The Borneo Post

Studies show that smoking weakens a gene that protects arteries

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WASHINGTON: People who smoke cigarettes may boost their risk of clogged heart arteries by weakening a gene that is otherwise protective of these important blood vessels, US researcher­s said Monday.

The findings point to a genetic explanatio­n for how smoking can lead to the plaque buildup that stiffens arteries and causes heart disease, said the report in the journal Circulatio­n.

“This has been one of the first big steps towards solving the complex puzzle of geneenviro­nment interactio­ns that lead to coronary heart disease,” said co- author Danish Saleheen, assistant professor of biostatist­ics and epidemiolo­gy at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvan­ia.

Researcher­s pooled genetic data on more than 140,000 people from more than two dozen earlier studies, with a particular focus on regions of the genome that have been previously associated with a higher risk of plaque buildup in the heart’s arteries.

“A change in a single DNA ‘ letter’ on chromosome 15, near the gene that expresses an enzyme (ADAMTS7) produced in blood vessels, was associated with a 12 percent reduction in heart risk in nonsmokers,” said the report.

“However, smokers with this same variation had only a five percent lower risk of coronary heart disease – reducing by over half the protective effect of this genetic variation.”

Follow- up lab studies showed that in cells that line arteries of the human heart, the production of the enzyme ADAMTS7 dropped significan­tly when the cells contained this single-letter DNA variant. — AFP

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