| Literature DB >> 26014131 |
Stephanie Seneff1, Robert M Davidson2, Ann Lauritzen3, Anthony Samsel4, Glyn Wainwright5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite a vast literature, atherosclerosis and the associated ischemia/reperfusion injuries remain today in many ways a mystery. Why do atheromatous plaques make and store a supply of cholesterol and sulfate within the major arteries supplying the heart? Why are treatment programs aimed to suppress certain myocardial infarction risk factors, such as elevated serum homocysteine and inflammation, generally counterproductive?Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26014131 PMCID: PMC4456713 DOI: 10.1186/s12976-015-0006-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theor Biol Med Model ISSN: 1742-4682 Impact factor: 2.432
Timeline of significant research papers linking atherosclerosis with impaired sulfate supply to the vasculature
| Publication | Key finding |
|---|---|
| Mann, 1960 [ | Sulfur supplementation protects monkeys from atherosclerosis, due to dietary cholesterol and choline enrichment. |
| Hauss et al., 1962 [ | Chondroitin sulfate incorporation into connective tissue is greatly enriched in the atherosclerotic aorta. |
| McCully, 1969 [ | Homocysteine plays an important role in arteriosclerosis. |
| Bleau et al., 1974 [ | Deficient Ch-S in RBCs leads to increased hemolysis; Ch-S stabilization of RBC membrane by SEM. |
| Bergner et al., 1981 [ | Cholesterol sulfatase deficiency leads to massive accumulation of Ch-S in RBCs and plasma. |
| Avila et al., 1996 [ | Chagas infection induces Ch-S autoantibodies. |
| Paka et al., 1999 [ | ApoE promotes both cholesterol egress from macrophages in the plaque and sulfation of the glycocalyx. |
| Strott, 2003 [ | The only review article available on Ch-S’s role in physiology. |
| Freitas et al., 2005 [ | Chagas disease induces heart failure many years later; with minimal evidence of cardiovascular disease. |
| Ren et al., 2007 [ | Ch-S regulates lipid metabolism in the liver. |
| Ma et al., 2008 [ | Ch-S decreases lipid biosynthesis in macrophages. |
| Qiao et al., 2010 [ | H2S is involved in pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. |
| Davidson and Seneff, 2012 [ | Sulfate deficiency leads to decreased deformability and increased aggregation of RBCs, increased (less negative) zeta potential, and increased capillary surface tension. |
| Manna and Jain, 2011 [ | H2S enhances glucose uptake by cells |
| Seneff et al., 2012 [ | eNOS produces sulfate catalyzed by sunlight. |
| Xu et al., 2012 [ | Ch-S suppresses inflammatory response in macrophages. |
| Xu et al., 2014 [ | H2S is a promising therapy for atherosclerosis. |
| Toshikuni et al., 2015 [ | Elevated serum GGT predicts carotid plaque build-up. |
Fig. 1a. Distribution of charge in the exclusion zone and water beyond the exclusion zone as shown by electrical potential measurements and pH- sensitive dye studies. Protons spread in bulk water, although some cling to the negatively charged EZ. b Disposition of charge anticipated in a tubular configuration. (Reproduced from Rohani and Pollack, 2013 [72], with permission from the American Chemical Society. Copyright © 2013)
Fig. 2NafionR strips spaced at 50, 100, 250 & 500 μm edge-to-edge. Exclusion zones form from the NafionR surfaces and merge into an unbroken EZ in 50- and 100 μm-spaced lines. NafionR strips are seen as the bright white squares on the images. At 250 and 500 μm the EZ forms in discrete zones that do not combine. The yellow dashed lines demarcate edges of glass support. Dashed black lines indicate extent of clear EZ. Diagram on the far right indicates the viewing height (arrow) on which the objective was focused. (Reproduced from Figueroa and Pollack (2011) [73] with permission from WIT Press)
Fig. 3Schematic of the bottle brush structure of the glycocalyx, including the lipid bilayer at the top, and the branching trees of glycosylated proteins with sulfates in the heparan sulfate chains providing negative charge and kosmotropic effects on the surrounding water, with strong analogies to Pollack’s NafionR strips experiments shown in Fig. 2
Fig. 4Schematic of a red blood cell moving through a capillary, propelled by the force field generated by the voltage drop between the artery and the vein. The moving RBC creates an electromagnetic field that induces the release of nitric oxide from the capillary wall. This relaxes the vessel and further promotes flow
Fig. 5Sulfur Incorporation into GAGs with Age. Incorporation of 35Sulfur into chondroitin sulphuric acids (CSA) of the connective tissue of normal human aortae (x) and atherosclerotic human aortae (o) in in vitro experiment. (Redrawn from [110], with permission from Elsevier)