Gene discovery could lead to new treatments for cancer and heart
disease
Doctors could use the gene's effects to increase the blood supply to
a 'failing heart' or starve a tumour of oxygen
The discovery of a gene that affects the growth of blood vessels
could help lead to new treatments for both heart disease and cancer,
researchers have said.

A gene that affects the growth of blood vessels has been
discovered by scientists |
Turning off the gene reduce the growth of blood vessels and the
scientists said it might also be possible to enhance its effect to
encourage more blood vessels. The latter effect could be used to treat
heart disease, while the former could potentially be used to cut off the
supply of blood to tumours and treat other conditions.
Prof Stuart Cook, of the National Heart and Lung Institute, who led
the study, said the process of creating blood vessels - angiogenesis -
was "vital for supporting life and providing nutrients to all parts of
the body".
"Finding a way to control angiogenesis not only provides a target for
the development of anti-cancer therapies, but may also prove useful in
similarly starving abnormal blood vessel growth elsewhere in the body,
like in diabetic eye disease," he said.
And Dr Rizwan Ahmed, of the Royal Brompton & Harefield hospitals, who
also took part in the research, said they were "one step closer to
improving heart function" in patients with reduced blood flow to the
heart. "Our findings could lead to new treatments to stimulate blood
vessel production in the heart," he said.
"The next step is to find medications to activate blood vessel
production specifically in the heart muscle, using this gene."
The researchers studied the gene, called Wars2, in rats and zebrafish.
It has previously been linked to obesity and cancer in large genetic
studies that look for genes that are shared by people with a particular
disease. The study was supported by a group on international backers,
including the UK's Medical Research Council, the Tanoto Foundation in
Singapore, the Czech government and the European Union. Professor Jeremy
Pearson, associate medical director at the British Heart Foundation,
which also helped fund the research, said: "This careful genetic study
has found a new gene that controls cardiac blood vessel growth, opening
up the potential for new therapies to enhance blood supply to the
failing heart.
"This new insight into the role of Wars2 in blood vessel growth will
allow researchers around the world to explore a fresh new target to
treat diseases which are characterised by impaired blood vessel
formation."
- The Independent |