- High-Risk Prostate Cancer Survival Improved 40% with Drug Combo Inside Precision Medicine
- Niraparib combo delays prostate cancer progression: Study | Tap to know more | Inshorts Inshorts
- Enzalutamide Plus ADT Significantly Increases Overall…
Blog
-
High-Risk Prostate Cancer Survival Improved 40% with Drug Combo – Inside Precision Medicine
-
HMGN1 gene linked to heart problems in people with Down syndrome
Nearly half of all babies born with Down syndrome face congenital heart defects, often involving serious malformations that require surgery in the first months of life.
For decades, scientists have known that having an extra copy…
Continue Reading
-
Key Plasma Proteins Linked to Causal Roles in BP Regulation and Risk of CV Events
Four key plasma proteins associated with potential causal roles in blood pressure (BP) regulation and increased risk of cardiovascular (CV) events, including coronary artery disease (CAD) and stroke, were identified in a Mendelian randomization (MR) study published Oct. 10 in EHJ.
First, Devendra Meena, DPhil, et al., leveraged genetic instruments from 2007 plasma proteins measured in the UK Biobank study to determine their causal effects on systolic BP (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP) in an MR analysis. Then they performed Bayesian co-localization analyses to test whether identified associations shared causal variants. Last, they examined proteins showing strong associations in UK Biobank participants to assess relationships between proteins, BP and cardiovascular events.
Results showed that 242 proteins associated with BP (185 for SBP, 137 for DBP; false discovery rate [FDR] <0.05) were identified using proteome-wide MR. Of these, 48 were also linked to CAD or stroke. Four proteins (ACOX1, FGF5, FURIN, and MST1) were reported with potential causal roles and were supported by genetic co-localization analyses (FDR 5%; posterior probability ≥70%).
Findings also revealed that genetically predicted FURIN and FGF5 were strongly associated with BP and stroke risk, whereas ACOX1, FGF5 and MST1 might have causal effects on CAD. Notably, network MR indicated that a large portion of their impact on CAD and stroke (31%–78%) was mediated through BP regulation. These findings were further supported by observational analyses.
Meena and colleagues write that “these findings provide novel insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying hypertension-related [cardiovascular disease] and identify promising protein targets for further investigation.”
In an accompanying editorial comment, Patricia B. Munroe, PhD, et al., note that the study “provides a framework for exploring causal and mediator relationships between plasma proteins of risk factors and disease outcomes” and that the findings “provide a ‘snapshot’ of the role of BP proteins on cardiovascular outcomes, as datasets are limited to plasma and there is incomplete coverage of the proteome.”
Continue Reading
-
True Love Prevails In A Ridiculous Romantic Drama
Regretting You is a tribute to the transportational properties of cinema; for two very long hours you’ll be wondering what year it is, where you are, and what the hell you’re doing there….
Continue Reading
-
Media Lab alum Dan Novy participates in analog astronaut mission — MIT Media Lab
Dan Novy, an alum of the Media Lab’s Object-Based Media group and current professor at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s Johnny Carson Center for Emerging Media Arts, has been selected to participate as a communications officer…
Continue Reading
-
World’s biggest X-ray laser discovers never-before-seen type of ice that’s solid at room temperature
Scientists have squeezed water between two diamonds to create an entirely new form of ice that’s solid at room temperature.
The ice, named ice XXI, forms when water is subjected to extreme pressure to become metastable — a precarious state that…
Continue Reading
-
What’s next for Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone?
Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone, not done with the hurdles yet
To say that McLaughlin-Levrone has dominated the 400m hurdles event is an understatement. She has broken the world record six times in her career, including at Tokyo 2020 (in 2021) and last…
Continue Reading
-
Jennifer Garner on Her Cozy Home Rituals, Filming ‘Five Star Weekend’ on Nantucket, and the Kitchen Tools She Can’t Live Without
Jennifer Garner comes from a baking family—the kind where Sunday mornings meant the smell of bread filling the house and something was always coming out of the oven. “That’s my memory of my mom—when I was little, there was always…
Continue Reading
-
Study forces a textbook rewrite on cell division
Scientists at the Ruđer Bošković Institute (RBI) in Zagreb, Croatia, have discovered that the protein CENP-E, long believed to act as a motor dragging chromosomes into place during cell division, in fact plays a completely…
Continue Reading
-
Biomarker-Driven Apalutamide Therapy for Patients With Recurrent Prostate Cancer
Use of PAM50 subtyping allowed clinicians to determine which patients with recurrent prostate cancer were most likely to benefit from the addition of apalutamide hormonal therapy to salvage radiotherapy, according to findings from the phase…
Continue Reading