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A Natural Protein Heals Heart Cells Tuesday, January 15, 2008 - Einat Rotman Home >> News >> Medicine
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A research group from Bristol has found that a naturally occurring protein, known as nerve growth factor, can dramatically improve the survival of heart cells and reduce heart cell damage following a heart attack in mice. The researchers hope that this treatment could also benefit humans and prevent heart attack victims from suffering further damage to their heart muscle.
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A research project led by Dr. Costanza Emanueli, Senior Research Fellow at Bristol University, and her colleagues at the Bristol Heart Institute, shows for the first time that NGF can have a protective effect on heart muscle cells. The researchers had conducted in vitro (in a tube) studies that showed that NGF was protective in cultures of heart cells and then expanded the studies to a heart attack model in rats. In this model one of the arteries supplying the rat's heart with blood is tied off. The model closely mimics the human heart's condition leading to a heart attack, in which the artery is blocked due to accumulation of cholesterol and fatty material in it. A heart attack occurs when a blood clot suddenly and completely blocks this artery, preventing part of the heart muscle from getting an adequate blood supply and starving its cells of oxygen. This event results in massive cell death in its immediate region and in a later effect of cell death in the surrounding area. As blood supply is cut off and a part of the heart muscle dies, the remaining live cells in that area adapt by increasing in size, leading to enlargement of the heart and to eventual heart failure. Dr. Emanueli's group injected the gene for NGF into the region around the dead cell areas near rats' hearts. They found that a week following the injection, NGF promoted survival of the cells in that region, in comparison to hearts not treated with NGF. “This is the first time that a pro-survival effect in the heart of NGF has been found. Our study shows that NGF may be a novel way of protecting the heart from further damage following a heart attack", said Dr Emanueli.
TFOT previously covered several other methods for heart treatment. Among them are The HeartLander - a robot able to sense, map, and treat the heart, and an embryonic stem cells transplant for heart muscle repair, conducted in the University of Washington The University of Bristol's press release announcing this finding is available here. |
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