“Inactivation of KRIT1 in endothelial cells causes a cascade of changes in the expression of genes that regulate cardiovascular development,” said Ginsberg. “What we learned is that reduced expression of a protein encoded by one of these genes, TSP1, contributes to the growth of CCMs. Loss of one or two copies of THBS1, the gene that encodes TSP1, makes a mouse model of the disease much worse. Conversely, administration of 3TSR, a fragment of TSP1, reduces lesions in this mouse model. This means that replacement of TSP1 by 3TSR or other angiogenesis inhibitors may be a preventative for CCMs or treatment of the disease.”

Miguel Lopez Ramirez, PhD, UC San Diego School of Medicine
“Moreover, anti-angiogenic based therapy can function as a natural means to treat CCMs in the sense that it would replace the function of a protein that is lost as a consequence of the pathogenesis of CCM disease,” said first author Miguel Alejandro Lopez-Ramirez, PhD, senior research associate, UC San Diego School of Medicine. “We thus suggest that TSP1 functional replacement could provide a more ‘biological’ therapy for CCMs.”
Co-authors include: Gregory Fonseca, Angela Pham, Bart-Jan de Kreuk, Frederic Lagarrigue, and Christopher K. Glass of UC San Diego; Hussein A. Zeineddine, Romuald Girard, Thomas Moore, Ying Cao, Robert Shenkar, and Issam A. Awad of University of Chicago Medicine; and Jack Lawler of Harvard Medical School.
This research was funded, in part, by a CAO Pilot Grant from the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (HL078784, NS092521), and the University of California San Diego School of Medicine Microscopy Core (P30 NS047101) from the National Institutes of Health.
✅Reference
ژنی که میتواند درمان احتمالی برای ناهنجاری های مغزی باشد – اخبار زیست فناوری