PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study: Oxidized LDL might actually be 'good guy'

2014-09-04
(Press-News.org) LEXINGTON, Ky (Sept. 4, 2014) -- A team of investigators at the University of Kentucky has made a thought-provoking discovery about a type of cholesterol previously believed to be a "bad guy" in the development of heart disease and other conditions.

Jason Meyer, a University of Kentucky MD-PhD candidate, worked with Deneys van der Westhuyzen, Ph.D., a Professor in the Departments of Internal Medicine and Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry, to study the role oxidized LDL plays in the development of plaque inside artery walls.

According to Meyer, the medical research community has traditionally believed that oxidized LDL plays a pivotal role in that process.

"Oxidized LDL moves rapidly into arterial walls and engorges them with cholesterol," explains Meyer. "Cholesterol ultimately converts into plaque, blocking the arteries or, in a worst case scenario, rupturing and sending clots into the bloodstream, causing heart attacks and/or strokes."

However, more recent studies in animals and humans have brought that assumption into question, and the oxidized LDL theory is currently the subject of lively debate.

Though in its very early stages, our research will add considerably to that controversy," Meyer says, "because it seems to indicate that oxidized LDL might in fact be a 'good guy' in the process."

The team's findings come from a project studying a pathway of cholesterol transport called "selective lipid uptake."

"Based on our analysis, we were surprised to find that, instead of increasing the amount of cholesterol uptake and accumulation in the macrophage foam cells, mildly oxidized LDL almost completely prevents increases in cholesterol," Dr. van der Westhuyzen said.

Meyer says the implications of the study are potentially profound.

"If it is demonstrated that oxidized LDL actually has a preventive effect on the accumulation of cholesterol in arterial walls, it may be possible to create a medicine from oxidized LDL to help prevent or treat this killer disease," Meyer said. "There is still much work to do because this project is very early in development and has not been tested in animals, but the results we have so far are very promising."

Meyer and van der Westhuyzen's findings were published in the August issue of the Journal of Lipid Research.

INFORMATION: END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Research shows declining levels of acidity in Sierra Nevada lakes

Research shows declining levels of acidity in Sierra Nevada lakes
2014-09-04
RIVERSIDE, Calif. — California's water supply depends on a clean snow pack and healthy mountain lakes. The lakes receive a large amount of runoff in the spring from the melting snowpack. If the snowpack is polluted, the lakes will be polluted. James O. Sickman, an environmental scientist at the University of California, Riverside, has conducted research on lakes in the Sierra Nevada—the most sensitive lakes in the U.S. to acid rain, according to the Environmental Protection Agency—and described human impacts on them during the 20th century. The research was done by ...

New research offers help for spinal cord patients

2014-09-04
Many patients suffer from severe spinal cord injuries after being involved in traffic accidents or accidents at work. An injury to the spinal cord is a catastrophe for the individual, and often results in complete or partial paralysis of the person's arms and legs. Despite the paralysis, several patients experience problems with involuntary muscle contractions or spasms which impair the patient's quality of life. The movements are due to the neurotransmitter serotonin, which normally plays a crucial role in relation to our voluntary control of movements by reinforcing ...

Mantle plumes crack continents

2014-09-04
In some parts of the Earth, material rises upwards like a column from the boundary layer of the Earth's core and the lower mantel to just below the Earth's crust hundreds of kilometres above. Halted by the resistance of the hard crust and lithospheric mantle, the flow of material becomes wider, taking on a mushroom-like shape. Specialists call these magma columns "mantle plumes" or simply "plumes". Are mantel plumes responsible for the African rift system? Geologists believe that plumes are not just responsible for creating volcanoes outside of tectonically active areas ...

Implact of dexamethasone on intelligence and hearing in preterm infants

2014-09-04
Glucocorticoids are speculated to have a long-term impact on the development of the nervous system and increase the incidence of cerebral palsy in preterm infants. The existing studies concerning the role of dexamethasone in preterm infants are insufficiently reliable owing to short follow-up periods and small sample sizes in clinical studies, or the absence of randomized controlled trials. Ruolin Zhang and co-workers from the Second Xiangya Hospital, Central South University in China conducted a meta-analysis of 10 relevant randomized controlled trials. They found that ...

Apolipoprotein E and apolipoprotein CI are involved in cognitive impairment progression in Chinese late-onset Alzheimer's disease

2014-09-04
Current evidence shows that apolipoprotein E (APOE), apolipoprotein CI (APOC1) and low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein (LRP) variations are related to late-onset Alzheimer's disease. However, it remains unclear if genetic polymorphisms in these genes are associated with cognitive decline in late-onset Alzheimer's disease patients. According to a recent study reported in the Neural Regeneration Research, APOE ε4 plays an important role in augmenting cognitive decline, and APOC1 H2 may act synergistically with APOE ε4 in increasing the risk of cognitive ...

Cystic fibrosis: Additional immune dysfunction discovered

2014-09-04
Cystic fibrosis (mucoviscidosis) is due to a mutation of an ion channel which leads to highly viscous mucus and to dysfunction of the lung and the gastrointestinal organs. Since these patients frequently suffer from chronic infections, Dr. Thomas Hofer and Professor Dr. Loems Ziegler-Heitbrock from the Comprehensive Pneumology Center (CPC) at Helmholtz Zentrum München - together with colleagues at the Klinikum der Universität München and the University of Leicester, UK - investigated, whether these patients might have an additional immune defect. The scientists found ...

Finding new approaches for therapeutics against Ebola virus

2014-09-04
Researchers from the University of Liverpool in collaboration with Public Health England have been investigating new ways to identify drugs that could be used to treat Ebola virus infection. Their approach has been to study what proteins inside a cell are critical for the functions of Ebola virus and are hijacked by the virus to help with infection. One of the proteins they have targeted is known as VP24. This protein disrupts signalling in infected human cells and disrupts the body's immune system and the fight against the virus. Once the team identified these cellular ...

Bats change strategy when food is scarce

2014-09-04
Echolocating bats have historically been classified into two groups: 'loud' aerial hawkers who catch flying insects on the wing and 'whispering' gleaners that pick up prey from the ground. While some bat species can forage in multiple ways, others have limited flexibility in the amplitude of their echolocation calls. Dr Talya Hackett and colleagues studied the desert long-eared bat (Otonycteris hemprichii), said to be a passive 'whispering' gleaner that picks up ground-dwelling invertebrates, such as scorpions, from the desert floor. Using an acoustic tracking system, ...

Visualising plastic changes to the brain

Visualising plastic changes to the brain
2014-09-04
Tinnitus, migraine, epilepsy, depression, schizophrenia, Alzheimer's: all these are examples of diseases with neurological causes, the treatment and study of which is more and more frequently being carried out by means of magnetic stimulation of the brain. However, the method's precise mechanisms of action have not, as yet, been fully understood. The work group headed by PD Dr Dirk Jancke from the Institut für Neuroinformatik was the first to succeed in illustrating the neuronal effects of this treatment method with high-res images. Painless Therapy Transcranial magnetic ...

Harvard & Cornell researchers develop untethered, autonomous soft robot

Harvard & Cornell researchers develop untethered, autonomous soft robot
2014-09-04
New Rochelle, NY, September 4, 2014--Imagine a non-rigid, shape-changing robot that walks on four "legs," can operate without the constraints of a tether, and can function in a snowstorm, move through puddles of water, and even withstand limited exposure to flames. Harvard advanced materials chemist George Whitesides, PhD and colleagues describe the mobile, autonomous robot they have created in Soft Robotics, a peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The article is available on the Soft Robotics website. In "A Resilient, Untethered Soft Robot," ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Climate intervention techniques could reduce the nutritional value of crops

Mapping resilient supply solutions for graphite, a critical mineral powering energy storage: Rice experts’ take

Effects of sodium glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitors by diabetes status and level of albuminuria

Young people using unregulated nicotine pouches despite health risks

New study finds family and caregivers can help spot post-surgery delirium early

High-impact clinical trials generate promising results for improving kidney health - part 2

More Americans are on dialysis. Could more safely wean off it?

A conservative dialysis strategy and kidney function recovery in dialysis-requiring acute kidney injury

More Americans, especially Black adults, are dying before they can access Medicare benefits

Death Valley plant reveals blueprint for building heat-resilient crops

Racial disparities in premature mortality and unrealized Medicare benefits across US states

Heat- and cold-related mortality burden in the US from 2000 to 2020

Research hints at the potential of pain relief with CBD

Dr. Johnson V. John appointed as a Standing Member of the NIH Musculoskeletal Tissue Engineering (MTE) Study Section

TCF/LEF transcription factors emerge as druggable targets in Wnt signaling, offering new hope for fibrosis and cancer therapies

New alloy design could power solid-state batteries that charge faster and last longer

Discovery to display: FAU unveils the ‘Art of Science’ winners

Achieving electrocatalytic activity toward oxygen reduction reaction based on Ruddlesden-Popper type cathode catalyst for solid oxide fuel cells

Ceramic-based electromagnetic interference shielding materials: mechanisms, optimization strategies, and pathways to next-generation applications

NIH-funded exploratory study to seek possible targets for treating alcohol use disorder

Hanyang University researchers develop of novel high-resolution mechanoluminescent platform technology

Hidden HPV-linked cell type may drive early cervical cancer, scientists report

Metros cut car use in European cities, but trams fall short

Antarctic ice melt triggers further melting: Evidence for cascading feedbacks 9,000 years ago

Colorectal cancer evades immunotherapy using a dual barrier

MIT research finds particles that enhance mRNA delivery could reduce vaccine dosage and costs

Enhancing ocean wind observation accuracy: New rain correction approach for FY-3E WindRAD

New immobilization strategy enables reliable surface plasmon resonance analysis of membrane proteins

Single organic molecule triggers Kondo effect in molecular-scale “Kondo box”

Drug toxicity predicted by differences between preclinical models and humans

[Press-News.org] Study: Oxidized LDL might actually be 'good guy'