(Press-News.org) Contact information: Marla Paul
marla-paul@northwestern.edu
312-503-8928
Northwestern University
Heart attack damage slashed with microparticle therapy
First therapy to target damage after heart attack could transform field
CHICAGO --- After a heart attack, much of the damage to the heart muscle is caused by inflammatory cells that rush to the scene of the oxygen-starved tissue. But that inflammatory damage is slashed in half when microparticles are injected into the blood stream within 24 hours of the attack, according to new preclinical research from Northwestern Medicine® and the University of Sydney in Australia.
When biodegradable microparticles were injected after a heart attack, the size of the heart lesion was reduced by 50 percent and the heart could pump significantly more blood.
"This is the first therapy that specifically targets a key driver of the damage that occurs after a heart attack," said investigator Daniel Getts, a visiting scholar in microbiology-immunology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. "There is no other therapy on the horizon that can do this. It has the potential to transform the way heart attacks and cardiovascular disease are treated."
The micoparticles work by binding to the damaging cells -- inflammatory monocytes -- and diverting them to a fatal detour. Instead of racing to the heart, the cells head to the spleen and die.
The particles are made of poly (lactic-co-glycolic) acid, a biocompatible and biodegradable substance already approved by the Food and Drug Administration for use in re-absorbable sutures. A microparticle is 500 nanometers, which is 1/200th size of a hair.
The scientists' study showed the microparticles reduced damage and repaired tissue in many other inflammatory diseases. These include models of West Nile virus, colitis, inflammatory bowel disease, multiple sclerosis, peritonitis and a model that mimics blood flow after a kidney transplant.
"The potential for treating many different diseases is tremendous," said investigator Stephen Miller, the Judy Gugenheim Research Professor at Feinberg. "In all these disease models, the microparticles stop the flood of inflammatory cells at the site of the tissue damage, so the damage is greatly limited and tissues can regenerate."
Getts, Miller and Nicholas King, professor of viral immunopathology at the University of Sydney School of Medical Sciences, are corresponding authors on the paper, which will be published January 15 in Science Translational Medicine.
Biotech Startup Aims for FDA Approval and Clinical Trial
The Northwestern and University of Sydney results are so encouraging, the scientists have partnered with a startup biotechnology company, Cour Pharmaceutical Development Co., to produce a refined version of the microparticles in anticipation of what they hope will be a clinical trial in myocardial infarction (heart attack) within two years. The company plans to submit an investigational new drug application to the FDA.
"This discovery has the potential to transform how inflammatory disorders are treated and the use of microparticles derived from biodegradable polymers means that this therapy could be rapidly translated for clinical use," said John Puisis, the chief executive officer of Cour.
How a Fatal Attraction Saves the Heart
The microparticles are designed to have a negative charge on their surface. This makes them irresistible to the inflammatory monocytes, which have a positively charged receptor. It's a fatal attraction. When the inflammatory cell bonds to the microparticle, a signal on the cell is activated that announces it's dying and ready for disposal. The cell then travels to the spleen, the natural path for the removal of dying cells, rather than going to the site of the inflammation.
"We're very excited," King said. "The potential for this simple approach is quite extraordinary. Inflammatory cells pick up immune-modifying microparticles and are diverted down a natural pathway used by the body to dispose of old cells.
It's amazing that such a simple detour limits major tissue damage in such a wide range of diseases."
###
The research was supported by grants NS-026543 from the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Stroke and EB-013198 from the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering of the National Institutes of Health, and the National Health and Medical Research Council in Australia.
Editors note: King, Getts and Miller have an interest in Cour Pharmaceutical Development Co. Getts is the chief scientific officer.
NORTHWESTERN NEWS: http://www.northwestern.edu/newscenter/
Heart attack damage slashed with microparticle therapy
First therapy to target damage after heart attack could transform field
2014-01-16
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
UK rates of gout soaring, but treatment remains poor
2014-01-16
UK rates of gout soaring, but treatment remains poor
1 in 40 people now affected; highest rates in Wales and North East of England
UK rates of gout have soared since the late1990s, with one in every 40 people now affected by the condition - the highest in ...
UK law to stop further sales of booze to drunk customers routinely flouted
2014-01-16
UK law to stop further sales of booze to drunk customers routinely flouted
Bartenders readily sell more drink to those obviously incapacitated by alcohol; prosecutions rare
Bar tenders in clubs and pubs are routinely flouting UK legislation intended to prevent ...
Speech means using both sides of our brain, NYU & NYU Langone researchers find
2014-01-16
Speech means using both sides of our brain, NYU & NYU Langone researchers find
We use both sides of our brain for speech, a finding by researchers at New York University and NYU Langone Medical Center that alters previous conceptions about neurological activity. The ...
'Barcode' profiling enables analysis of hundreds of tumor marker proteins at once
2014-01-16
'Barcode' profiling enables analysis of hundreds of tumor marker proteins at once
A new technology developed at the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) Center for Systems Biology (CSB) allows simultaneous analysis of hundreds of cancer-related protein ...
Living in densely populated neighborhoods can actually decrease risk of diabetes and obesity
2014-01-16
Living in densely populated neighborhoods can actually decrease risk of diabetes and obesity
TORONTO, Jan. 15, 2014 – Torontonians living in neighbourhoods that aren't conducive to walking have a 33 per cent greater risk of developing diabetes or being obese, ...
Endotracheal extubation technique training video by BMC anesthesiologist published in NEJM
2014-01-16
Endotracheal extubation technique training video by BMC anesthesiologist published in NEJM
(Boston) – An endotracheal extubation training video produced by Rafael Ortega, MD, the vice-chair of academic affairs for the department of anesthesiology at Boston ...
DNA detectives able to 'count' thousands of fish using as little as a glass of water
2014-01-16
DNA detectives able to 'count' thousands of fish using as little as a glass of water
A mere glass full of water from Monterey Bay Aquarium's 1.2 million-gallon Open Sea tank, among the 10 largest aquariums in the world, is all scientists really needed to identify the ...
Oldest trees are growing faster, storing more carbon as they age
2014-01-16
Oldest trees are growing faster, storing more carbon as they age
CORVALLIS, Ore. – In a finding that overturns the conventional view that large old trees are unproductive, scientists have determined that for most species, the biggest trees increase their ...
Head injuries triple long-term risk of early death
2014-01-16
Head injuries triple long-term risk of early death
Survivors of traumatic brain injuries are 3 times more likely to die prematurely than the general population, often from suicide or fatal injuries, finds an Oxford University-led study
Survivors ...
Study highlights growing threat of intense tropical cyclones hitting East Asia
2014-01-16
Study highlights growing threat of intense tropical cyclones hitting East Asia
The intensity of tropical cyclones hitting East Asia has significantly increased over the past 30 years, according to a new study published today.
The coastlines of China, Korea ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Making quieter dental drills to reduce dental anxiety
Why undisturbed sleep is important to brain injury recovery
Supplement trio shows promise in reversing autism-linked behaviors in mice
People who received emergency or hospital care for hallucinogens six times more likely to be diagnosed with mania
Scientists call for greater focus on conserving whole ecosystems instead of charismatic species
UH engineers making AI faster, reducing power consumption
Crickets munch on microplastics — especially if they have a big mouth
APIC and SHEA announce Joint Healthcare Infection Prevention Advisory Group (HIPAG)
Iron-deficient diet prevents lung cells from fighting the flu
Are primary students prepared to write in a digital world?
In support of the National Institute of Nursing Research
Ants signal deadly infection in altruistic self-sacrifice
Rising complexity in pediatric patients is reshaping hospital care
Continuous glucose monitoring in insulin-treated older adults with diabetes and Alzheimer disease and related dementias
Vitamin D levels during pregnancy and dental caries in offspring
For those living with dementia, new study suggests shingles vaccine could slow the disease
Your pain meds' side effects may be masquerading as heart failure
Carbon monoxide, the ‘silent killer,’ becomes a boon for fuel cell catalysts
Historical geography helps researchers solve 2,700-year old eclipse mystery
SwRI expands High-Viscosity Flow Loop to test equipment moving heavy oils
Insilico Medicine and Atossa Therapeutics publish AI-driven study in Nature's Scientific Reports identifying (Z)-endoxifen as a potential therapeutic candidate for glioblastoma
An overlooked hormone eyed as deadly driver of postmenopausal breast cancer in women with obesity
Study links childhood vaccination to lower risk of drug-resistant bacteria
LLMs choose friends and colleagues like people
Gas stoves and nitrogen dioxide exposure
Beauty linked with metabolic costs of perceiving images
First Nations Australians twice as likely to be digitally excluded: report
Korea University study finds restless legs syndrome linked to Parkinson’s risk—dopamine treatment may be protective
Pusan National University researchers use AI to create optimized engine components that outperform human designs
Approximate domain unlearning: Enabling safer and more controllable vision-language models
[Press-News.org] Heart attack damage slashed with microparticle therapyFirst therapy to target damage after heart attack could transform field