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        <title>Kiss and run and Festivus for the rest of us... - Neurognosis - Crobar&apos;s Blog - Victoria Advocate</title>
        <link>http://community.victoriaadvocate.com/home/Blog/Crobar/6092</link>
        <description>I have my pole ready to put up in the living room, a long list of grievances to air and I&#039;ve been working out in preparation for the feats of strength.&amp;nbsp; Yes folks, it&#039;s that time of year again, time for Festivus.&amp;nbsp; Time to shine that pole.

So...did ya know that there were two popular competing theories for vesicular recycling at neuronal synapses?&amp;nbsp; Well there are, you&#039;ll just have to take my word for it.&amp;nbsp; One of the popular theories and one which seemed logical to most was nicknamed the &amp;quot;kiss and run&amp;quot; theory.&amp;nbsp; It proposed that a vesicle would fuse with the membrane, release its contents and then reform and go on its merry way to be reused.&amp;nbsp; Well, along come a couple of scientific upstarts from the Weill Cornell Medical College to squash that theory.&amp;nbsp; They utilized fluorescence tagging to follow vesicles and watch them work in real time.&amp;nbsp; What they found was that the vesicles definitely didn&#039;t kiss and run.&amp;nbsp; The vesicles fused with the membrane then would breakdown.&amp;nbsp; They have to be rebuilt by enzymes in the cell to be used again.&amp;nbsp; The researchers published their findings in the latest issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

Now, when you&#039;re shining that pole and drink that nice cup of eggnog and it tastes so good, remember the poor vesicles.

Happy Holidays Folks.</description>
        <itunes:summary>I have my pole ready to put up in the living room, a long list of grievances to air and I&#039;ve been working out in preparation for the feats of strength.&amp;nbsp; Yes folks, it&#039;s that time of year again, time for Festivus.&amp;nbsp; Time to shine that pole.

So...did ya know that there were two popular competing theories for vesicular recycling at neuronal synapses?&amp;nbsp; Well there are, you&#039;ll just have to take my word for it.&amp;nbsp; One of the popular theories and one which seemed logical to most was nicknamed the &amp;quot;kiss and run&amp;quot; theory.&amp;nbsp; It proposed that a vesicle would fuse with the membrane, release its contents and then reform and go on its merry way to be reused.&amp;nbsp; Well, along come a couple of scientific upstarts from the Weill Cornell Medical College to squash that theory.&amp;nbsp; They utilized fluorescence tagging to follow vesicles and watch them work in real time.&amp;nbsp; What they found was that the vesicles definitely didn&#039;t kiss and run.&amp;nbsp; The vesicles fused with the membrane then would breakdown.&amp;nbsp; They have to be rebuilt by enzymes in the cell to be used again.&amp;nbsp; The researchers published their findings in the latest issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

Now, when you&#039;re shining that pole and drink that nice cup of eggnog and it tastes so good, remember the poor vesicles.

Happy Holidays Folks.</itunes:summary>
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