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Vitamin
A Can Reset Blood Vessel Rhythm
(HealthScoutNews)
-- Time may wait for no man, but you can tinker with it, say University
of Pennsylvania scientists who have discovered that vitamin A
has the potential to alter the daily rhythms of blood vessel activities.
Bodily functions
are known to be affected by the 24-hour cycle called the circadian
clock. The incidence of heart attacks and strokes is higher in
the morning, for instance, when blood pressure is at its highest
of the day.
But Penn scientists
have discovered a new mechanism by which doctors someday might
manipulate body rhythms for medicinal or other health reasons.
In laboratory
experiments testing how vitamin A hooks up with certain proteins,
doctors found that the vitamin bonded with a protein linked to
the brain's so-called "master clock" that regulates the body's
cycles in relation to the environment. They discovered that bonding
altered the rhythms of the genes that affect blood vessels.
"This is the
first study to show findings of the circadian clock in blood vessels,"
says lead study author Peter McNamara of Penn's Center for Experimental
Therapeutics. "Two or three years ago people thought the only
circadian clock was in the brain and that it drove all the rhythms
in the body. Now [we're finding] that lots of peripheral organs
have their own clocks
and the question is what are the
signals and how do they synchronize with the master clock."
More experiments
will pinpoint how the varying rhythms affect the blood vessels
and hopefully will lead to ways to alter the timing of blood vessel
activity, McNamara says.
"The more
we know about how to modulate the body's timing, the better we
will be able to design drug treatments that will be more effective,
depending on a person's body clock," he says. "Further, it would
be really beneficial to be able to discreetly modify the circadian
clock for people facing transatlantic travel [or for those] changing
work schedules from night to day."
In the study,
McNamara and his colleagues found that vitamin A, in the form
of retinoic acid, bonded with a protein called MOP4, which is
very similar to the protein that is known to activate the brain's
master clock. When bonded with the retinoic acid, the MOP4 protein
changed the rhythm of the genes that controlled blood vessels
in mice. Genes basically turn on and off at different times, and
McNamara says the researchers could see that the vitamin A/protein
combination altered the way the genes turned on and off.
McNamara says
the next step is to "look to identify all the genes in the blood
vessels that are under the control of the clock," then to see
what characteristics of the blood vessels are changed, from blood
pressure to the size of the vessels.
The study
was sponsored by the National Institutes of Health and reported
in the June 29 Journal Cell.
Michael Menaker,
a biology professor at the University of Virginia, says the findings
are "very exciting." He says, "If these conclusions are correct,
then what the testing procedure has discovered is one of what
is bound to be a very large number of signals that connect the
oscillators in the body."
What To
Do: The field of chronobiology is a new and tantalizing one.
Read an excerpt from the book
The Body Clock to find out if you are a morning or night person
and how knowing this can affect your health.
Northwestern University also has information on the subject.
Reference
Source 89
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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