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

Understanding the cause of joint and tendon dysfunction in osteogenesis imperfecta

2021-06-14
(Press-News.org) HOUSTON - (June 14, 2021) - Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is the most common genetic form of brittle bone disease and results in defects of both bone and connective tissue. OI patients can have significant problems with mobility due to joint dysfunction due in part to tendinopathy. In a new study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers at Baylor College of Medicine identify a protein signaling mechanism driving this dysfunction and find that inhibiting this signaling pathway can prevent onset of tendinopathy problems in mouse models.

The researchers studied mouse models of OI in which the Fkpb10 gene was deleted in tendons and ligaments. The mice developed contracture, a condition in which the tendons harden, leading to joint rigidity and limited motion. As a result of the Fkpb10 gene deletion, researchers also observed inflammation in the joints and localized formation of cartilage pieces in the tendon, both symptoms of chronic tendinopathy. These symptoms coincided with the increased expression of a gene that impacts cell differentiation.

"We discovered an important signaling protein called Hedgehog, which is key in controlling the formation on cartilage, had been activated in the joints," said Dr. Brendan Lee, corresponding author of the study and Robert and Janice McNair Endowed Chair in Molecular and Human Genetics and professor and chair of the Department of Molecular and Human Genetics at Baylor.

The team, led by Lee and first author and postdoctoral associate in the Lee Lab, Dr. Joohyun Lim, wanted to see if genetic and drug inhibition of the Hedgehog signaling pathway could prevent the onset of symptoms of tendinopathy.

"By giving an FDA-approved Hedgehog signaling inhibitor, we delayed contracture and tendon degeneration and normalized joint function," said Lee, director of the Center for Skeletal Medicine and Biology at Baylor and co-director of the Rolanette and Berdon Lawrence Bone Disease Program of Texas. "We believe this could be a model for treating tendinopathy, not only in OI patients, but perhaps also in the general population."

In the future, the researchers will also work to determine if targeting inflammatory pathways as well as Hedgehog signaling can further prevent tendinopathy.

INFORMATION:

This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (P01 HD070394, F32AR070612, F31DE02248) and the Baylor College of Medicine Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Center (HD024064, U54HD083092) from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute Of Child Health and Human Development. To see a full list of funding and contributing authors, see the publication.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Fitbit user data show slight increase in sleep duration in US during COVID-19 pandemic

2021-06-14
DARIEN, IL - According to a study of data from more than 163,000 Fitbit users, sleep duration increased slightly in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic compared with a similar timeframe in 2019. Results show that mean sleep duration increased in nearly all groups by 5 to 11 minutes, compared with a mean decrease of 5 to 8 minutes seen over the same period in 2019. Sleep timing shifted later for nearly all groups. Sleep duration and bedtime variability decreased, largely due to fewer differences between weekday and weekend sleep. "The most surprising thing we found was that, overall, sleep duration increased slightly, and sleep variability decreased slightly, during the most ...

Understanding the impact of patient empowerment and remote management in rheumatoid arthritis

2021-06-14
The World Health Organization describes empowerment as a process in which people can take control and make informed decisions about their life and health. Empowerment is important for people with RA since most care is provided by patients themselves. Andersson and colleagues studied levels of empowerment and associated variables in people with RA, and investigated longitudinal clinical data in those with low and high levels of empowerment. The study involved 2837 people with RA from the BARFOT (Better Anti-Rheumatic PharmacO Therapy) cohort. Everyone was assessed according to a structured protocol at ...

Study links COVID-19 public health efforts to dramatic drop in COPD hospitalizations

2021-06-14
BALTIMORE (June 14, 2021) - Researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) analyzed data at the 13-hospital University of Maryland Medical System (UMMS) and found public health measures designed to reduce the spread of the COVID-19 virus may have fostered a substantial side benefit: Hospital admissions for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) were reduced by 53 percent, according to a new study published in The American Journal of Medicine. This is likely due to a drop in circulating seasonal respiratory viruses such as influenza. Hospitalizations for COPD, a group of lung diseases that make it hard to breathe and get worse over time, are commonly driven by flare-ups where symptoms are triggered by such factors ...

As climates change, prepare for more mosquitoes in winter, new study shows

2021-06-14
In many parts of the world, mosquitoes are a common summertime nuisance. But in places on the front lines of climate change, these disease-spreading insects may one day be a year-round problem, according to new research from the University of Florida. "In tropical regions, mosquitoes are active all year, but that isn't the case for the rest of the world. Outside of the tropics, winter temperatures cause mosquitoes to go into a kind of hibernation called diapause. We call these mosquitoes 'cold bounded' because their activity is limited by these lower temperatures," said Brett Scheffers, senior author of the study and an assistant professor in the UF/IFAS wildlife ecology and conservation department. "However, ...

Climate change leads to unprecedented Rocky Mountain wildfires

Climate change leads to unprecedented Rocky Mountain wildfires
2021-06-14
June 14, 2021 - Last fall, the Mullen fire west of Laramie raged for the better part of two months, burning more than 176,000 acres and 70 structures in Wyoming's Carbon and Albany counties, and in Jackson County, Colo. Unfortunately, this scenario was typical during the intense 2020 fire season in the Rocky Mountain region, an area of Colorado and southern Wyoming where high-elevation forests are burning more than at any point in the past 2,000 years, according to a study in which a University of Wyoming faculty member was instrumental. "Global warming is causing larger fires in Rocky Mountain forests than have burned for thousands of years," says Bryan Shuman, a professor in the UW Department of Geology and Geophysics. "The last time anything ...

More than a bumpy ride: turbulence offers boost to birds

2021-06-14
ITHACA, N.Y. - Most sensible air travelers dread turbulence. A little atmospheric hiccup can shake airplanes, rattle nerves and spill beverages. A Cornell University-led study found that birds don't mind at all. By combining wind speed data with the measured accelerations of a golden eagle outfitted with GPS tracking instruments, the researchers suggest that, rather than hindering flight, turbulence is a source of energy that birds may use to their advantage. This counterintuitive discovery could revise what we know about avian flight, and help the aerospace industry develop faster, more efficient ways to fly in turbulent environments. The paper, ...

Targeted drug found effective in thwarting pancreatic tumors

Targeted drug found effective in thwarting pancreatic tumors
2021-06-14
Pancreatic cancer is an aggressive disease in which malignant cells form in the tissues of the pancreas, a long and flat gland located behind the stomach that helps with digestion and blood sugar regulation. Because pancreatic cancer is difficult to detect early, it is associated with a low survival rate, accounting for just over 3% of all new cancer cases in the U.S., but leading to nearly 8% of all cancer deaths, according to the National Cancer Institute. Through a pre-clinical study conducted in his former role at Moffitt Cancer Center and published in Clinical Cancer Research, Said Sebti, Ph.D., associate director for basic research at VCU Massey Cancer Center, identified a novel drug that effectively thwarts pancreatic tumors that are addicted ...

New app tracks human mobility and COVID-19

2021-06-14
Analyzing how people move about in their daily lives has long been important to urban planners, traffic engineers, and others developing new infrastructure projects. But amid the social restrictions and quarantine policies imposed during the global spread of COVID-19--which is directly linked to the movement of people--human mobility patterns changed dramatically. To understand just how COVID-19 affected human movement on a global scale, Shouraseni Sen Roy, a professor in the College of Arts and Sciences Department of Geography and Sustainable Development, and graduate student Christopher Chapin developed COVID-19 vs. Human Mobility, an innovative and interactive web application that, shared in a new ...

A 'pump' gene's surprising role in early brain formation

A pump genes surprising role in early brain formation
2021-06-14
In polymicrogyria, the cortex of the brain has many irregular, small folds (gyria) and disorganization of its layers. Many affected children have severe developmental delay, intellectual disabilities, and epilepsy, and many need to use a wheelchair. Mutations in several different genes can cause this "overfolding of the brain" condition. Studying four patients with polymicrogyria, Richard Smith, PhD, identified mutations in a gene that caused him to do a double-take. His curiosity drove him to investigate the role of this gene, called ATP1A3, in the developing brain. "ATP1A3 is critical to many cell biological processes," says Smith, an investigator the Division of Genetics and Genomics at Boston Children's Hospital. ...

How do social media influence ethnic polarization?

2021-06-14
Those who deactivated their Facebook profiles report a lower regard for other ethnic groups, and this effect was more prevalent among people living in more ethnically homogenous areas, shows a new study of users in Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH). The findings run counter to a commonly held view that social media usage exacerbates societal polarization. The work, conducted by researchers at New York University's Center for Social Media and Politics (CSMaP), appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). "For all our attention to the online drivers of polarization, we should not forget about the importance of offline factors as well," ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

X-ray flashes from a nearby supermassive black hole accelerate mysteriously

New research highlights trends in ADHD diagnoses

United States dementia cases estimated to double by 2060

“The biggest challenge is lacking public acceptance of wind turbines”

Six-month outcomes in the long-term outcomes after the multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children study

Global prevalence of sexual violence against children

Chances of quitting smoking improve with integrated care, including medication and counseling

From microplastics to macro-impact: KTU expert explains plastic recycling challenges

How does the brain encode pain? Scientists uncover neuronal mechanisms of pain intensity encoding

Study finds opioid pain medications very infrequently prescribed to NFL players

Wrong place, wrong time: Why Zika virus hijacks a protein needed for brain growth

The new age of infrastructure maintenance using data from space

CNIO and CNIC research identifies a key protein for ‘burning’ fat

‘True food’ research database offers rankings for 50,000 processed foods

Mystery solved: how tumor cells die after radiotherapy

Bacterial survival genes uncovered using evolutionary map

Sodium-ion batteries need breakthroughs to compete

Tumor DNA in the blood can predict lung cancer outcome

New study unveils breakthrough in understanding cosmic particle accelerators

Previous experience affects family planning decisions of people with hereditary dementia

Does obesity affect children’s likelihood of survival after being diagnosed with cancer?

Understanding bias and discrimination in AI: Why sociolinguistics holds the key to better Large Language Models and a fairer world 

Safe and energy-efficient quasi-solid battery for electric vehicles and devices

Financial incentives found to help people quit smoking, including during pregnancy

Rewards and financial incentives successfully help people to give up smoking

HKU ecologists reveal key genetic insights for the conservation of iconic cockatoo species

New perspective highlights urgent need for US physician strike regulations

An eye-opening year of extreme weather and climate

Scientists engineer substrates hostile to bacteria but friendly to cells

New tablet shows promise for the control and elimination of intestinal worms

[Press-News.org] Understanding the cause of joint and tendon dysfunction in osteogenesis imperfecta