Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (heart disease)
34,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Folic acid deficiency in humans has been linked with megaloblastic anaemia, neural tube defects in the neonate, and heart disease. Folate has also been implicated in the development of cancer, especially cancer of the colorectum. There appear to be two principal mechanisms through which low folate status may increase the risk of malignancy. Folate deficiency, by reducing intracellular S-adenosylmethionine (SAM), can alter cytosine methylation in DNA, leading to inappropriate activation of proto-oncogenes and induction of malignant transformation. Alternatively, folic acid is crucial for normal DNA synthesis and repair. Folate deficiency may cause an imbalance in DNA precursors, uracil misincorporation into DNA, and chromosome breakage. This chapter briefly describes the epidemiological data supporting the involvement of folic acid in the aetiology of cancer. It also assesses the evidence from cellular, animal and human studies that folic acid can modulate DNA by such mechanisms.
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PMID:Folic acid deficiency and cancer: mechanisms of DNA instability. 1074 48

The generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) is associated with life in aerobic conditions. ROS are thought to be implicated in the pathogenesis of various human diseases since they are capable of damaging biological macromolecules such as DNA, carbohydrates and proteins. The organism maintains defense against ROS, including enzymes and low molecular-weight antioxidants. An important source of antioxidants is diet which contains numerous compounds exhibiting antioxidant activity. A shortage of antioxidants in the diet might promote coronary heart disease through accumulation of oxidized LDL in macrophages. However, antioxidants may also influence endothelial functions, smooth muscle cell proliferation, thrombosis and plaque rupture. Consumption of fruits and vegetables, olive oil, red wine and tea is inversely correlated with heart disease rates. These foods are particularly rich in natural antioxidant nutrients, including ascorbate (vitamin C), the tocopherols (vitamin E) and carotenoids. More than 600 naturally occurring carotenoids have been identified. These compounds are plant pigments that provide the bright color of various fruits and vegetables; lycopene, which gives tomatoes their red color, is under active research. Flavonoids are > 4,000 naturally occurring substances which provide color, texture and taste for plant foods. As free radical scavengers, flavonoids inhibit lipid peroxidation, promote vascular relaxation and help prevent atherosclerosis. A sufficient supply with antioxidants from diet might help prevent or delay the occurrence of pathological changes associated with oxidative stress. When diet fails to meet the antioxidant requirement, dietary supplements might be indicated. The recently coined term nutriceuticals describes a variety of nonprescription products that are used to enhance health. The best known are vitamin E, vitamin C, carotenoids, coenzyme Q10, flavonoids and the amino acid L-arginine. Rigorous clinical trials, particularly among high-risk groups, are needed before they can be recommended routinely to patients.
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PMID:Dietary antioxidants for cardiovascular prevention. 1081 86

Hemochromatosis is a common autosomal recessive condition found in the homozygous state in 1/200-1/400 people of northern-, central-, and western-European origin. It causes increased iron storage, which may lead to liver cirrhosis, liver cancer, heart disease, arthritis, and diabetes in many but not all affected adults, with a higher frequency in males. The condition is easily treated by repeated venesections without side effects but is frequently overlooked. Population screening of adults using iron indices alone or combined with DNA testing has therefore been recommended, but a consensus conference in 1997 recommended that such screening be deferred, owing to uncertainty regarding the extent of clinical disease that may develop in individuals detected by such programs. There was also concern that DNA screening results might be used for discrimination in insurance and occupational settings. Screening family members of patients with evidence of definite iron loading, however, is accepted by all observers. Because serious complications may be overlooked, a more aggressive stance toward case detection in the adult population has been advocated by some observers, realizing that unnecessary treatment might occur. Because additional information regarding the spectrum of clinical disease in homozygotes in now accumulating, a consensus conference in the near future is suggested to consider appropriate policies.
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PMID:Population screening in hereditary hemochromatosis. 1088 46

In the report of the 1995 World Health Federation/International Society and Federation of Cardiology (WHF/ISFC) Task Force on the Definition and Classification of Cardiomyopathies, the definition of heart muscle diseases was updated. Idiopathic, autoimmune, and infectious forms of inflammatory cardiomyopathy are now recognized in this definition. Enteroviruses, adenoviruses and cytomegaloviruses are considered as main etiopathological factors in the pathogenesis of inflammatory heart disease. A wide range of different assays have been and are currently being used, either alone or in combination, to assay for the presence of enteroviral RNA and/or DNA of cytomegalo- and adenoviruses in endomyocardial biopsy and explanted heart samples. The prevalence of cardiotropic viruses in endomyocardial biopsies of patients with clinically suspected inflammatory cardiomyopathy varies widely: enteroviral genome was detected in endomyocardial biopsies of 3 to 53% of patients, cytomegaloviral DNA was detected in 3 to 40% of patients with inflammatory heart disease and adenoviruses in 3 to 23% of the patients. This report summarizes the methods that have been used and the results of molecular biological investigation with polymerase chain reaction, which were reported by several groups over the last years. Taking this together it seems to be clear that the improvement of molecular biological techniques and the experience of people working with these methods will lead to more reliable results on prevalence, persistence and the diagnostic value of these investigations. These findings have to be taken into account in future diagnostic and therapeutic studies in the field of cardiomyopathies.
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PMID:Prevalence of viral genome in endomyocardial biopsies from patients with inflammatory heart muscle disease. 1090 42

Of the numerous viruses that have been implicated as causes of viral inflammatory cardiomyopathy, only the 6 serotypes of the group B coxsackieviruses (CVB 1-6) and adenovirus type 2 (Ad 2) have been regularly linked to heart disease on the basis of both clinical investigations as well as animal models (in the case of the coxsackieviruses). Of these, only the coxsackieviruses offer a truly well-characterized system for not only investigations using a small animal disease model (myocarditis in mice) but for studies of the virus at the molecular level and in cell culture systems. The pending worldwide eradication of the related enteroviruses, the polioviruses, will further emphasize the importance of the coxsackieviruses in years to come. Studies using poliovirus have shown that enteroviruses can be attenuated for disease to create highly successful and safe human vaccines. Furthermore, using recombinant DNA approaches, strains of polioviruses have been created that demonstrate a human enterovirus can express small proteins as well as foreign antigenic epitopes, thus creating multivalent chimeric vaccine strains of virus. Our laboratory has been exploring coxsackievirus 3-based vectors as models for both multivalent chimeric vaccines as well as expression vectors. The coxsackievirus can be successfully attenuated using both point mutations as well as chimeric genome technology. The coxsackievirus can also express intact small proteins in biologically active form as well as antigenic epitopes. Although it is doubtful that the marketplace will support the development of antiviral vaccines to combat human heart disease at present, the technology exists to make such vaccines a reality.
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PMID:Progress toward vaccines against viruses that cause heart disease. 1090 54

Epidemiological evidence indicates that plant derived flavonoids and other phenolic antioxidants protect against heart disease and cancer. In the current investigation utilizing human oral squamous carcinoma cell line (SCC-25), we have evaluated the potency of three different plant phenolics, viz., curcumin, genistein and quercetin in comparison with that of cisplatin on growth and proliferation of SCC-25. Test agents were dissolved in DMSO and incubated in triplicates in 25 cm2 flasks in DMEM- HAM's F-12 (50:50)supplemented with 10% calf serum and antibiotics in an atmosphere 5% CO2 in air for 72 hours cell growth was determined by counting the number of cells in a hemocytometer. Cell proliferation was determined by measuring DNA synthesis by the incorporation of [3H]-thymidine in nuclear DNA. Cisplatin (0.1, 1.0, 10.0 microM) and curcumin (0.1, 1.0, 10.0 microM) induced significant dose-dependent inhibition in both cell growth as well as cell proliferation. Genistein and quercetin (1.0, 10.0, 100.0 microM) had biphasic effect, depending on their concentrations, on cell growth as well as cell proliferation. Based on these findings, it is concluded that curcumin is considerably more potent than genistein and quercetin, but cisplatin is five fold more potent than curcumin in inhibition of growth and DNA synthesis in SCC-25.
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PMID:The inhibitory effect of curcumin, genistein, quercetin and cisplatin on the growth of oral cancer cells in vitro. 1092 1

Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) is an autosomal recessive disorder with locus heterogeneity. None of the 'responsible' genes have previously been identified. Some BBS cases (approximately 10%) remain unassigned to the five previously mapped loci. McKusick-Kaufma syndrome (MKS) includes hydrometrocolpos, postaxial polydactyly and congenital heart disease, and is also inherited in an autosomal recessive manner. We ascertained 34 unrelated probands with classic features of BBS including retinitis pigmentosa (RP), obesity and polydactyly. The probands were from families unsuitable for linkage because of family size. We found MKKS mutations in four typical BBS probands (Table 1). The first is a 13-year-old Hispanic girl with severe RP, PAP, mental retardation and obesity (BMI >40). She was a compound heterozygote for a missense (1042GA, G52D) and a nonsense (1679TA, Y264stop) mutation in exon 3. Cloning and sequencing of the separate alleles confirmed that the mutations were present in trans. A second BBS proband (from Newfoundland), born to consanguineous parents, was homozygous for two deletions (1316delC and 1324-1326delGTA) in exon 3, predicting a frameshift. An affected brother was also homozygous for the deletions, whereas an unaffected sibling had two normal copies of MKKS. Both the proband and her affected brother had RP, PAP, mild mental retardation, morbid obesity (BMI >50 and 37, respectively), lobulated kidneys with prominent calyces and diabetes mellitus (diagnosed at ages 33 and 30, respectively). A deceased sister (DNA unavailable) had similar phenotypic features (RP with blindness by age 13, BMI >45, abnormal glucose tolerance test and IQ=64, vaginal atresia and syndactyly of both feet). Both parents and the maternal grandfather were heterozygous for the deletions. Genotyping with markers from the MKKS region confirmed homozygosity at 20p12 in both affected individuals.
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PMID:Mutations in MKKS cause Bardet-Biedl syndrome. 1097 38

Long-term athletic training is associated with morphologic left ventricular (LV) remodeling, that in elite athletes may be substantial and raise differential diagnosis with structural heart disease, ie, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). Several criteria for differential diagnosis are discussed here, including the morphologic features of LV hypertrophy in athletes (ie, the symmetric distribution of LV wall thickening, the enlarged cavity with normal shape) and normal diastolic LV filling pattern. The most definitive criterion for differential diagnosis is the response to deconditioning, which is associated with a substantial reduction in LV wall thickness (by 2-5 mm, mean 3 mm) in athlete's heart; no substantial morphologic changes occur in patients with HCM. Finally, genetic screening for DNA abnormalities, although at present limited to research-oriented genotyping of family HCM pedigrees and are not yet available for clinical purposes, in the near future may offer the most definitive diagnosis of HCM, regardless of the morphologic expression and clinical presentation of the disease.
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PMID:Athlete"s heart and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. 1098 Aug 89

The extracellular "cAMP-adenosine pathway" refers to the local production of adenosine mediated by cAMP egress into the extracellular space, conversion of cAMP to AMP by ectophosphodiesterase, and the metabolism of AMP to adenosine by ecto-5'-nucleotidase. The goal of this study was to assess whether the cAMP-adenosine pathway limits cardiac fibroblast growth. Studies were conducted in ventricular cardiac fibroblasts maintained in 3-dimensional cultures. Addition of exogenous cAMP to cardiac fibroblasts increased extracellular levels of AMP, adenosine, and inosine in a concentration-dependent and time-dependent manner. This effect was attenuated by blockade of total phosphodiesterase activity (3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine), ectophosphodiesterase activity (high concentration of 1, 3-dipropyl-8-p-sulfophenylxanthine), or ecto-5'-nucleotidase (alpha, beta-methylene-adenosine-5'-diphosphate). Treatment with exogenous cAMP inhibited cell growth as assessed by DNA synthesis ((3)H-thymidine incorporation), cell proliferation (cell counts), and protein synthesis ((3)H-leucine incorporation). Antagonism of A(2) (KF17837) or A(1)/A(2) (low concentration of 1, 3-dipropyl-8-p-sulfophenylxanthine), but not A(1) (8-cyclopentyl-1, 3-dipropylxanthine), adenosine receptors blocked the growth-inhibitory effects of exogenous cAMP, but not the growth inhibitory effects of 8-bromo-cAMP (stable cAMP analogue). The growth-inhibitory effects of exogenous cAMP were enhanced by the combined inhibition of adenosine deaminase [erythro-9-(2-hydroxy-3-nonyl) adenine] and adenosine kinase (iodotubercidin). In conclusion, the extracellular cAMP-adenosine pathway exists in cardiac fibroblasts and attenuates cell growth. Pharmacological augmentation of this pathway could abate pathological cardiac remodeling in heart disease.
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PMID:Cardiac fibroblasts express the cAMP-adenosine pathway. 1098 61

Apoptosis of cardiac muscle cells may contribute to the development of cardiomyopathy and heart failure. Alcohol (ethanol) abuse is a major cause of cardiomyopathy, but its underlying mechanism remains unknown. To determine whether ethanol causes apoptosis in cardiac muscle and whether insulin-like growth factor I (IGF 1) improves cardiac muscle survival upon ethanol exposure, we have defined the effects of ethanol and IGF I in primary cardiomyocytes. Ethanol decreased cell viability in dose-response manner from 0.2% to 1%. In contrast, ethanol (0.2-1%) did not alter viability of cardiac fibroblasts. To assess the occurrence of apoptosis, DNA fragmentation was determined with quantitation of nucleosomes. Nucleosomes were increased in ethanol-treated cells, thus confirming the apoptotic effects of ethanol. The pro-apoptotic Bax protein and Caspase 3 are important proteins of apoptotic signaling. The content of Bax and the activities of Caspase 3 were increased upon ethanol exposure. IGF I partially suppressed Bax induction, Caspase 3 activation, DNA fragmentation, and increased cardiomyocyte survival. The effects of IGF I on ethanol-induced apoptosis can be inhibited with a chemical inhibitor of PI 3 Kinase (LY-294002), suggesting that anti-apoptotic actions of IGF I involves PI 3 Kinase. These results may have important implications on further understanding the pathogenesis of alcoholic heart disease and the development of new strategies to treat alcoholic cardiomyopathy.
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PMID:Insulin-like growth factor I retards apoptotic signaling induced by ethanol in cardiomyocytes. 1102 53


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