This Week in Experimental and Molecular Pathology

In Experimental and Molecular Pathology, researchers led by Kiho Cho from the University of California, Davis, report having studied whether structural changes to the genome depend on age and organ tissue. Using real-time PCR, the researchers examined the copy number of GAPDH, HPRT, and mitochondrial DNA addition to determining the copy number of four retroelements from different tissues from mice of various ages. Cho and his colleagues found that liver genome size was larger than the other tissues and that the size increase was associated with more copies of the retroelements. "This study provided a series of evidence that the structure of the C57BL/6 J mouse genome changes temporally (age-dependent) and spatially (tissue-specific) implying that the genome has a highly dynamic property and is polymorphic in nature," the researchers write.

Researchers from Harbin Medical University looked into the role of Shp-2 in apoptosis, with a particular interest in its relation to cell death during cardiac ischemia and heart disease. The team found that "the inhibition of Shp-2 was responsible for increased apoptosis in neonatal cardiomyocytes," it writes. "Second, the overexpression of Shp-2 attenuated apoptosis via ERK activation, and the effect of Shp-2 was abolished by treatment with a MEK inhibitor."