I fail to see how a protein
already in place and doing its job is too likely to suddenly begin doing a
better job. I am missing something
here. In the meantime we understand that
this is an important pathway that needs to be better understood.
I do not think that we actually
understand the actual causation pathway for cardiovascular disease well enough
to speculate here as yet. After all and
excellent argument was made a few years back on the possibility of a small
biological agent been the driver. We have
gone away from that and attempting to reconcile the usual suspects into a
convincing protocol is still unconvincing.
It all has to answer the question
of why a small fraction remain untouched at all.
Protein Discovery Could Switch Off Cardiovascular Disease
ScienceDaily (Mar. 12, 2012) — Researchers from Queen Mary,
University of London and the University of Surrey have found a protein inside
blood vessels with an ability to protect the body from substances which cause
cardiovascular disease.
The findings, published online in the journal Cardiovascular
Research, have revealed the protein protein pregnane X receptor (PXR) can
switch on different protective pathways in the blood vessels.
Co-author Dr David Bishop-Bailey, based at Queen Mary's William Harvey
Research Institute, said they found the protein was able to sense a wide
variety of drugs, foreign chemicals and food products in the blood and switch
on specific pathways to deal with them.
"We've known for a long time that this protein has an important
role sorting out waste products in the liver -- now we believe it could have an
important role in protecting the body against cardiovascular disease," he
said.
Dr Karen Swales, based at the University of Surrey, said: "Heart
and circulatory disease is the UK 's
biggest killer. Discovering that the protein pregnane X receptor (PXR) could
protect blood vessels has major implications for the prevention of
cardiovascular disease."
"We knew if PXR played similar protective roles in blood vessels
to those in the liver, it could protect the vessels from damage caused by
harmful substances in the blood."
The researchers used human tissue and blood vessel cells in culture and
found PXR was present and active.
Dr Bishop-Bailey added: "We introduced specific PXR activating
drugs and saw a co-ordinated increase in metabolising and anti-oxidant enzyme
pathways.
"Since blood travels everywhere in the body, PXR has the potential
to provide protection not just through its actions in the liver, but anywhere
in the entire body. If we can work out how to manipulate PXR to turn on
detoxification and antioxidant pathways in blood vessels, we may be a step
closer to preventing our nation's biggest killer."
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