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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: heart + gene + switch  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Sports Minute: Here is the latest Alabama sports from The AP
WHNT, AL - Aug 4, 2008
The 46-year-old John Mark was born with Down syndrome and suffered from health problems related to a congenital heart defect. AUBURN, Ala. ...

San Diego Union Tribune
Endurance lift without lifting
San Diego Union Tribune, United States - Aug 1, 2008
By Terri Somers Couch potatoes, take heart: A team of scientists at the Salk Institute in La Jolla has made a discovery that might just make your dreams ...
Drugs mimic exercise benefits in mice Boston Globe
A wonder drug from Salk University scientists - AICAR, the ... HealthJockey.com
The Rise of the Couch Potato Athlete: Scientists Develop Exercise ... DigitalJournal.com
New York Times
all 678 news articles »
Basics: Sonic Hedgehog
ScienceBlogs - Aug 1, 2008
Your heart is skewed to the left and your appendix is on the right because of a pattern modulated by Hedgehog signaling. In a role that has to be useful in ...
Names in the news
The Olympian, WA - Jul 21, 2008
Motocross racer Carey Hart, whose new nightclub Wasted Space in the Hard Rock Hotel in Vegas opened this weekend, says his heart still belongs to his ...
Installation of Leading-Edge Data Analytics, Visualization Set for ...
MarketWatch - Jul 22, 2008
Economical, low-latency modular switches represent the heart of the data-management system. The nine-switch complex supports up to 2048 connections, ...
EXERCISE AND RESPIRATORY PHYSIOLOGY
AJP-Regul Integr Comp Physiology (subscription) - Jul 9, 2008
Regulation of antisense RNA expression during cardiac MHC gene switching in response to pressure overload. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 290: H2351?H2361, ...
Local growers share good living with their customers, but it's ...
Waco Tribune Herald, TX - Aug 2, 2008
?We?ve noticed more Texas consumers buying and dining locally,? said Gene Richards, assistant commissioner for marketing and promotion at the Texas ...
Gaining Ground On Sickle Cell Disease
Science Daily (press release) - Jul 15, 2008
ScienceDaily (July 15, 2008) ? Although sickle cell disease is a single-gene disorder, its symptoms are highly variable. In a study published online July 14 ...
Polluted Gowanus Canal May Be Source of New Antibiotics
Newswise (press release) - Jul 29, 2008
?I think with the brain and Nasreen thinks with the heart, but at times we switch. We complement each other well.? The largest public college of technology ...
Scientists find Parkinson's gene link
The Gazette (Montreal), Canada - Jul 29, 2008
... cell-clogging plaque found in Parkinson's patients, in the same way statins are used to lower the cholesterol levels of people at risk of heart disease. ...
Source: Google News

The energy substrate switch during development of heart failure: gene regulatory mechanisms (Review) … -
MN Sack, DP Kelly - Int J Mol Med, 1998 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Int J Mol Med. 1998 Jan;1(1):17-24. The energy substrate switch during development
of heart failure: gene regulatory mechanisms (Review). Sack MN, Kelly DP. ...

Fatty Acid Oxidation Enzyme Gene Expression Is Downregulated in the Failing Heart -
MN Sack, TA Rader, S Park, J Bastin, SA McCune, DP … - Circulation, 1996 - Am Heart Assoc
... hypertrophy and in the failing heart; fatty acid ... In this report, we identify a gene
regulatory pathway ... is involved in this myocardial energy substrate switch. ...

Vigilant Vector: Heart-Specific Promoter in an Adeno-Associated Virus Vector for Cardioprotection -
MI Phillips, Y Tang, K Schmidt-Ott, K Qian, S … - Hypertension, 2002 - Am Heart Assoc
... cardioprotection against ischemia; (3) a tissue-specific promoter to drive the
transgene to express mRNA in the heart only; and (4) a gene switch that would ...

Myosin heavy chain gene expression in human heart failure. -
K Nakao, W Minobe, R Roden, MR Bristow, LA … - Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1997 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... Skeletal actin mRNA increases in the human heart during ontogenic ... hypertrophy,
beta-myosin heavy chain gene expression, and myosin isoform switch in rats ...

Changes in gene expression in the intact human heart. Downregulation of alpha-myosin heavy chain in … -
BD Lowes, W Minobe, WT Abraham, MN Rizeq, TJ … - Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1997 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... of G proteins in failing human heart: a reappraisal ... ventricular hypertrophy,
beta-myosin heavy chain gene expression, and myosin isoform switch in rats ...

Nkx-2.5: a novel murine homeobox gene expressed in early heart progenitor cells and their myogenic … -
TJ Lints - Development, 1993 - dev.biologists.org
... in Mouse Cardiomyocytes Facilitates an Inducible Switch from Proliferation ... of upstream
regulatory regions in the heart-expressed homeobox gene Nkx2-5 ...

Metabolic Gene Expression in Fetal and Failing Human Heart -
P Razeghi, ME Young, JL Alcorn, CS Moravec, OH … - Circulation, 2001 - Am Heart Assoc
... In contrast to the rat heart, the human heart does not exhibit a true switch to
fetal ... Thus, the failing heart reverts to a fetal metabolic gene profile by ...

… an adenovirus vector expressing the Cre recombinase protein: a molecular switch for control of gene -
M Anton, FL Graham - J. Virol, 1995 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... immunoglobulin switch recombination at individual switch regions evidenced ... Briand
P. Widespread long-term gene transfer to mouse skeletal muscles and heart. ...

Sarcoplasmic reticulum gene expression in cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure -
M Arai, H Matsui, M Periasamy - Circulation Research, 1994 - Am Heart Assoc
... The purpose of this review is to highlight recent advances concerning the regulation
of SR gene expres- sion during cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure. ...

Adenovirus-mediated regulable target gene expression in vivo -
MM Burcin, G Schiedner, S Kochanek, SY Tsai, BW O' … - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1999 - National Acad Sciences
... Hypoxia-Regulated Heme Oxygenase-1 Gene Vector in the Heart Limits Cardiac ... time and
space of the rutabaga memory impairment by using Gene-Switch PNAS, January 6 ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

Gene switch helps mice fix their own heart damage

Last Updated: 2007-05-11 10:35:12 -0400 (Reuters Health)

CHICAGO - Researchers have figured out how to switch on a gene in adult mice that repaired their hearts after a heart attack, a finding that may one day help fix heart damage in humans.

The team at Columbia University Medical Center in New York found that by genetically manipulating a gene associated with cell growth, adult mice were able to make new cells to replace those damaged in a heart attack.

Heart cells in mice, and in humans, stop regenerating after birth. If the heart is damaged by a heart attack, it cannot create new cells to repair the damage and hearts become less efficient at pumping blood.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

"Heart cells don't divide at all in the mammal heart, and that's why we have so much mortality and morbidity," said Dr. Hina Chaudhry, whose study appears in the journal Circulation Research.

Chaudhry and colleagues studied the gene cyclin A2, a gene that is active in embryos, but shut off in adult mammals.

"We genetically engineered these mice to keep expressing this gene that becomes silent after birth," she said in a telephone interview.

The researchers then induced a heart attack in the mice.

At three months, the mice whose cyclin A2 genes had been switched on had 77 percent better heart function than the other mice.

"The mice who did not carry the gene were progressing to heart failure and dying," she said. "We didn't lose any of the mice that carried the gene. They had much better survival."

"We're the first study to show a sustained improvement in cardiac function by any kind of molecular or cellular manipulation," she said.

Heart failure is the leading cause of hospitalization in people older than 65, a condition that affects nearly 5 million Americans.

Chaudhry said the approach needed to be tested in larger mammals and then in humans, something she believes is not too far off.

Copyright © 2007 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon. Reuters and the Reuters sphere logo are registered trademarks and trademarks of the Reuters group of companies around the world.

 

Aspirin vs. colon cancer: study weighs benefits

Last Updated: 2007-05-11 10:37:42 -0400 (Reuters Health)

CHICAGO - Long-term use of aspirin may be a cheap, effective way of warding off colorectal cancer for people who are at high risk, but bleeding risks make it a bad idea for the average patient, researchers said on Thursday.

British researchers found that daily doses of aspirin may be worthwhile for patients at high risk of colon cancer, reducing the risk by more than 70 percent over 10 years.

Colorectal cancer is the second-leading cause of U.S. cancer deaths, killing about 52,000 people a year.

Several studies have shown aspirin may help prevent colorectal cancer. Daily aspirin use can also protect against heart attack or stroke for people at risk.

But it can cause gastrointestinal bleeding and it may worsen some strokes that involve bleeding in the brain.

"As always, it comes down to the balance of likely risk and benefit in individuals," said Peter Rothwell of Radcliffe Infirmary in Oxford.

Rothwell and colleagues analyzed data from two large randomized clinical trials of aspirin done in the late 1970s and 1980s. They were looking especially at long-term results because it takes about 10 years for precancerous adenomas or polyps to develop into colon cancer.

What they found is that patients who took a daily 300 mg or greater dose of aspirin were 37 percent less likely to have colorectal cancer after five years and 74 percent less likely to have it after 10 to 15 years.

"If you have no evidence of any increase in risk of colorectal cancer, then the risks and benefits are probably similar in magnitude -- so (it's) probably not worth taking on the basis of cancer prevention alone," said Rothwell, whose study was published in The Lancet medical journal.

"However, if your risk of colorectal cancer is increased -- for example, by a strong family history or by having had a colonic polyp or cancer in the past -- then the benefits are likely to outweigh the risks," he said in an e-mail.

NOT RECOMMENDED

Dr. Andrew Chan of Massachusetts General Hospital, writing in a commentary accompanying the study, said Rothwell's work does provide "convincing evidence that aspirin, at biologically relevant doses, can reduce the incidence of colorectal cancer."

"However, with the concerns about the potential risks of long-term aspirin use and the availability of alternative prevention strategies, these findings are not sufficient to warrant a recommendation for the general population to use aspirin for cancer prevention," Chan wrote.

A similar analysis of long-term daily use of an adult dose of aspirin -- 325 mg or more -- found support for prevention of colorectal cancer as well.

That study, published on April 18 in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, concluded that because of aspirin's high toxicity in doses greater than 80 mg a day, the risks of further study were not warranted, especially given that screening and colonoscopy work well at preventing colon cancer.

Originally made from the bark of the willow tree, aspirin is one of nature's oldest drugs. It was first synthesized more than a century ago and scientists continue to explore its potential benefits.

A 2004 study of daily use of adult aspirin over a lifetime resulted in about 1 in 15 people having an aspirin-related complication and about 1 in 556 people dying.

Copyright © 2007 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon. Reuters and the Reuters sphere logo are registered trademarks and trademarks of the Reuters group of companies around the world.

 
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