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Biotech / Medical : CYPB - Cypress BioScience

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To: Ben Geh who wrote (486)1/26/1999 8:59:00 AM
From: muddphudd  Read Replies (1) of 586
 
There is also an interesting article in the January 1999 issue of The Journal of Clinical Investigation about decreased angiogenesis (new blood vessel formation) in Rheumatoid Arthritis with the use of an antagonist to the integrin alpha-v-beta 3. This integrin is crucial for blood vessels undergoing angiogenesis.

Angiogenesis, the formation of new blood vessels, is one of the earliest histopathologic findings in rheumatoid arthritis and appears to be required for the massive synovial proliferation and changes in synovial archtitecture resulting in interdigitating folds of tissue, termed pannus. This neovascularization not only maintains the chronic architectural changes of the pannus but plays an active role in inflammation as a source of both cytokines and protease activity.

In the paper, the authors use a cyclic peptide antagonist to the integrin to block angiogenesis in rabbits with rheumatoid arthritis. They found that joint swelling decreased, inflammation decreased, and pannus formation decreased. In the materials and methods sections they mention that the compound was provided by MERCK!

This field is getting more and more competitive!
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