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  (BBSRC DTP) Are the pathways that protect tissues from mechanical stress lost in ageing?


   Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health

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  Dr Joe Swift, Dr Stephen Richardson, Prof Sarah Cartmell  No more applications being accepted  Competition Funded PhD Project (European/UK Students Only)

About the Project

The defining qualities of our cells - their physical features and function - can be determined by their surroundings, but the tissue environment can be demanding. Just as our muscles regenerate and are conditioned by exercise to maintain health, our cells have developed mechanisms to protect against damage induced by mechanical stress. A fundamental response to stress is the production of chaperone proteins within our cells (Hartl, 2011). These molecular machines act to limit and reverse damage by refolding the proteins unwound by stress back into functional structures. However, these mechanisms are thought to deteriorate as we age. This loss of function may be compounded by other factors affecting ageing tissue (Lopez-Otin, 2013). The extracellular matrix - the material in which cells are embedded – may stiffen and become fibrotic in ageing tissue, changing the ways that tissue-resident cells experience mechanical stresses (Humphrey, 2014). A knowledge of the pathways that enable cells to sense and respond to physical signals is therefore key to understanding the ageing process.

This project will look at how senescent cells, used as a model of ageing, respond to periods of cyclic straining in two- and three-dimensional environments. It will build on new and exciting findings from the Swift laboratory: (i) that senescent cells loose their ability to ‘feel’ and respond to the mechanical properties of their environments; (ii) that senescent cells also loose their ability to express protective chaperone proteins when faced with stress; and (iii) that regulation of mechano-sensitivity and chaperone expression are integral to the strain response in healthy (i.e. non-senescent) cells. The responses of senescent cells will be compared to control cells using combinations of: microscopy, to characterise structural and morphological changes within cells; mass spectrometry proteomics, to identify, in an unbiased way, the stress-regulation pathways abrogated in senescence; and RNA-Seq transcriptomics to establish complete signalling pathways. We will also look for evidence of compromised cellular integrity, such as the accruement of DNA damage. Important pathways will be investigated in more detail by knocking down key proteins, or by expressing proteins in senescent cells to restore function. This project will take a multidisciplinary approach to deliver insight into the ageing process in mechanically loaded tissues. It will aim to build a holistic picture of how cells function, from a molecular level to their integration within three-dimensional environments that replicate active, living tissues.

http://www.wellcome-matrix.org/research_groups/joe-swift.html

Entry Requirements:
Applications are invited from UK/EU nationals only. Applicants must have obtained, or be about to obtain, at least an upper second class honours degree (or equivalent) in a relevant subject.


Funding Notes

This project is to be funded under the BBSRC Doctoral Training Programme. If you are interested in this project, please make direct contact with the Principal Supervisor to arrange to discuss the project further as soon as possible. You MUST also submit an online application form - full details on how to apply can be found on the BBSRC DTP website www.manchester.ac.uk/bbsrcdtpstudentships

As an equal opportunities institution we welcome applicants from all sections of the community regardless of gender, ethnicity, disability, sexual orientation and transgender status. All appointments are made on merit.



References

• Hartl et al. Molecular chaperones in protein folding and proteostasis. Nature (2011) 475, 324-332.
• Lopez-Otin et al. The hallmarks of aging. Cell (2013), 153 (6), 1194-1217.
• Humphrey et al. Mechanotransduction and extracellular matrix homeostasis. Nat. Rev. Mol. Cell Biol. (2014), 15 (12), 802-812.