Close X
Thursday, September 26, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian-American Researcher's Heart Disease Project Gets $400,000 Boost

IANS, 12 Sep, 2015 01:43 PM
  • Indian-American Researcher's Heart Disease Project Gets $400,000 Boost
An Indian-American researcher at East Tennessee State University (ETSU) has received a $423,485 grant from the National Institutes of Health for his project related to ischemic heart disease, a media report said.
 
The grant will give a boost to the project led by Krishna Singh, professor in the Department of Biomedical Sciences at Quillen College of Medicine and physiologist at the Quillen VA Medical Centre, to study the role of a protein called ATM, or ataxia telangiectasia mutated kinase, in ischemic heart disease, johnsoncitypress.com reported on Friday.
 
"The aim of this research is to identify a link between ATM and ischemic heart disease, and to understand why ATM deficient patients are more susceptible to ischemic heart disease," Singh was quoted as saying.
 
Mutations in the ATM gene cause a rare genetic disorder known as Ataxia-telangiectasia, or A-T, which affects multiple organs in the body and leads to severe disability.
 
Individuals carrying both copies of the mutated ATM gene die in their teens or early 20s. Patients with one normal and one mutated copy of the ATM gene are spared from most of the symptoms of the disease. However, they are more susceptible to cancer and ischemic heart disease.
 
The study will focus on examining the role of ATM in heart muscle cell death and heart function.
 
Singh also holds a VA Merit Review Award from the Department of Veterans Affairs for nearly $1 million to study the role of a protein called osteopontin in heart disease.

MORE International ARTICLES

French Parliament Approves Measure Against Anorexic Models In New Public Health Bill

French Parliament Approves Measure Against Anorexic Models In New Public Health Bill
PARIS — In one of the most elegant cities on earth, France's Parliament has moved to make it a crime to use anorexic models or encourage anorexia, as authorities try to crack down on the glorification of dangerously thin women.

French Parliament Approves Measure Against Anorexic Models In New Public Health Bill

Oklahoma Fraternity Racial Incident Just One Of Many As Campuses Grapple With Lingering Racism

Oklahoma Fraternity Racial Incident Just One Of Many As Campuses Grapple With Lingering Racism
COLLEGE PARK, Md. — College students and administrators are struggling to deal with racist incidents on campus despite repeated condemnations.

Oklahoma Fraternity Racial Incident Just One Of Many As Campuses Grapple With Lingering Racism

What Is In The Iran Nuclear Deal?

What Is In The Iran Nuclear Deal?
The P5+1 group of world powers led by the US have announced a "framework agreement" with Iran limiting its nuclear programme.

What Is In The Iran Nuclear Deal?

Obama Hails Iran Nuclear Accord As 'Historic'

Obama Hails Iran Nuclear Accord As 'Historic'
US President Barack Obama said on Thursday that the world powers have reached a "historic understanding with Iran, which, if fully implemented, will prevent it from obtaining a nuclear weapon".

Obama Hails Iran Nuclear Accord As 'Historic'

Indian Man, 29, Dies In Australia After Falling From Third-Floor Balcony

Indian Man, 29, Dies In Australia After Falling From Third-Floor Balcony
Pankaj Saw, 29, an IT analyst, was talking to his wife in India on the phone when he plunged about 10 metres to the ground at the apartments block in Macquarie Park about 1 a.m. on Thursday, the Sydney Morning Herald reported.

Indian Man, 29, Dies In Australia After Falling From Third-Floor Balcony

Germanwings Co-pilot Andreas Lubitz Searched Internet For Suicide Methods

Andreas Lubitz, the German co-pilot suspected of deliberately crashing a passenger plane into the French Alps, killing himself along with the other 149 people on board, researched methods of committing suicide on the internet the night before the tragic flight, the prosecutor's office of Dusseldorf city announced on Thursday.

Germanwings Co-pilot Andreas Lubitz Searched Internet For Suicide Methods