Here we have a resolution on the biochemistry behind the
sustainability of the penile erection and an obvious target for
therapy. Also an obvious target for drug company research I am sure.
The advent of drugs into this market did not provide an universally
successful solution at all but provided some a partial solution.
This left plenty of room for improvement although most likely think
the problem is solved. Thus the continued press for research
solutions.
The real problem is to find solutions which can work with other
pharmaceutical therapies that block the natural biochemistry. This
has that promise.
Release Date:
09/26/2012
Discovery in mice may
lead to new therapies for men with erectile dysfunction
For two decades,
scientists have known the biochemical factors that trigger penile
erection, but not what’s needed to maintain one. Now an article by
Johns Hopkins researchers, scheduled to be published this week by
the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
(PNAS), uncovers the biochemical chain of events involved in
that process. The information, they say, may lead to new therapies to
help men who have erectile dysfunction.
“We’ve closed a
gap in our knowledge,” says Arthur Burnett, M.D., professor of
urology at Johns Hopkins Medicine and the senior author of the study
article. “We knew that the release of the chemical nitric oxide, a
neurotransmitter that is produced in nerve tissue, triggers an
erection by relaxing muscles that allow blood to fill the penis. We
thought that was just the initial stimulus. In our research, we
wanted to understand what happens next to enable that erection to be
maintained.”
In a study of mice,
Burnett and his colleagues found a complex positive feedback loop in
the penile nerves that triggers waves of nitric oxide to keep the
penis erect. He says they now understand that the nerve impulses that
originate from the brain and from physical stimulation are sustained
by a cascade of chemicals that are generated during the erection
following the initial release of nitric oxide. “The basic biology
of erections at the rodent level is the same as in humans,” he
says.
The key finding is
that after the initial release of nitric oxide, a biochemical process
called phosphorylation takes place to continue its release and
sustain the erection.
In a landmark study
published in the journal Science in 1992, Burnett and his
Johns Hopkins co-author, Solomon S. Snyder, M.D., professor of
neuroscience (who is also an author on the current study), showed for
the first time that nitric oxide is produced in penile tissue. Their
study demonstrated the key role of nitric oxide as a neurotransmitter
responsible for triggering erections.
“Now, 20 years
later, we know that nitric oxide is not just a blip here or there,
but instead it initiates a cyclic system that continues to produce
waves of the neurotransmitter from the penile nerves,” says
Burnett.
With this basic
biological information, it may be possible, according to Burnett, to
develop new medical approaches to help men with erection problems
caused by such factors as diabetes, vascular disease or nerve damage
from surgical procedures. Such new approaches could be used to
intervene earlier in the arousal process than current medicines
approved to treat erectile dysfunction.
In particular, Burnett
says, “The target for new therapies would be the protein kinase A
(PKA) phosphorylation of neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS). Now
that we know the mechanism for causing the ‘activated’ form of
nNOS in penile nerves, we can develop agents that exploit this
mechanism to help with erection difficulties.”
One of the agents
studied by the researchers was forskolin, an herbal compound that has
been used to relax muscle and widen heart vessels. They found that
forskolin also ramps up nerves and can help keep nitric oxide flowing
to maintain an erection.
“It has been a
20-year journey to complete our understanding of this process,”
says Snyder. “Now it may be possible to develop therapies to
enhance or facilitate the process.”
The new study, “Cyclic
AMP Dependent Phosphorylation of Neuronal Nitric Oxide Synthase
Mediates Penile Erection,” was funded by the National Institute of
Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK), under grant
number RO1DK067223.
In addition to Burnett
and Snyder, the study article’s authors are K. Joseph Hurt from the
University of Colorado, Sena F. Sezen, Gwen F. Lagoda and Biljana
Musicki from Johns Hopkins, and Gerald A. Rameau from Morgan State
University.
1 comment:
L-arginine is a potent nitric oxide enhancer. Cheap & effective.
That's why you don't (and won't) hear much about it in the MSM.
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