Press Release Archives
- Scientists identify new target to battle rheumatoid arthritis
- Nearly 30 percent of all college athlete injuries a result of 'overuse'
- NIH-funded research provides new clues on how ApoE4 affects Alzheimer's risk
- Oxytocin improves brain function in children with autism
- Bacteria feed on smelly breath (and feet)
- Computer-designed molecules point to new therapy for cystic fibrosis
- Scientists discover new type of cell with a key role in treatment-resistant asthma
- Platelet-rich plasma: Does it work?
- Skechers Will Pay $40 Million to Settle FTC Charges That It Deceived Consumers with Ads for "Toning Shoes"
- First of its kind 'menopause map' helps women navigate treatment
- Higher pain tolerance in athletes may hold clues for pain management
- Alzheimer’s Gene Causes Brain’s Blood Vessels to Leak, Die
- Shin splints or stress fracture
- Anemia may more than triple your risk of dying after a stroke
- Keeping obesity rates level could save nearly $550 billion over 2 decades
- Measles-containing vaccines not linked with increased risk of febrile seizures in kids 4-6
- 53 Million Americans Might Have Diabetes by 2025, According to a New Study in Population Health Management
- Most people brush their teeth in the wrong way
- Quality of care, other issues may cause worse results in black prostate cancer surgery patients
- U of M researchers develop new muscular dystrophy treatment approach using human stem cells
- Mayo Clinic researchers discover biomarkers for prostate cancer detection, recurrence
- Severs Disease
- Blood pressure drugs don't protect against colorectal cancer
- New Website Launched to Raise Awareness of Sesamoiditis
- Children with Down syndrome faced with implicit stereotyping based on facial features
Recently Published Press Releases
- No categories
- Anaemia (1)
- No categories
- No categories
- No categories
- No categories
- No categories
- Alzheimer's (2)
- Charcot Marie Tooth Disease (0)
- Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (0)
- Epilepsy (1)
- Head Injury (2)
- Headaches (1)
- Hearing Loss (0)
- Multiple Sclerosis (2)
- Neuropathy (0)
- Parkinson's Disease (1)
- Stroke (0)
- ADHD (1)
- Autism (8)
- Birth Defects (1)
- Cerebral Palsy (1)
- Down's Syndrome (1)
- Muscular Dystrophy (1)
- Orthopedic (1)
- Vaccines (1)
- No categories
- No categories
- No categories
- Breast Cancer (2)
- Lung Cancer (1)
- Pancreatic Cancer (1)
- Prostate Cancer (3)
- No categories
- No categories
- Menopause (1)
- No categories
- No categories
- No categories
- No categories
- Chiropractic (1)
- Reflexology (1)
- Heart Disease (2)
- Hypertension (3)
- Peripheral Vascular Disease (1)
- Diabetes (10)
- Colitis (1)
- Crohn's Disease (2)
- Cold and Flu (2)
- HIV and AIDS (1)
- No categories
- Arthritis (2)
- Back and Neck Pain (1)
- Fibromyalgia (1)
- Foot Problems (7)
- Hip Disorders (1)
- Osteoporosis (1)
- Rheumatoid Arthritis (3)
- Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (1)
- No categories
- Asthma (2)
- Cystic Fibrosis (1)
- No categories
Press Release Categories
Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in /home/medicalr/public_html/wp-content/themes/wpArticleDirectory/library/extensions/content-extensions.php on line 469
- Hip implant for long-term use
- Importance of Unique Content in Search Engine Optimization
- Back pain? Move, don't rest!
- Maintain your brain: The secrets to aging success
- Shin splints or stress fracture
- Summer Olympic athletes must overcome skin conditions to reach for the gold
- Skechers Will Pay $40 Million to Settle FTC Charges That It Deceived Consumers with Ads for "Toning Shoes"
- First of its kind 'menopause map' helps women navigate treatment
- Latest research confirms genetic susceptibility to lung cancer
- Scientists have discovered genes that increase the risk of osteoporosis and fractures
- H1N1 discovery paves way for universal flu vaccine
- New diagnostic tool determines aggressiveness of prostate cancer
Scientists identify new target to battle rheumatoid arthritis
Scientists identify new target to battle rheumatoid arthritis
A new study led by researchers at Hospital for Special Surgery identifies the mechanism by which a cell signaling pathway contributes to the development of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). In addition, the study provides evidence that drugs under development for diseases such as cancer could potentially be used to treat RA. Rheumatoid arthritis, a systemic inflammatory autoimmune disease that can be crippling, impacts over a million adults in the United States.
“We uncovered a novel mechanism by which the Notch pathway could contribute to RA, said Xiaoyu Hu, M.D., Ph.D., a research scientist at Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City and principal investigator of the study. The study appears online in advance of print in Nature Immunology.
Prior to this study, researchers knew that an intracellular molecular pathway called Notch is involved in diseases such as cancer. In the last year, other scientists conducted a genome wide association study to identify genes that were linked to the development of rheumatoid arthritis. They discovered that a certain mutation in a gene involved in the Notch pathway puts patients at risk for RA, but nobody knew just how it was involved.
“We were intrigued. Nothing has been known about how the Notch pathway is important to RA,” said Dr. Hu. Working with researchers at other institutions in the United States and abroad, HSS investigators started putting two and two together and noted that Notch might be involved in a misfiring of the immune system that is commonly seen in RA.
The researchers designed experiments to test whether the Notch pathway had an influence on macrophages, a type of white blood cell that is most commonly known for gobbling up pathogens but which can also cause inflammation. Macrophages that have gone awry possess widespread pro-inflammatory and destructive capabilities that can critically contribute to acute and chronic rheumatoid arthritis. “In the case of RA, inflammatory macrophages attack joints and they produce inflammatory mediators that basically sustain inflammation in joints,” said Dr. Hu.
In experiments, researchers found that knockout mice that lack the Notch pathway in macrophages were unable to produce certain type of macrophages and exhibited a lesser inflammatory phenotype.
“Notch is essential for the development and function of a cell type called the inflammatory macrophages and if this pathway is missing in mice, then you don’t get good differentiation of the inflammatory macrophages,” said Dr. Hu. In a nutshell, the Notch pathway is essential for the differentiation and function of inflammatory macrophages, and these macrophages are critical for human RA pathogenesis.
In a series of test tube studies, the researchers flushed out the specifics of how Notch influences the molecular cascade that leads to generation of inflammatory macrophage. In another experiment, the investigators used an inhibitor of the Notch pathway called GSI-34 that is under development and showed that this drug could inhibit the function of macrophages.
The researchers say the study provides the first explanation of how Notch contributes to rheumatoid arthritis pathogenesis. It also shows, for the first time, that investigational Notch inhibitors under development for cancer and Alzheimer’s could potentially be used to treat RA. Several Notch inhibitors are under development by various companies and a few are currently in Phase III trials.
“Before this study, the Notch pathway has been implicated mainly in cancer, but in this study we define how it is connected to RA,” said Dr. Hu.
The study was supported by funding from the National Institutes of Health and the American College of Rheumatology. Other authors involved in the study include Hospital for Special Surgery researchers Baohong Zao, Ph.D., Lionel Ivashkiv, M.D., Carl Blobel, M.D., Ph.D., Jimmy Zhu, Sinead Smith, and Allen Chung; Julia Foldi, Ph.D., and Chao Shi, Ph.D., from Weill Cornell Graduate School of Medical Sciences; Hasina Outtz and Jan Kitajewski, Ph.D., from Columbia University; Silvio Weber and Paul Saftig, Ph.D., from the Christian Albrechts Universitat Kiel, Kiel, Germany; Yueming Li, Ph.D., from Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center; and Keiko Ozato, Ph.D., from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.