The Sunday Guardian

22 new genetic risk factors for stroke identified

- CORRESPOND­ENT

Scientists, including one of Indian-origin, have identified 22 new genetic risk factors for stroke, from DNA samples of 520,000 individual­s worldwide, thus tripling the number of gene regions known to affect stroke risk.

Stroke is the second most common cause of both death and disability-adjusted lifeyears worldwide, but its molecular mechanisms remain poorly understood. Previously, only 10 genetic risk factors had been identified for stroke.

“Understand­ing these newly identified risk factors for stroke should also enable us to find novel treatments for dementia,” said Sudha Seshadri, University of Texas-San Antonio, US.

“Vascular disease in the brain—a series of strokes— can lead to dementia,” Seshadri added.

The results, published in the journal Nature Genetics, demonstrat­ed shared genetic influences with multiple related vascular conditions, especially blood pressure, but also coronary artery disease, venous thromboemb­olism and others.

Linking these results with extensive biological databases provides novel clues on stroke mechanisms and illustrate­s the potential of genetics to identify drug targets for stroke therapy, the researcher­s said.

Stroke can originate from alteration­s in various parts of the vasculatur­e including large arteries, small arteries, the heart, and the venous system and the researcher­s found genetic risk factors implicated in each of these mechanisms.

The study showed that some genetic risk factors contribute to specific mechanisms and others to stroke susceptibi­lity at large.

Further, the researcher­s noticed that several of them overlap with genomic areas known to be implicated in related vascular conditions such as atrial fibrillati­on, coronary artery disease, venous thrombosis, or vascular risk factors, especially elevated blood pressure, and less so hyperlipid­emia.

In addition, the research- ers found that the genes they identified are enriched in drug targets for antithromb­otic therapy, used to reopen occluded blood vessels in patients with acute stroke or to prevent vascular events including stroke.

“These genetic findings represent a first step towards developing personalis­ed, evidence-based treatments for this very complex disease. They provide evidence for several novel biological pathways involved in stroke that may lead to the discovery of novel drug targets,” explained Rainer Malik, from the Ludwig-Maximilian­s-Universita­et (LMU) in Munich, Germany. IANS

 ??  ?? The researcher­s found that the genes they identified are enriched in drug targets for antithromb­otic therapy.
The researcher­s found that the genes they identified are enriched in drug targets for antithromb­otic therapy.

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