Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 
Email a Friend Send to a friend
Printer Friendly Print UC researchers find new ways to regulate genes, reduce heart damage

UC researchers find new ways to regulate genes, reduce heart damage

June 23, 2008

CINCINNATI-Researchers at the University of Cincinnati (UC) are looking for ways to reduce or prevent heart damage by starting where the problem often begins: in the genes.

Following a heart attack, cells die, causing lasting damage to the heart.




Keith Jones, PhD, a researcher in the department of pharmacology and cell biophysics, and colleagues are trying to reduce post-heart attack damage by studying the way cells die in the heart-a process controlled by transcription factors.

Transcription factors are proteins that bind to specific parts of DNA and are part of a system that controls the transfer of genetic information from DNA to RNA and then to protein. Transfer of genetic information also plays a role in controlling the cycle of cells-from cell growth to cell death.

"We call it 'gene regulatory therapy,'" says Jones.

So far, studies have identified the role for an important group of interacting transcription factors and the genes they regulate to determine whether cells in the heart survive or die after blood flow restriction occurs.

Often, scientists use virus-like mechanisms to transfer DNA and other nucleic acids inside the body.

The "virus" takes over other healthy cells by injecting them with its DNA. The cells, then transformed, begin reproducing the virus' DNA. Eventually they swell and burst, sending multiple replicas of the virus out to conquer other cells and repeat the process.

Now, UC researchers are further investigating new, non-viral delivery mechanisms for this transfer of DNA.

"We can use non-viral delivery vehicles to transfer nucleic acids, including transcription factor decoys, to repress activation of specific transcription factors in the heart," Jones says, adding that the researchers have made this successfully work within live animal models. "This means we can block the activity of most transcription factors in the heart without having to make genetically engineered mice."

Jones will be presenting these results at the International Society for Heart Research in Cincinnati, June 17-20.

He says this delivery mechanism involves flooding the cells with "decoys" which trick the transcription factors into binding to the decoys rather than to target genes, preventing them from activating those genes.

"We can use this technology to identify the target genes and then investigate the action of these genes in the biological process," Jones says.

He says that this delivery has limitations and advantages.

"It can be used to block a factor at any point in time and is reversible," he says. "However, right now, a specific delivery route must be used to target the tissue or cell."

Jones and other researchers are hoping that this new technology will allow them to directly address the effects of gene regulation in disease, as opposed to using classical drugs that treat symptoms or have significant adverse outcomes.

"So far, this seems to cause no adverse effects in animals," he says. "We are hopeful and are working toward pre-clinical studies."

University of Cincinnati



Related Heart Damage Current Events and Heart Damage News Articles Heart Damage Current Events and Heart Damage News RSS Heart Damage Current Events and Heart Damage News RSS
High Blood Pressure Easy to Miss in Children with Kidney Disease
Spot blood pressure readings in children with chronic kidney disease often fail to detect hypertension - even during doctor's office visits - increasing a child's risk for serious heart problems, according to research from Johns Hopkins Children's Center and other institutions. A report of the findings appears online in the Journal of American Society of Nephrology.

UCI researchers create new strategy for highly-selective chemotherapy delivery
UC Irvine researchers have created a new approach that vastly improves the targeting of chemotherapeutic drugs to specific cells and organs.

Body's immune system response to dental plaque varies by gender and race
Will neglecting to brush your teeth damage more than just your smile? Can failing to attack dental plaque increase your risk of heart damage?

Two treatment innovations improve heart function after heart attack
Supersaturated oxygen (SSO2) administered during catheter-based treatments for heart attack can significantly reduce heart muscle damage, according to a new study reported in Circulation: Cardiovascular Interventions, a journal of the American Heart Association.

Half of eligible patients not getting mitral valve surgery, U-M study shows
Overblown fears about surgical risk and lack of awareness about the risk of not operating are among the reasons only half of eligible patients were referred for mitral valve repair, according to a study by doctors at the University of Michigan Cardiovascular Center.

Early heart attack therapy with bone marrow extract improves cardiac function
A UCSF study for the treatment of heart failure after heart attack found that the extract derived from bone marrow cells is as effective as therapy using bone marrow stem cells for improving cardiac function, decreasing the formation of scar tissue and improving cardiac pumping capacity after heart attack.

Overweight male teens with normal blood pressures showing signs of heart damage
AUGUSTA, Ga. - Even while their blood pressures are still normal, overweight male teens may have elevated levels of a hormone known to increase pressures as well as early signs of heart damage, researchers say.

Benefit of grapes may be more than skin deep
Can a grape-enriched diet prevent the downhill sequence of heart failure after years of high blood pressure?

A missing enzyme conveys major heart protection in pre-clinical work
Mice born without a certain enzyme can resist the normal effects of a heart attack and retain nearly normal function in the heart's ventricles and still-oxygenated heart tissue, according to a study by researchers at Duke University Medical Center.

Mount Sinai first in US to implant FDA-cleared ring for mitral valve repair
David H. Adams, MD, Marie-Josée and Henry R. Kravis Professor and Chairman of the Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery at The Mount Sinai Medical Center, performed the first two implantations of the Carpentier-Edwards Physio II ring in the United States yesterday.
More Heart Damage Current Events and Heart Damage News Articles
  Protection Against Ischemia/Reperfusion Damage of the Heart
by Yasushi Abiko (Editor), M. Karmazyn (Editor)

How to protect against ischemia/reperfusion damage is one of the most urgent problems in medicine. It is known that ischemic damage can be attenuated by improving the oxygen balance of the ischemic heart, but the damage-producing mechanism is not yet fully understood. This book provides the latest information on the pathophysiology of ischemia/reperfusion damage and presents new ideas for more effective methods for protection. In the first two sections, the roles of such factors as various ions and phospholipids that modulate ischemia/reperfusion damage are explored, providing a clear and updated explanation of the mechanisms involved. In the third section, the myocardial and vascular remodeling procedure in hearts that have undergone ischemia/reperfusion is explained in terms of signal...

The Damage In Your Heart

The Damage In Your Heart
Weezer (Primary Contributor)



Glucose-Balance - Sale! Dr. Kang's formula for use in treating diabetes mellitus and prevents damage of heart;liver;kidney and atherosclerosis from diabetes. Limited time offer.

Glucose-Balance - Sale! Dr. Kang's formula for use in treating diabetes mellitus and prevents damage of heart;liver;kidney and atherosclerosis from diabetes. Limited time offer.
by Trilight,Inc.

From the Western scientific perspective, diabetes mellitus is an inherited endocrine disorder characterized by a variable degree of carbohydrate intolerance and specific vascular lesions (i.e., thickening of the capillary basement membrane.) The endocrine aspect of this disease is the lack of sufficient pancreatic insulin to take up nutrients from the blood, in particular, glucose. The short term danger would then be a sort of tissue starvation leading to rapid fat metabolism leading to ketoacidosis and ultimately to metabolic acidosis, shock and death. The long term dangers involve vascular lesions beginning in the lower extremities and fundus of the eye leading to tissue death, loss of sight and limb amputation. In the short term, immediate symptoms include thirst, hunger and frequent...

Faith

Faith
Directed By: Allan Kroeker
Also With: McG (Producer), Kim Manners (Producer), Robert Singer (Producer), Eric Kripke (Producer), John Shiban (Producer), Sera Gamble (Writer), Raelle Tucker (Writer)



  ACSM Select Symposium: Exercise-Induced Cardioprotection: Why Exercise May Be the Most Pragmatic Counter Therapy Against Heart Attack Damage
Starring: Artist Not Provided



  Collateral Damage
by Jim Page



Pokemon JAPANESE Legend Heart Gold Soul Silver Damage Counter Case

Pokemon JAPANESE Legend Heart Gold Soul Silver Damage Counter Case
by Nintendo/GameFREAKS



  Hon fetal heart rate pattern flags brain damage.(News): An article from: OB GYN News
by Betsy Bates (Author)

This digital document is an article from OB GYN News, published by International Medical News Group on May 15, 2005. The length of the article is 857 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Hon fetal heart rate pattern flags brain damage.(News)
Author: Betsy Bates
Publication: OB GYN News (Magazine/Journal)
Date: May 15, 2005
Publisher: International Medical News Group
Volume: 40 Issue: 10 Page: 1(2)

Distributed by Thomson...

2 each: Droll Yankees Mixed Seed Tube Bird Feeder (CJM15G)

2 each: Droll Yankees Mixed Seed Tube Bird Feeder (CJM15G)
by Droll Yankees, Inc.

Sold as 2 UNITS at $25.38 per unit. (1 unit = each.) 15". 2-1/2" diameter. Use for sunflower, mixed seed, safflower or sunflower hearts. Lifetime warranty against squirrel damage. Green . Manufacturer number: CJM15G. SKU #: 8126534. Country of origin: (TBA). Distributed by Droll Yankees, Inc.

Love (Can Seriously Damage Your Heart)

Love (Can Seriously Damage Your Heart)
Big Road (Primary Contributor)



© 2009 BrightSurf.com