
"The technology has exciting applications in basic research – in many cases the same protein can be either cancer-producing or beneficial, depending on where in a cell it is activated. Now researchers can control where that happens and study this heretofore inaccessible level of cellular control," said Hahn. "Because we first tested this new technology on a protein that initiates cell movement, we can now use light to control where and how cells move. This is quite valuable in studies where cell movement is the focus of the research, including embryonic development, nerve regeneration and cancer metastasis," he added. The new technology is an advance over previous light-directed methods of cellular control that used toxic wavelengths of life, disrupted the cell membrane or could switch proteins 'on' but not 'off'. Reference: A genetically encoded photoactivatable Rac controls the motility of living cells Yi I. Wu, Daniel Frey, Oana I. Lungu, Angelika Jaehrig, Ilme Schlichting, Brian Kuhlman & Klaus M. Hahn Nature advance online publication 19 August 2009, doi:10.1038/nature08241 See also: Coordination of Rho GTPase activities during cell protrusion Matthias Machacek, Louis Hodgson, Christopher Welch, Hunter Elliott, Olivier Pertz, Perihan Nalbant, Amy Abell, Gary L. Johnson, Klaus M. Hahn & Gaudenz Danuser Nature advance online publication 19 August 2009, doi:10.1038/nature08242 ......... ZenMaster
For more on stem cells and cloning, go to CellNEWS at http://cellnews-blog.blogspot.com/ and http://www.geocities.com/giantfideli/index.html
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