The influence of the microbiota on immune development, chronic inflammation, and cancer in the context of aging

May 13, 2019

This article shows that the microbiota is crucial for immune system development and that its relationship with the immune system during aging and the pathogenesis of age-related diseases, including cancer, needs further research to inform disease treatment and prevention.

Threading Granules in Freiburg: 2nd International Symposium on “One Mitochondrion, Many Diseases – Biological and Molecular Perspectives”, a FRIAS Junior Researcher Conference, Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany, March 9th/10th, 2016

November 4, 2016

INTRODUCTION Mitochondria (greek: μίτος & χονδρίον, mitos & chondrion, i.e., thread & granule) are the power houses of eukaryotic cells, and are pivotally involved in essential metabolic processes, including iron/sulfur cluster and heme ... Read more

Human Thyroid Cancer-1 (TC-1) is a vertebrate specific oncogenic protein that protects against copper and pro-apoptotic genes in yeast

June 25, 2015

The human Thyroid Cancer-1 (hTC-1) protein, also known as C8orf4 was initially identified as a gene that was up-regulated in human thyroid cancer. This article reports that hTC-1 is a peptide that prevents the effects of over-expressing Bax in yeast. In sum, the results indicate that hTC-1 is a pro-survival protein that retains its function when heterologously expressed in yeast. Thus yeast is a useful model to characterize the potential roles in cell death and survival of cancer related genes.

Yeast as a tool to explore cathepsin D function

June 11, 2015

Cathepsin D has garnered increased attention in recent years, mainly since it has been associated with several human pathologies. This review summarizes how cathepsin D can have both anti- and pro-survival functions depending on its proteolytic activity, cellular context and stress stimulus.

Struggling for breath in Sherbrooke: 1st Symposium on “One mitochondrion, many diseases” in Sherbrooke, Québec, Canada, March 11th, 2015

May 20, 2015

This meeting report summarizes discussions during the "1st symposium on “One mitochondrion, many diseases," which took place in Sherbrooke in southern Québec in 2015.

Two distinct and competitive pathways confer the cellcidal actions of artemisinins

January 1, 2015

The biological actions of artemisinin (ART), an antimalarial drug derived from Artemisia annua, remain poorly understood and controversial. This article concludes that ARTs are endowed with two major and distinct types of properties: a potent and specific mitochondria-dependent reaction and a more general and less specific heme-mediated reaction. The competitive nature of these two actions could be explained by their shared source of the consumable ARTs, so that inhibition of the heme-mediated degradation pathway would enable more ARTs to be available for the mitochondrial action. These properties of ARTs can be used to interpret the divergent antimalarial and anticancer actions of ARTs.

Genome-wide studies of telomere biology in budding yeast

March 1, 2014

In the last decade, technical advances have allowed carrying out systematic genome-wide screens for mutants affecting various aspects of telomere biology. In this review we summarize these efforts, and the insights that this Systems Biology approach has produced so far.