And with this news a great stroke association would spring into action. Writing up an RFP to researchers to solve the problem and going after foundation grant money to pay for that research. But we have fucking failures of stroke associations, doing absolutely nothing useful. How can their boards of directors live with themselves? A complete and total failure of leadership on display here.
http://medicalxpress.com/news/2016-10-genes-linked-atherosclerosis.html
Researchers at Brigham and Women's Hospital
have found two new potential drug targets for treating arterial diseases
such as atherosclerosis. By using proteomics to screen a vast number of
molecules, the researchers identified PARP9 and PARP14 - two members of
the PARP family of proteins - as regulators of macrophage activation,
which has been linked to arterial disease by systems biology.
Though the mechanisms that activate macrophages,
a type of digestive white blood cell that targets foreign cells, remain
incompletely understood, previous research shows that macrophages play
an important role in the development of atherosclerosis
and its thrombotic complications. Masanori Aikawa, MD, PhD, director of
the Center for Interdisciplinary Cardiovascular Sciences (CICS) at the
Brigham, his research fellow Hiroshi Iwata, MD, PhD, and colleagues
studied atherosclerosis on the protein-level to determine which
molecules were most involved in the regulation of macrophages.
Once Aikawa and his colleagues narrowed down their search to these
two proteins, they silenced each gene in cultured macrophages and found
that tamping down PARP14 increased macrophage activation while tamping down PARP9 had the opposite effect.
Aikawa founded CICS and hopes that this hypothesis-generating method
can be used to streamline the lengthy process of drug development.
Aikawa and CICS are using a more systematic approach which hinges on
network analysis; this analysis predicts which pathways are most likely
to control their studied effect so that they can prioritize these
pathways. Ideally, this process would take a fraction of the time in
comparison to searching through each individual pathway unaware of their
likelihood of affecting their studied effect.
Aikawa and his colleagues plan to augment these findings to develop
targeted therapeutics for atherosclerosis and other diseases.
"Macrophage activation plays a role in not only vascular disorders
but also various inflammatory and autoimmune diseases," said Aikawa.
"These results could provide important information about the mechanisms
of these diseases and help to develop much needed new therapeutics."
More information:
Iwata H et al. "PARP9 and PARP14
cross-regulate macrophage activation via STAT1 ADP-ribosylation." Nature Communications DOI: 10.1038/NCOMMS12849
Journal reference:
Nature Communications
Provided by:
Brigham and Women's Hospital
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