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

Cell-permeable peptide shows promise for controlling cardiovascular disease

Cell-permeable peptide hampers inflammation and atherosclerosis in mice, report investigators in The American Journal of Pathology

2013-04-17
(Press-News.org) Philadelphia, PA, April 16, 2013 – Atherosclerosis – sometimes called "hardening of the arteries" – is a leading cause of death and morbidity in Western countries. A cell-permeable peptide containing the NF-ĸB nuclear localization sequence (NLS) shows promise as a potential agent in controlling the development of atherosclerotic disease. This study is published in the May 2013 issue of The American Journal of Pathology.

Atherosclerosis is a chronic inflammatory disease of the arterial and vascular wall. The objective of many therapeutic compounds is to modulate atherogenesis – the process that leads to the formation of fatty tissue-containing plaques that stick to the cell wall. Numerous cellular and molecular inflammatory components are involved in the disease process, and uncontrolled activation of pro-inflammatory transcription factors, such as nuclear factor-B (NF-ĸB), plays a significant role. Several NF-ĸB inhibitors are in phase II-III clinical trials against various inflammatory diseases, but most cardiovascular research is still in the preliminary laboratory experimental phase.

Investigators in Spain, the United States, the United Kingdom, and Germany studied the anti-inflammatory and atheroprotective effects of a cell-permeable peptide containing the NF-ĸB NLS. In vitro tests clearly established that NLS peptide blocks the nuclear import of activated NF-ĸB and inhibits NF-ĸB activation in vascular cells. These findings were corroborated in vivo in ApoE knockout mice, an experimental model relevant to human atherosclerosis. In these experiments, the mice were fed a high-fat diet and treated with either NLS peptide or vehicle (control group).

The results showed that systemic administration of NLS peptide reduced the nuclear NF-ĸB activity in vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) and macrophages of aortic plaques of mice. More importantly, NLS peptide inhibited lesion development in mice either at the onset of atherosclerosis (early treatment) or after the development of advanced plaques (delayed treatment), without affecting serum cholesterol levels. The results also demonstrated that NLS peptide alters plaque composition and inflammation in atherosclerotic lesions.

"The NF-ĸB system is a crucial factor regulating the expression of genes in different steps of the atherosclerotic process, from early phases characterized by lipid modification, chemotaxis, adhesion of leukocytes, monocyte differentiation, foam cell formation, and inflammatory cytokine expression to more advanced lesions involving cell death, migration and proliferation of VSMCs, and fibrous cap formation," explained lead investigator Carmen Gomez-Guerrero, PhD, of the Renal and Vascular Inflammation Laboratory, IIS-Fundación Jiménez Díaz, Autonoma University, Madrid, Spain.

"Our study demonstrates that targeting NF-ĸB nuclear translocation hampers inflammation and atherosclerosis development and identifies cell-permeable NLS peptide as a potential anti-atherosclerotic agent," she said. "These properties make cell-permeable NLS peptide a promising prevention/intervention strategy to inhibit inflammation in cardiovascular diseases."

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Osteoporosis costs EU countries €37 billion every year

2013-04-17
A new report prepared in collaboration with the International Osteoporosis Foundation (IOF) and the European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industry Associations, is the first to describe in detail the epidemiology, burden, and treatment of osteoporosis in all 27 member states of the European Union (EU27). Published today in Rome in conjunction with the opening of Europe's largest osteoporosis congress, the report 'Osteoporosis in the European Union: Medical Management, Epidemiology and Economic Burden' shows that as Europe's population ages, fractures due to osteoporosis ...

New scorecard shows inequalities in osteoporosis care in the Europe Union

2013-04-17
Today a panel of international experts working in cooperation with the International Osteoporosis Foundation (IOF) have published SCOPE – or Scorecard for Osteoporosis in Europe. Focusing on key aspects of service provision and uptake, the Scorecard compares how the 27 different countries within the European Union (EU) care for people with osteoporosis to reduce their risk of bone fractures. Fractures, which mostly affect older adults, can result in pain, long-term disability and even premature death. The Scorecard presents, measures and compares data in a way that ...

ALMA pinpoints early galaxies at record speed

2013-04-17
The most fertile bursts of star birth in the early Universe took place in distant galaxies containing lots of cosmic dust. These galaxies are of key importance to our understanding of galaxy formation and evolution over the history of the Universe, but the dust obscures them and makes them difficult to identify with visible-light telescopes. To pick them out, astronomers must use telescopes that observe light at longer wavelengths, around one millimetre, such as ALMA. "Astronomers have waited for data like this for over a decade. ALMA is so powerful that it has revolutionised ...

Recipe for large numbers of stem cells requires only one ingredient, says NIH/Pitt team

2013-04-17
Stem cells and tissue-specific cells can be grown in abundance from mature mammalian cells simply by blocking a certain membrane protein, according to scientists at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Their experiments, reported today in Scientific Reports, also show that the process doesn't require other kinds of cells or agents to artificially support cell growth and doesn't activate cancer genes. Scientists hope that lab-grown stem cells and induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, which have the ability to produce ...

University of Southern California scientists reveal natural process that blocks viruses

2013-04-17
The human body has the ability to ward off viruses by activating a naturally occurring protein at the cellular level, setting off a chain reaction that disrupts the levels of cholesterol required in cell membranes to enable viruses to enter cells. The findings, discovered by researchers in molecular microbiology and immunology at the Keck School of Medicine of USC, hold promise for the development of therapies to fight a variety of viral infections. "Previous studies have shown that our bodies are already equipped to block viruses such as Ebola, influenza, West Nile, ...

CU-Boulder study looks at microbial differences between parents, kids and dogs

2013-04-17
As much as dog owners love their children, they tend to share more of themselves, at least in terms of bacteria, with their canine cohorts rather than their kids. That is just one finding of a new study led by the University of Colorado Boulder that looked at the types and transfer modes of microbes from the guts, tongues, foreheads and palms (or paws) of members of 60 American families, including canines. Identifying how such bacterial communities can be affected by environmental exposure may help scientists better understand how they can be manipulated to prevent or ...

Virus-like particles provide vital clues about brain tumors

2013-04-17
"Current wisdom says that cells are closed entities that communicate through the secretion of soluble signalling molecules. Recent findings indicate that cells can exchange more complex information – whole packages of genetic material and signalling proteins. This is an entirely new conception of how cells communicate", says Dr Mattias Belting, Professor of Oncology at Lund University and senior consultant in oncology at Skåne University Hospital, Lund, Sweden. Exosomes are small vesicles of only 30 nm. They are produced inside cells and act as "transport vehicles" of ...

New keyboard for touchscreens

2013-04-17
Typing on today's mobile phones and tablets is needlessly slow. One limitation is that the QWERTY layout is ill-suited for tablets and other touch-screen devices when typing with the thumbs. Two-thumb typing is ergonomically very different from typing on a physical keyboard. It has been established that normal users using a QWERTY on a touch-screen device are limited to typing at a rate of around 20 words per minute, which is slow compared to the rates achieved on physical keyboards. The researchers set out to create an alternative to QWERTY that offers substantial performance ...

Half of Tamiflu prescriptions went unused during 2009 H1N1 swine flu pandemic, UK sewage study

2013-04-17
A new study concludes that approximately half of the prescriptions of Tamiflu during the 2009-10 influenza pandemic went unused in England. The unused medication represents approximately 600,000 courses of Tamiflu at a cost of around £7.8 million to the UK taxpayer. The novel scientific method used in the study could help measure and improve the effectiveness of future pandemic flu strategies. The finding, published online this week in the open access scientific journal PLOS ONE, comes from the first study of its kind to use sewage water to estimate drug compliance rates, ...

Molecule treats leukemia by preventing cancer cell repair, Jackson Laboratory scientists report

2013-04-17
Researchers at The Jackson Laboratory have identified a molecule that prevents repair of some cancer cells, providing a potential new "genetic chemotherapy" approach to cancer treatment that could significantly reduce side effects and the development of treatment resistance compared with traditional chemotherapy. In healthy people, white blood cells called B cells (or B lymphocytes) are a kind of sophisticated tool kit, making antibodies against pathogens or other invaders. In the process of antibody production, B cells turn on the gene known as activation-induced cytidine ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New evidence links tire chemicals to chronic liver and brain toxicity

Two new studies in American Journal of Psychiatry explore risk prediction for postpartum mental health conditions

Fitness fight: Native bees struggle against invasive honey bee

‘Every single species is a unique product of evolution, like a work of art’: how Dr Kit Prendergast champions bees and biodiversity

Capuchin monkeys develop bizarre “fad” of abducting baby howlers

Antibiotic treatment in patients hospitalized for nonsevere COVID-19

Mental health trajectories among US survivors of adolescent and young adult cancer

Mice use chemical cues such as odours to sense social hierarchy

Experimental painkiller could outsmart opioids – without the high  

AI chip developed for decentralized use without the cloud

Florida Inventors Hall of Fame announces 2025 inductees: Celebrating the visionaries behind the breakthroughs

Level-ground and stair adaptation for hip exoskeletons based on continuous locomotion mode perception

Helping noisy data centers fit into residential neighborhoods #ASA188

Laying the groundwork to diagnose speech impairments in children with clinical AI #ASA188

Efficient hybrid environment expression for look-and-step behavior of bipedal walking

Using sound to ‘see’ unexploded munitions on the seafloor #ASA188

Changes in the aging heart may lessen the risk of irregular heartbeats

Study links dementia care gaps in Quebec to socio-economic status

Two CWRU engineering researchers receive early career awards from National Science Foundation

Exploring the link between overlapping chronic conditions and heart failure in seniors

Metallic glass catalyst paves the way for efficient water splitting

After cardiac event, people who regularly sit for too long had higher risk of another event

Streaked slopes on Mars probably not signs of water flow, study finds

Cover crops may not be solution for both crop yield, carbon sequestration

Researchers take AI to “kindergarten” in order to learn more complex tasks

Glaciers will take centuries to recover even if global warming is reversed, scientists warn

Mayo Clinic discovery could mean more donor hearts by extending the preservation time

Faced with drought, fertilizer helps grasslands grow strong

Researchers discover why donor hearts fail in cold storage — and how to prevent it

Nimble dimples: Agile underwater vehicles inspired by golf balls

[Press-News.org] Cell-permeable peptide shows promise for controlling cardiovascular disease
Cell-permeable peptide hampers inflammation and atherosclerosis in mice, report investigators in The American Journal of Pathology