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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: break down + blood vessels + disease  Related to the article below (Last Update: 5/5/2008)

Bile Duct Congestion Can Lead to Intestinal Diseases and Liver ...
Natural News.com, AZ - May 2, 2008
These cells form an essential part of all the organs, blood vessels, lymph vessels, and so on in the body. Vitamin A is also necessary to maintain healthy ...

News 8 Austin
Device considered vacuum cleaner for the brain
News 8 Austin, TX - May 1, 2008
We snake a tube up through the blood vessels. So you go into the groin, the femoral artery ? that's how we get into the body ? and you snake a tube up ...
Link found between adult retardation and physical disease
Jerusalem Post, Israel - Apr 6, 2008
The complications of diabetes that affect the heart, blood vessels, eyes, kidneys and other organs can be minimized by taking resveratrol, a compound found ...
Nature/Medicine Biodiversity loss: It will make you sick!
Accra Daily Mail, Ghana - Apr 27, 2008
Bears appear to produce a substance that inhibits cells that break down bone and promote substances that encourage bone and cartilage-making cells. ...
The Health Benefits of Training
PezCycling News - Apr 29, 2008
Our blood vessels and heart become stiffer (lose compliance) and there is a decline in our maximal heart rate as well as maximal oxygen uptake (Max V02). ...
HEALTH MATTERS: Get moving to prevent DVT
Packet Online, NJ - Apr 22, 2008
Risk factors for DVT include blood vessels that become inflamed and restrict blood flow as we age; trauma such as a broken bone or other injury that causes ...
The Lifecycle of a Tooth
NPR - Apr 9, 2008
If infection reaches the pulp, the blood vessels and nerves in the tissue also become infected and inflamed. Swelling builds and, with nowhere to go, ...
Hogs fans can take pride in King, too
Arkansas Democrat Gazette, AR - Apr 21, 2008
Wegener?s granulomatosis is a potentially fatal disease in which inflamed blood vessels restrict the flow of blood, usually to the kidneys, lungs and upper ...

TopCancerNews.com
New Therapy For slowing the growth of stubborn solid tumor cancers
TopCancerNews.com, TX - Apr 18, 2008
CEPs are derived from blood marrow and circulate in the blood. They have the ability to become cells that line blood vessels to promote blood flow. ...
Cancer fighting virus
WHOI, IL - Apr 29, 2008
Soft tissue sarcomas form in the deep tissues, muscles, tendons, fat, blood vessels, nerves and fibrous tissue around the joints. ...
Source: Google News

Is Breakdown of the Blood-Brain Barrier Responsible for Lacunar Stroke, Leukoaraiosis, and Dementia? -
JM Wardlaw, PAG Sandercock, MS Dennis, J Starr - Stroke, 2003 - Am Heart Assoc
... s triad for the leak hypothesis, small-vessel disease, and dementia ... if lipohyalinosis
is due to blood-brain barrier ... 65 This suggests that breakdown of the blood ...

Cancer Research: Designing Therapies That Target Tumor Blood Vessels -
M Barinaga - Science, 1997 - sciencemag.org
... secreted by cancer cells that break down proteins of the ... Angiogenesis requires the
same breakdown of the surrounding ... to make way for new blood vessels, and the ...

Extracellular matrix degradation by metalloproteinases and central nervous system diseases -
A Lukes, S Mun-Bryce, M Lukes, GA Rosenberg - Molecular Neurobiology, 1999 - Springer
... much inhibition prevents normal ECM break- down, resulting in ... Formation of connections
and breakdown of other ... that normal brain small blood vessels express o11 ...

Matrix metalloproteinases and coronary artery disease: a novel therapeutic target -
DC Celentano, WH Frishman - The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 1997 - jcp.sagepub.com
... Matrix metallo- proteinases contribute to this remodeling by break- ... By breaking down
the extracellular ma- ... surrounding extracellular matrix breakdown 22 or a ...

… of VEGF Causes Retinal Neovascularization in Rabbits and Breakdown of the Blood?Retinal Barrier in … -
H OZAKI, H HAYASHI, SA VINORES, Y MOROMIZATO, PA … - Experimental Eye Research, 1997 - Elsevier
... widespread retinal vascular dilation and breakdown of the ... Key words: blood?retinal
barrier; ischemic retinopathies ... Oc- clusion of retinal vessels leading to ...

VEGF-initiated Blood-Retinal Barrier Breakdown in Early Diabetes -
T Qaum, Q Xu, AM Joussen, MW Clemens, W Qin, K … - Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science, 2001 - ARVO
... and DA Antonetti Mapping the Blood Vessels with Paracellular ... intensive insulin therapy
exacerbates diabetic blood-retinal barrier breakdown via hypoxia ...

Senile macular degeneration: The involvement of immunocompetent cells -
PL Penfold, MC Killingsworth, SH Sarks - Graefe's Archive for Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology, 1985 - Springer
... mast cells, play a role in the break- down of Bruch's ... the pig- ment epithelium and
the breakdown of Bruch's ... the stroma and cells in the blood vessels showed a ...

Blood-brain barrier breakdown in septic encephalopathy and brain tumours* -
DC Davies - Journal of Anatomy, 2002 - Blackwell Synergy
... neuronal degeneration) suggesting blood?brain barrier breakdown in these ... lead to
opening of the blood?brain barrier ... ZO-1 expression is not down-regulated in ...

Angiogenesis in health and disease -
P Carmeliet - Nature Medicine, 2003 - uwcvb.org
... not only proteolytically broken down, but its ... original position, but excessive breakdown
removes critical ... stabilization of nascent blood vessels byrecruit- ing ...

The blood?brain barrier: an overview Structure, regulation, and clinical implications -
P Ballabh, A Braun, M Nedergaard - Neurobiology of Disease, 2004 - Elsevier
... Break down of BBB in septic encephalopathy. ... and other brain tumors may be involved
in down-regulating TJ ... of toxins and neurotropins, and the breakdown of the BBB ...

Source: Google Scholar

Genetic finding sheds light on diseases causing blood vessel breakdown

By Michael Purdy

Twenty-one years after they first described a fatal genetic disorder in Missouri and Arkansas families, scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have linked the condition to mutations in a gene known as TREX1.

The study appears online in Nature Genetics.

The identification will accelerate efforts to understand and treat retinal vasculopathy with cerebral leukodystrophy (RVCL), a rare condition that usually goes unrecognized or is misdiagnosed. In Asian and Caucasian patients with the disease, a complex and ultimately fatal barrage of primarily central nervous system symptoms begins around age 45 that includes vision loss, mini-strokes and dementia. The symptoms can also mimic a brain tumor or multiple sclerosis. After onset, RVCL is fatal in 10 years or less.

Medical News Releases >

Genetic finding sheds light on diseases causing blood vessel breakdown

By Michael Purdy

Embargoed until 1 p.m. ET, Sunday, July 29

Twenty-one years after they first described a fatal genetic disorder in Missouri and Arkansas families, scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have linked the condition to mutations in a gene known as TREX1.

The study appears online in Nature Genetics.

The identification will accelerate efforts to understand and treat retinal vasculopathy with cerebral leukodystrophy (RVCL), a rare condition that usually goes unrecognized or is misdiagnosed. In Asian and Caucasian patients with the disease, a complex and ultimately fatal barrage of primarily central nervous system symptoms begins around age 45 that includes vision loss, mini-strokes and dementia. The symptoms can also mimic a brain tumor or multiple sclerosis. After onset, RVCL is fatal in 10 years or less.

Because small blood vessels in the back of the eye and the brain disappear in patients with RVCL, the new link could have important relevance to a much broader range of health problems affecting the elderly, including common diseases like diabetes that also alter microvessels.

"Why TREX1 mutations would suddenly cause these blood vessels to start disappearing at midlife is a mystery," says senior author John Atkinson, M.D., the Samuel Grant Professor of Medicine and professor of molecular microbiology. "But now that we have this link, what it teaches us about the health and maintenance of these blood vessels also may help a great deal in understanding and preventing their loss in aging and in diabetes."

Also on the list of disorders linked to blood vessel loss is vascular dementia, a condition that causes memory loss, disorientation, and emotional problems in the elderly. In the United States, vascular dementia is the second-leading cause of these kinds of symptoms after Alzheimer's disease; in some Asian nations, it is the leading cause of dementia.

Gil Grand, M.D., professor of clinical ophthalmology and visual sciences at Washington University, and Atkinson led the research team that in 1986 first reported RVCL as a novel human disease. Since then, researchers have identified other families with RVCL in Europe, Australia and Taiwan.

In 2002, Atkinson's group and colleagues at other institutions tied the condition to a portion of the third chromosome. Unfortunately, the region is rich with more than 150 complex genes, and initial attempts to locate the specific gene that causes RVCL were unsuccessful.

With a grant from the Genome Sequencing Center (GSC) at Washington University, scientists recently began a new attempt. The lead researcher, Anna Richards, M.D., Ph.D., at that time a member of the Atkinson lab and now clinical lecturer in nephrology, Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh, elected to begin the search with a simple gene whose structure made it easiest to sequence.

In a stroke of good fortune, that gene, TREX1, turned out to be the gene they were looking for. In the 10 families scientists studied, they found that family members with RVCL consistently had one of five different TREX1 mutations.

A small but rapidly expanding body of scientific literature already exists on TREX1, which is an important mammalian gene. It is active in almost all cells, where it proofreads DNA for errors and helps correct those mistakes. Cells sometimes introduce such errors into DNA when they copy it prior to cell division, and environmental factors like radiation and reactive chemicals can also create errors.

According to Atkinson, though, there's little in the limited TREX1 literature to suggest why mutations in the gene should cause small blood vessels to start dying off in middle-aged RVCL patients. This implies that TREX1 may have a fundamental role in maintaining the health of small blood vessels that has previously gone unrecognized.

"We're going to be working very hard to understand everything we can about TREX1 to try to give us some hints about what's happening to people with RVCL and how we can help," Atkinson says. "What we learn may provide insights into why these same vessels sometimes start to die off in the elderly, leading to a variety of complications. The disease was discovered here in St. Louis, its genetic basis was identified by the GSC, and now our goal is to find a treatment."

Atkinson's lab has already identified a lead. They were able to show that two of the mutations they identified in RVCL patients create a tailless form of the TREX1 protein that can't properly anchor itself to the part of the cell where it normally does its job. Scientists are currently studying whether this dislocation could have any links to the damage that occurs in RVCL.

Richards A, et al. Truncations in the carboxyl-terminus of human 3'-5' DNA exonuclease TREX1 cause autosomal dominant retinal vasculopathy with cerebral leukodystrophy. Nature Genetics, in press.

Funding from the Human Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University School of Medicine supported this research.

Washington University School of Medicine's full-time and volunteer faculty physicians also are the medical staff of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's hospitals. The School of Medicine is one of the leading medical research, teaching and patient care institutions in the nation, currently ranked fourth in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked to BJC HealthCare.

 
 
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