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

New advances in lipid genetics lead to better detection and prevention of major diseases

2011-05-30
(Press-News.org) Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Studying the genetic make-up of different varieties of lipids (fatty molecules) in the blood plasma of an individual can lead to a better and earlier prediction of diseases such as diabetes, atherosclerosis, and heart disease, two researchers will tell the annual conference of the European Society of Human Genetics today (Monday 30 May). In the first study, Dr. Joanne Curran from the Texas Biomedical Research Institute, San Antonio, USA, will tell the conference that lipidomic profiling will become a more reliable early indicator of individuals likely to develop diabetes than the more commonly used predictors such as blood glucose and insulin levels.

Dr. Curran and colleagues from the US and Australia measured 356 different lipid varieties from about 1100 Mexican American members of large extended families who were part of the San Antonio Family Heart Study. The Mexican American population is at high risk of diabetes with about 25% of this population ultimately becoming diabetic. At the start of the research, 861 of the individuals studied did not have diabetes. However, over the 10 year follow-up examined in the study, 110 individuals did develop the disease.

The scientists were able to isolate 128 different varieties of lipids that predicted the progression to diabetes by measuring the the lipidomic profiles of each individual at multiple timepoints during the follow-up period. "The single best predictor we found was a novel component called dihydroceramide (dhCer). This was substantially increased in people with diabetes. It is also heritable, and appears to be an independent risk factor unconnected to blood sugar and insulin levels," says Dr. Curran.

After uncovering the link between dhCer and diabetes, the team searched the genome to find locations that harboured genes that influence dhCer levels. They identified a region on chromosome 3 that appeared to contain a gene with substantial importance for the production of dhCer. "Through whole genome sequencing, we are now attempting to identify this causal gene in the hope that it will be informative in the understanding of the pathogenesis of diabetes, and also suggest new avenues for treatment," Dr. Curran says.

In the future, the researchers say, measurement of dhCer levels could become routine in the prediction of individuals likely to become diabetic. One of the difficulties of the current predictive methods is that they do not function until a patient is near to developing the disease. Being able to identify those at risk at the earliest stage would mean that individuals have plenty of time to make the lifestyle changes that could help them avoid the disease – through a change in diet, or increasing physical activity, for example.

"Currently one in ten US adults suffers from diabetes and recently the Centers for Disease Control has predicted that this will increase to one in three by 2050", says Dr. Curran. "We are optimistic that our discovery will lead to new treatments, but in the short-term the importance of finding out at an early stage whether any individual is likely to develop it cannot be overstated. A test based on dhCer levels will help to avoid the serious health effects that diabetes has in its own right, such as kidney failure, amputations, and blindness. It is, of course, also a risk for cardiovascular disease, so the health burden of this condition is enormous", she concludes.

In the second study, Dr. Sara Willems, from the Erasmus Medical Centre, Rotterdam, The Netherlands, will describe to the conference research carried out on the influence of common genetic lipid variants on atherosclerosis and related heart disease. "A recent genome-wide meta-analysis of more than 100,000 individuals identified a large number of genetic variants associated with levels of LDL (bad) cholesterol, HDL (good) cholesterol and triglycerides. These molecules are, at increased levels of LDL and triglycerides and decreased levels of HDL, important risk factors for cardiovascular disease", says Dr. Willems.

The researchers used risk scores from these genetic variants to test the hypothesis that their cumulative effects were associated with cardiovascular disease. For this purpose they used genetic data from more than 8000 individuals from the population-based Rotterdam Study and more than 2000 individuals participating in the Dutch family-based Erasmus Rucphen Family study.

They found an association between the LDL risk score and arterial wall thickness, and a strong association of this risk score with carotid plaque. These conditions can cause arterial blockage which leads to stroke. The same risk score was also associated with coronary heart disease.

"Our findings show that an accumulation of common genetic variants with small effects on lipid levels can have a significant effect on clinical and sub-clinical outcomes", says Dr. Aaron Isaacs, who led the project. "In the future, as our knowledge of genetic variation increases, effective pre-clinical genetic screening tools may be able to enhance the prediction and prevention of diseases such as cardiovascular disease."

New genetic variants influencing lipid levels are being identified all the time, the researchers say. "As new variants are discovered, we would like to be able to continue to test them, both singly and combined, for association with cardiovascular disease. The cost of these diseases to individuals, families, society and healthcare systems is immense", says Dr. Willems.

"Cardiovascular disease is the main cause of death in Europe, killing over 4 million people per year. It also represents 23% of the total disease burden (illness and death) across the continent. Managing cholesterol levels is important for prevention. This can be done early in life by effective treatment. We hope that our study, showing that common genetic variants play an important role in the occurrence of cardiovascular disease, marks a starting point for early prediction and prevention and may thus reduce the burden of disease," she concludes.

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Novel pathway regulating angiogenesis may fight retinal disease, cancers

2011-05-30
CINCINNATI – Scientists identify in the journal Nature a new molecular pathway used to suppress blood vessel branching in the developing retina – a finding with potential therapeutic value for fighting diseases of the retina and a variety of cancers. Researchers report that myeloid cells, blood cells involved in the immune system, use this molecular pathway to guide blood vessel patterning in the retina. Furthermore, in the same study researchers were able to reverse this pathway to accelerate the growth of branching vessels, which could be important to developing new ...

Hartsfield Hotel Offers Guests 15% Savings During The Great Getaway

2011-05-30
The Hilton Garden Inn Atlanta Airport Hotel (North) is now offering the perfect summer package. The Great Getaway package includes offering guest an additional 15% off Hilton Garden Inn's standard Bed & Breakfast rates for guests who book their stay now through August 22, 2011. Visits must take place between May 27 and September 5, 2011. Guests will enjoy a fresh cooked-to-order breakfast for up to four adults staying in the same room. Plus, up to two kids 12 and under eat breakfast free per room. In addition, other perks offered with The Great Getaway include: - ...

Virtual natural environments and benefits to health

2011-05-30
A new position paper by researchers at the European Centre for the Environment and Human Health (ECEHH - part of the Peninsula College of Medicine and Dentistry) and the University of Birmingham has compared the benefits of interaction with actual and virtual natural environments and concluded that the development of accurate simulations are likely to be beneficial to those who cannot interact with nature because of infirmity or other limitations: but virtual worlds are not a substitute for the real thing. The paper includes details of an exciting project underway between ...

Why does flu trigger asthma?

2011-05-30
Boston, Mass. - When children with asthma get the flu, they often land in the hospital gasping for air. Researchers at Children's Hospital Boston have found a previously unknown biological pathway explaining why influenza induces asthma attacks. Studies in a mouse model, published online May 29 by the journal Nature Immunology, reveal that influenza activates a newly recognized group of immune cells called natural helper cells – presenting a completely new set of drug targets for asthma. If activation of these cells, or their asthma-inducing secretions, could be blocked, ...

New synchrotron technique could see hidden building blocks of life

New synchrotron technique could see hidden building blocks of life
2011-05-30
Scientists from Finland and France have developed a new synchrotron X-ray technique that may revolutionize the chemical analysis of rare materials like meteoric rock samples or fossils. The results have been published on 29 May 2011 in Nature Materials as an advance online publication. Life, as we know it, is based on the chemistry of carbon and oxygen. The three-dimensional distribution of their abundance and chemical bonds has been difficult to study up to now in samples where these elements were embedded deep inside other materials. Examples are tiny inclusions of ...

Hard Money Lenders From California are Helping Real Estate Investors and Home Owners With Their Properties. Commercial and Residential Hard Money Loans by Private Lenders Nationwide.

Hard Money Lenders From California are Helping Real Estate Investors and Home Owners With Their Properties. Commercial and Residential Hard Money Loans by Private Lenders Nationwide.
2011-05-30
Many people these days are looking for alternatives to get money to pay their mortgages and all other debt involved. While trying to qualify for a mortgage with their bank and getting the cold shoulder, hard money lenders will lend you the money even with bad credit and no income. What is hard money? Hard money is a term that real estate professional use for private investors. These private investors will loan you their own private money without checking your credit score or your income and employment. Hard money lenders are interested in equity. Since they don't ...

Tiny bubbles signal severe impacts to coral reefs worldwide

Tiny bubbles signal severe impacts to coral reefs worldwide
2011-05-30
VIDEO: This is a video of Dr. Chris Langdon. Click here for more information. MIAMI – May 29, 2011 – A new study from University of Miami (UM) Rosenstiel School of Marine & Atmospheric Science scientists Chris Langdon, Remy Okazaki and Nancy Muehllehner and colleagues from the Australian Institute of Marine Science and the Max-Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology in Germany concludes that ocean acidification, along with increased ocean temperatures, will likely ...

Bingo Games Integrate Social Networks, Music And Chat Rooms For Lively Interaction

2011-05-30
Remember growing up singing the song that there was a farmer who had a dog and Bingo was his name? Well in these times, one can look offline and online to see the bingo revolution making a come back. This gives players and performers alike a chance to promote themselves at a large scale event as well as take a fun game like bingo and give it a twist that everyone enjoys. Since the online bingo explosion, bingo has become a lot more popular. Many bingo halls have been trying to take the additions found on no deposit bingo sites and installing them into their practice. ...

What is a laboratory mouse? Jackson, UNC researchers reveal the details

2011-05-30
Bar Harbor, Maine -- Mice and humans share about 95 percent of their genes, and mice are recognized around the world as the leading experimental model for studying human biology and disease. But, says Jackson Laboratory Professor Gary Churchill, Ph.D., researchers can learn even more "now that we really know what a laboratory mouse is, genetically speaking." Churchill and Fernando Pardo-Manuel de Villena, Ph.D., of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, leading an international research team, created a genome-wide, high-resolution map of most of the inbred mouse ...

Acupuncture of benefit to those with unexplained symptoms

2011-05-30
Attending frequently with medically unexplained symptoms is distressing for both patient and doctor and effective treatment or management options are limited: one in five patients have symptoms that remain unexplained by conventional medicine. Studies have shown that the cost to the NHS of managing the treatment of a patient with medically unexplained symptoms can be twice that of a patient with a diagnosis. A research team from the Institute of Health Services Research, Peninsula Medical School, University of Exeter, has carried out a randomised control trial and a ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Focal volume optics for composite structuring in transparent solids

Novel mix-charged nanofiltration membrane developed for high-salinity wastewater treatment

Fishy business: Male medaka mating limits revealed

Morning coffee may protect the heart better than all-day coffee drinking

For many low-income single moms, government aid serves as their paid family leave, study shows

Tumor-secreted protein may hold the key to better treatments for deadly brain tumor, study finds

Ready to quit vaping in the new year? A new study uncovers the best ways

Regular physical activity before cancer diagnosis may lower progression and death risks

Basking too long in a sauna without adequate hydration may risk heat stroke, doctors warn

DNA adds new chapter to Indonesia’s layered human history

Many children and young people with diagnosable mental health disorders are not receiving timely help, says new research

Dinosaurs roamed the northern hemisphere millions of years earlier than previously thought, according to new analysis of the oldest North American fossils

Breakthrough Durham University research offers new insights into quenching electrical waves in the heart

SLAC will play a key role in DOE’s new research centers for advancing next-generation microelectronics

Market researchers and online advertisers, are A-B tests leading you astray? A new study says they could be

Research alert: Ketamine use on the rise in U.S. adults; new trends emerge

Crop switching for climate change in China

Cell-based therapy improves outcomes in a pig model of heart attacks

Researchers have a better understanding of how our cells dispose of waste while developing ways to control it

Earth’s air war: Explaining the delayed rise of plants, animals on land

More than half of college students report alcohol-related harms from others

Smart food drying techniques with AI enhance product quality and efficiency

Typical cost of developing new pharmaceuticals is skewed by high-cost outliers

Predicting the progression of autoimmune disease with AI

Unlocking Romance: UCLA offers dating program for autistic adults

Research Spotlight: Researchers reveal the influences behind timing of sleep spindle production

New research reveals groundwater pathways across continent

Students and faculty to join research teams this spring at Department of Energy National Laboratories and a fusion facility

SETI Forward recognizes tomorrow’s cosmic pioneers

Top mental health research achievements of 2024 from the Brain & Behavior Research Foundation

[Press-News.org] New advances in lipid genetics lead to better detection and prevention of major diseases