In a recent study it has been pointed that switching off TLR4 gene results in the prevention of cardiovascular disease in diabetic patients.

Wei-Ping Min, from the University of Western Ontario, Canada, worked with a team of researchers to perform the tests in cells taken from diabetic mice.
"We found that TLR4 was up-regulated in the myocardia of diabetic mice. Treatment with TLR4 siRNA attenuated the apoptosis seen in these cells, thus highlighting the potential clinical use of siRNA-based therapy," Min said.
Min and his colleagues induced hyperglycemia in adult mice by injecting them with streptozotocin, a toxin that poisons insulin-producing beta cells.
They found that after 7 days of hyperglycemia, the level of TLR4 mRNA in myocardial tissue was significantly elevated, and signs of apoptosis were evident. Silencing TLR4 resulted in suppression of apoptotic cascades.
"This is the first demonstration of the prevention of cardiac apoptosis in diabetic mice through silencing of the TLR4 gene," he said.
Source-ANI
MEDINDIA



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