Motors


Discovery sheds light on the way cells pass information between generations.

Biologists at Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y., have shown how tiny molecular motors carrying target proteins help orient the spindle-like apparatus that transfers genetic material from the nucleus of a mother cell to the daughter.



Immunofluorescence microscope photograph of yeast cells with mutant molecular motors, left, and normal motor, right.

The research explains an essential mechanism in the birth of a new cell, and how failures of molecular motors can have dire consequences for new cell formation.

Molecular motors are tiny specialized structures that are fueled by cellular energy in the form of adenosine triphosphate. They perform a variety of tasks within cells. Mitosis is the process by which a mother cell's nucleus divides to provide a duplicate set of genetic instructions to the developing daughter cell, in the form of chromosomes. This transfer of genetic material is absolutely essential for all organisms because without genetic instructions, new cells cannot develop.

Even minor problems in mitosis can cause serious defects, such as the development of cancerous cells. The new model for mitotic mechanics, reported in the journal Nature,was worked out in budding yeast cells, shown here. But the study is expected to prompt further research into whether similar processes occur in the formation of cells of all higher organisms, including humans.

“The process of properly orienting the spindle with the axis of cell division has to be incredibly accurate, otherwise cells run the risk of not transferring their genetic material into newly formed daughter cells,” says Anthony Bretscher, professor of molecular biology and genetics at Cornell and one of four authors of the report. “This is the first time anyone could draw a molecular mechanism for spindle orientation in yeast. The big question is does this also happen in human cells?”

 

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