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Study Identifies Molecular Targets for Diabetes-related Erectile Dysfunction

by VR Sreeraman on Apr 7 2010 1:27 PM

Researchers at Case Western Reserve University and Albert Einstein College of Medicine have identified some of the molecular changes linked with the onset of diabetes-induced Erectile Dysfunction (ED).

The discovery could lead to markers that will help identify ED risk as well as new potential drug targets.

Current estimates suggest that as many as 75 percent of men with diabetes will develop some degree of ED, and in many cases diabetics develop more severe forms of ED that are less responsive to standard drugs.

Mark Chance and colleagues used a proteomics approach to examine the relative abundance of proteins in the corpora (the expandable tissues along the length of the penis which fill with blood during erection) of diabetic rats at two different stages of progression: one week and two months after the onset of diabetes.

They compared these rats to healthy age-matched controls, they identified 57 proteins in the penile tissue that either increased or decreased during diabetes.

The candidate proteins revealed insights into the mechanics of ED; perhaps not surprisingly, collagen proteins that provide strength and stiffness were down-regulated in diabetes, as were proteins that transport sex hormones.

In the meantime, proteins involved in cell death (apoptosis) were up regulated, as were many proteins related to fat metabolism, changes that might be related to narrowing or hardening of blood vessels.

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The researchers noted that the rat model they used in the study mimics many relevant features of human ED, and thus the identification of these 57 candidate proteins could open up further and more detailed studies into the relationship between diabetes and ED in humans, and also lead to diagnostic and drug targets.

The study has been published in the March Molecular and Cellular Proteomics.

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Source-ANI
SRM


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