(Press-News.org) Researchers at Case Western Reserve University have found that a single gene poses a double threat to disease: Not only does it inhibit the growth and spread of breast tumors, but it also makes hearts healthier.
In 2012, medical school researchers discovered the suppressive effects of the gene HEXIM1 on breast cancer in mouse models. Now they have demonstrated that it also enhances the number and density of blood vessels in the heart – a sure sign of cardiac fitness.
Scientists re-expressed the HEXIM1 gene in the adult mouse heart and found that the hearts grew heavier and larger without exercise. In addition, the animals' resting heart rates decreased. The lowered heart rate indicates improved efficiency, and is supported by their finding that transgenic hearts are pumping more blood per beat. The team also discovered that untrained transgenic mice ran twice as long as those without any genetic modification.
"Our promising discovery reveals the potential for HEXIM1 to kill two birds with one stone – potentially circumventing heart disease as well as cancer, the country's leading causes of death," said Monica Montano, PhD, associate professor of pharmacology, member of the Case Comprehensive Cancer Center, who created the mice for the heart and breast cancer research and one of the lead researchers.
Hypertension and subsequent heart failure are characterized by a mismatch between the heart muscles' need for oxygen and nutrients and blood vessels' inability to deliver either at the rate required. This deficit leads to an enlarged heart that, in turn, often ultimately weakens and stops. The researchers showed that increasing blood vessel growth through the artificial enhancement of HEXIM1 levels improved overall function – HEXIM1 may be a possible therapeutic target for heart disease.
The study, published online in the peer-reviewed journal Cardiovascular Research, is the sixth from the team of Dr. Montano and Michiko Watanabe, PhD, professor of pediatrics, genetics, and anatomy at Case Western Reserve School of Medicine and director of Pediatric Cardiology Fellowship Research at Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital. Their collaboration began in 2004 with an investigation of why mice expressing mutant HEXIM1 suffered heart failure in the fetal stages of life. The research team found then that the gene is important for cardiovascular development and that it is abundant in the earliest months of life. This discovery led the team to explore whether increasing HEXIM1 levels could help reverse cardiovascular disease by encouraging vessel growth.
"Our Cleveland-based collaborative research teams revealed that increasing HEXIM1 levels brought normal functioning hearts up to an athletic level, which could perhaps stand up to the physical insults of various cardiovascular diseases," Watanabe said.
The results build on the team's findings last year that showed increased levels of HEXIM1 suppressed the growth of breast cancer tumors. Using a well-known mouse model of breast cancer metastasis, researchers induced the gene's expression by locally delivering a drug, hexamethylene-bisacetamide using an FDA-approved polymer. The strategy increased local HEXIM1 levels and inhibited the spread of breast cancer. The team is currently making a more potent version of the drug and intends to move to clinical trials within a few years.
"Many cancer drugs have detrimental effects on the heart," said Mukesh K. Jain, MD, FAHA, professor of medicine, Ellery Sedgwick Jr. Chair and director of Case Cardiovascular Research Institute at Case Western Reserve School of Medicine. "It would be beneficial to have a cancer therapeutic with no adverse effects on the heart and perhaps even enhance its function."
The Case Western Reserve-led research team is now investigating HEXIM1's ability to improve the health of mice with cardiovascular disease. They are investigating the drug's ability to reduce the damage from heart attacks.
###
The research team included faculty investigators Xin Yu, Margaret Chandler, Thomas Dick, Julian Stelzer, and Brian Hoit and included investigators from several Cleveland institutions, including University Hospitals, MetroHealth Medical Center, Cleveland Clinic and Cleveland State University.
This research was supported in part by grants from the Clinical and Translational Science Collaborative at Case Western Reserve University, American Heart Association grant 0855543D and NIH grants, including funds from the American Recovery & Reinvestment Act of 2009: RO1CA92440, RO1HL091171, RO1HL73315, RO1HL86935, RO1HL08157, and R01CA118399.
Gene offers an athlete's heart without the exercise
Case Western Reserve scientists discover HEXIM1 makes heart healthier and suppresses breast cancer metastasis
2013-06-13
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Study points to role of nervous system in arthritis
2013-06-13
Arthritis is a debilitating disorder affecting one in 10 Canadians, with pain caused by inflammation and damage to joints.
Yet the condition is poorly managed in most patients, since adequate treatments are lacking – and the therapies that do exist to ease arthritis pain often cause serious side effects, particularly when used long-term. Any hope for developing more-effective treatments for arthritis relies on understanding the processes driving this condition.
A new study in the Journal of Neuroscience by researchers at McGill University adds to a growing body of ...
A peptide to protect brain function
2013-06-13
A structure called "the microtubule network" is a crucial part of our nervous system. It acts as a transportation system within nerve cells, carrying essential proteins and enabling cell-to-cell communications. But in neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's, ALS, and Parkinson's, this network breaks down, hindering motor abilities and cognitive function.
Now Prof. Illana Gozes of Tel Aviv University's Sackler Faculty of Medicine has developed a new peptide in her lab, called NAP or Davunetide, that has the capacity to both protect and restore microtubule function. ...
Helping to restore balance after inner ear disorder
2013-06-13
Many disorders of the inner hear which affect both hearing and balance can be hugely debilitating and are currently largely incurable. Cochlear implants have been used for many years to replace lost hearing resulting from inner ear damage. However, to date, there has not been an analogous treatment for balance disorders resulting from inner ear disease. One potential new treatment is an implantable vestibular prosthesis which would directly activate the vestibular nerve by electrical stimulation. This prosthetic treatment is tested in a new study by Christopher Phillips ...
US forest management policy must evolve to meet bioenergy targets
2013-06-13
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — In order to keep pace with the burgeoning demand for renewable energy, forest management policy in the U.S. must change to address environmental sustainability issues, according to an article by a University of Illinois expert in bioenergy law.
Unless the forestry sector can tailor sustainable forest management policies specifically to forest-to-energy feedstocks, its role in helping the country broaden its energy portfolio – and by extension, meeting ambitious bioenergy targets – may be limited in large part because of uncertainty about whether existing ...
No good substitute for race in college admissions: Research
2013-06-13
COLLEGE PARK, Md. – As the U.S. Supreme Court decides in a case involving racial preferences in higher education admissions (Fisher v. Texas), new University of Maryland-led research finds that socioeconomic diversity is no replacement for a direct consideration of race, as some have suggested. Still the research finds that a mix of students from differing socio-economic backgrounds has benefits.
The peer-reviewed study appears in the June issue of the "American Educational Research Journal." It evaluates the use of "socio-economic status" as a racially blind way to build ...
Yale researchers unravel genetics of dyslexia and language impairment
2013-06-13
A new study of the genetic origins of dyslexia and other learning disabilities could allow for earlier diagnoses and more successful interventions, according to researchers at Yale School of Medicine. Many students now are not diagnosed until high school, at which point treatments are less effective.
The study is published online and in the July print issue of the American Journal of Human Genetics. Senior author Jeffrey R. Gruen, M.D., professor of pediatrics, genetics, and investigative medicine at Yale, and colleagues analyzed data from more than 10,000 children born ...
Men with restless legs syndrome may be at higher risk of early death
2013-06-13
MINNEAPOLIS – Men who experience restless legs syndrome (RLS) may have a higher risk of dying earlier, according to research that appears in the June 12, 2013, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. The disorder is characterized by an irresistible urge to move the legs and often causes leg sensations of burning, creeping, and tugging, which are usually worse at night.
"RLS affects five to 10 percent of adults across the country," said study author Xiang Gao, MD, PhD, with Harvard School of Public Health, Harvard Medical School ...
Biomarkers may be key to discovery of successful initial treatment of depression
2013-06-13
In a National Institutes of Health (NIH) funded clinical trial, researchers at Emory have discovered that specific patterns of brain activity may indicate whether a depressed patient will or will not respond to treatment with medication or psychotherapy. The study was published June 12, 2013, in JAMA Psychiatry Online First.
The choice of medication versus psychotherapy is often based on the preference of the patient or clinician, rather than objective factors. On average, 35-40 percent of patients get well with whatever treatment they start with.
"To be ill with ...
Infants express non-verbal sympathy for others in distress
2013-06-13
VIDEO:
This movie file shows the attacker chasing the victim and hit it seven times, violently attacking and crushing the victim at the end of the movie.
Click here for more information.
Infants as young as ten months old express sympathy for others in distress in non-verbal ways, according to research published June 12 in the open access journal PLOS ONE by Yasuhiro Kanakogi and colleagues from Kyoto University and Toyohashi University of Technology, Japan.
Infants at this ...
Geographic context may have shaped sounds of different languages
2013-06-13
The sounds of different languages may have been shaped by the geography of the places where they are spoken, according to research published June 5 in the open access journal PLOS ONE by Caleb Everett from the University of Miami.
Everett compared the sounds used in about 600 languages across the world with the regions they were commonly spoken, and found a strong correlation between high altitude and spoken languages that included consonant sounds produced with an intense burst of air, called ejective consonants. Ejectives are absent in the English language, but were ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Survey confirms radiation and orthopedic health hazards in cardiac catheterization laboratories are ‘unacceptable’
Study finds consumer devices can be used to assess brain health
Teachers' negative emotions impact engagement of students, new study finds
Researchers see breakthrough with biofuel
White blood cells use brute force to dislodge bacteria
Foundation AI model predicts postoperative risks from clinical notes
Brain functional networks adapt in response to surgery and Botox for facial palsy
Multimodal AI tool supports ecological applications
New University of Minnesota research shows impact of anxiety and apathy on decision-making
Fred Hutch announces 10 recipients of the 2025 Harold M. Weintraub Graduate Student Award
30 million euros for a novel method of monitoring the world's oceans and coastal regions using telecommunications cables
New multicenter study shows: Which treatment helps best with high-risk acute pulmonary embolism
Hidden dangers and myths: What you need to know about HPV and cancer
SNU researchers develop world’s first technology to observe atomic structural changes of nanoparticles in 3D
SNU researchers develop a new synthesis technology of single crystal 2D semiconductors, “Hypotaxy,” to enhance the commercialization of next-generation 2D semiconductors
Graphene production method offers green alternative to mining
Researchers discover a cause of leptin resistance—and how to reverse it
Heat from the sun affects seismic activity on Earth
Postoperative aspiration pneumonia among adults using GLP-1 receptor agonists
Perceived discrimination in health care settings and care delays in patients with diabetes and hypertension
Postoperative outcomes following preweekend surgery
Nearly 4 of 10 Americans report sports-related mistreatment
School absence patterns could ID children with chronic GI disorders, research suggests
Mount Sinai researchers identify molecular glues that protect insulin-producing cells from damage related to diabetes
Study: Smartwatches could end the next pandemic
Equal distribution of wealth is bad for the climate
Evidence-based strategies improve colonoscopy bowel preparation quality, performance, and patient experience
E. (Sarah) Du, Ph.D., named Senior Member, National Academy of Inventors
Study establishes “ball and chain” mechanism inactivates key mammalian ion channel
Dicamba drift: New use of an old herbicide disrupts pollinators
[Press-News.org] Gene offers an athlete's heart without the exerciseCase Western Reserve scientists discover HEXIM1 makes heart healthier and suppresses breast cancer metastasis