Newswise — The National Institute on Aging (NIA), one of the 27 centers and institutes that make up the National Institutes of Health (NIH), has awarded a $163,000 grant to Julia Lee, Ph.D., assistant professor of biology, to pursue a research initiative into the science of cancer and aging. Her research will focus on the maintenance of chromosome ends — called telomeres — and how telomeres function in both the aging process and the growth of cancer cells.

The telomeres being studied in Lee’s project act as a kind of protective cap for chromosomal ends — much like the plastic aglet at the end of a shoelace, for example — allowing cells to retain their biological information.

Still, said Lee, telomeres shorten with each round of cell division, limiting the life span of the cell. When the telomere can no longer protect the end of the chromosome, the cell dies. Yet in stem cells and cancer cells, an enzyme called telomerase is present that, as far as past research shows, helps extend the telomeres and therefore the life of the cell. Lee hopes that her research will lead to a better understanding of this natural maintenance.

“The life span of a cell may be determined by the shortening of the telomeres,” said Lee. “Shortening the telomeres is a good thing to turnover aging cells.” But when it comes to cancer, maintaining telomeres could allow cancer cells to live indefinitely.

“It’s a catch-22,” said Lee. “How do you try to shorten the telomeres of bad cells while prolonging the life of good ones?”

Lee will utilize baker’s yeast cells as a comparative model system to determine how two specific proteins are involved in telomere maintenance. By removing the proteins, then putting back the mutated forms into the cells, Lee seeks to understand how the absence, alteration, or presence of those proteins affects telomere maintenance. In the long term, knowing which parts of which proteins are necessary in protecting chromosome ends could lead to further advancement in both understanding the aging process and in the destruction of cancer cells.

Background: Founded by the Society of Jesus in 1851, Saint Joseph's University advances the professional and personal ambitions of men and women by providing a demanding, yet supportive, educational experience. One of only 139 schools with a Phi Beta Kappa chapter and AACSB business school accreditation, Saint Joseph's is home to 4,200 full-time undergraduates and 3,100 graduate, part-time and doctoral students. Steeped in the 450-year Jesuit tradition of scholarship and service, Saint Joseph's was named to the 2008 President's Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll for General Community Service. The University strives to be recognized as the preeminent Catholic comprehensive university in the Northeast.

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