Osteoporosis has a strong genetic component, but the genes involved are poorly defined. We studied whether the sclerosteosis/van Buchem disease gene (SOST) is an osteoporosis-risk gene by examining its association with bone-mineral density (BMD). Mutations in SOST result in sclerosteosis, and alterations in the SOST gene expression may be causal in the closely related van Buchem disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Developmentally regulated endothelial locus-1 (Del-1) is an extracellular matrix protein that is expressed by endothelial cells during embryological vascular development. We speculated that Del-1 may be reexpressed in ischemia and may be involved in endogenous angiogenesis.
Methods And Results: Del-1 protein was detected by immunohistochemistry in murine ischemic hindlimb after femoral artery excision.
Van Buchem disease is an autosomal recessive sclerosing bone dysplasia characterized by skeletal hyperostosis, overgrowth of the mandible, and a liability to entrapment of the seventh and eighth cranial nerves. The genetic determinant maps to chromosome 17q12-q21. We refined the critical interval to the < 1-Mb region between D17S2250 and D17S2253 in 15 affected individuals, all of whom shared a common disease haplotype.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDel1 is a unique alpha v beta 3 integrin ligand that is produced by endothelial cells, and thus provides an autocrine signaling pathway in this cell type. It is expressed transiently in the embryo and mediates cell attachment, migration, and activation of cytoplasmic signaling molecules in focal contacts. Del1 also activates angiogenesis in the chick chorioallantoic membrane assay.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtherosclerosis
December 2000
Abundant data is present to implicate oxidatively modified low-density lipoprotein (oxLDL) in enhanced atherogenesis. Among the factors involved in LDL oxidation, an important role has been attributed to human 15-lipoxygenase (LO) and its murine analog 12-LO. The expression of these peroxidizing enzymes is under the control of cytokines, the principal of which is IL-4.
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