Study shows oxidants help maintain healthy blood pressure
January 17, 2012 in Medical research
(Medical Xpress) -- A new scientific study led by researchers at Kings College London has shown that oxidants, a family of molecules known to be involved in ageing and the development of cancer, also have a positive function in the body in helping to regulate blood pressure.
The study published in Nature Medicine, led by Dr Philip Eaton from Kings, and co-funded by the British Heart Foundation (BHF) and Medical Research Council (MRC), showed that oxidants steal electrons from other molecules in a chemical reaction which helps prevent high blood pressure.
The researchers looked at mice carrying a mutation to a protein, called protein kinase G, which helps keep blood pressure under control. They showed that mice with the mutation developed high blood pressure because their protein kinase G was unable to sense oxidants normally. The mutation is very small, only enough to change one atom in protein kinase G, but it is enough to stop it from working.
Dr Philip Eaton, Professor of Cardiovascular Biochemistry at Kings commented: Our work adds to a shift in how the scientific community views oxidants; there is a growing body of evidence they are produced in healthy cells where they play crucial regulatory functions. Now we have shown the importance of oxidants for lowering blood pressure during health, we are in an ideal position to assess the logical implication that some cases of high blood pressure occur because this pathway stops working properly.
Dr Helene Wilson, Research Advisor at the BHF, added: It's not as simple as 'oxidants are bad and anti-oxidants are good'. This study in mice brings us a step closer to understanding how blood pressure is controlled in people, showing for the first time that oxidants play an important role in blood pressure control in the body. It also highlights a potential target for new medicines to treat high blood pressure, which is a major risk factor for heart attacks and strokes.
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King's College London
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Rank: 1 / 5 (4)
This simply points out how unrealistic it is to expect evolution [molecules to man or chemicals to chemists] to proceed on the basis of mutations. Most mutations are not beneficial but do not do much damage because there are compensating factors built into the system(s). But where the mutations get critical, they impact the organism severely or even kills it. So the chances for beneficial mutations [ i.e. ones that created new positive structures, functions and processes to execute those functions] are next to minus. Just not enough occur quickly enough for molecules to man kind of evolution to be viable - even over a period of a billion trillion years.
Jan 17, 2012
Rank: 5 / 5 (2)
Those mutations aren't selected for or against. Only those that impact an organism are selected for. And those 'compensating factors' are themselves subject to mutation and selection. They weren't there from the start. Note that different organisms have sometimes different mechanisms for DNA repair. If there were a designer he wouldn't have used different mechanisms, now, would he?
Bravo. You finally have understood how selection works.
And you know this how exactly? A billion years is a long time.
Jan 19, 2012
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