The red dye in the cell show healthy mitochondria in a healthy cell.
Lysosomes, which comprise the cell’s recycling center, are crucial for cleaning up injured and dying parts of the cells, said lead researcher Haoxing Xu,
When lysosomes «sense» an overload of free radicals, they activate a calcium channel on their membranes. This triggers the expression of many genes and the production of more and stronger lysosomes, which rev into overdrive to rid the damaged parts of the cells.
Free radicals are guilty in the aging process, Xu said.
Green dye indicates damaged mitochondria that cannot be removed in due to impaired ROS sensing mechanisms.
How does the body tell itself that there are too many free radicals so that they can be reduced or removed? His study tells us how it’s done, Xu said.
«Nature is really cool," said. «The janitor of the cell, the lysosome, has this
The study, «MCOLN1 is a ROS Sensor in Lysosomes that Regulates Autophagy," is published online June 30 in Nature Communications. First authors are Xiaoli Zhang, Xiping Cheng and Yu Lu, all in the Xu lab.
Source: http://ns.umich.edu/new/releases/24005-researchers-discover-powerful-defense-against-free-radicals-t...