General

Memory of a heart attack gets stored in genes through epigenetic changes: Study

Author : NewsGram Desk
  • CVD includes all the diseases of the heart and circulation including coronary heart disease, angina, heart attack, congenital heart disease and stroke
  • The results of the study showed that there are many epigenetic changes in individuals who had experienced a heart attack
  • Several of these changes are in genes that are linked to cardiovascular disease

London, Sept 18, 2016: The memory of a heart attack gets stored in genes through epigenetic changes- chemical modifications of DNA that turn our genes on or off, a study has found.

Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) which are the leading causes of death worldwide are influenced by both heredity and environmental factors.

CVD includes all the diseases of the heart and circulation including coronary heart disease, angina, heart attack, congenital heart disease and stroke.

The study examined epigenetic changes- that can lead to the development of various diseases- in people who have had a previous heart attack.

Cyanotic heart disease. Wikimedia

Follow NewsGram on Twitter

"During a heart attack, the body signals by activating certain genes. This mechanism protects the tissue during the acute phase of the disease and restores the body after the heart attack. It is, therefore, likely that epigenetic changes are also associated a heart attack", said Asa Johansson, a researcher at the Uppsala University in Sweden.

The results of the study showed that there are many epigenetic changes in individuals who had experienced a heart attack.

Several of these changes are in genes that are linked to cardiovascular disease.

However, it was not possible to determine whether these differences had contributed to the development of the disease, or if they live on as a memory of gene activation associated with the heart attack, the researchers said.

"We hope that our new results should contribute to increasing the knowledge of the importance of epigenetic in the clinical picture of a heart attack, which in the long run could lead to better drugs and treatments", Johansson added.

Follow NewsGram on Facebook

For the study, the team took blood samples from the northern Sweden population health study. Individuals with a history of a CVD were identified in the cohort. It included individuals with hypertension, myocardial infarction, stroke, thrombosis and cardiac arrhythmia.

The results were published in the journal Human Molecular Genetics. (IANS)

Subscribe to our channels on YouTube and WhatsApp 

MeitY Asks X to Regulate Grok AI; MP Priyanka Chaturvedi Raises Serious Concerns Over Misuse and Violation of Women’s Privacy And Dignity

Approval Needed for Carrying Personal Medicines to Saudi Arabia while Travelling: NCB

PU Researchers Develop Special Paint That Kills Bacteria on Hospital Surfaces

FBI Foils ISIS-Inspired Attack Plot Targeting New Year Eve in North Carolina; Month-Long Investigation Leads to Arrest of 18-Year-Old

FDA Approves First Oral Pill for Thalassemia Anaemia, Offering New Hope to Patients Worldwide