Coronary artery disease (CAD) is a multifactorial process that appears to be caused by the interaction of environmental risk factors with multiple predisposing genes. Genetic research on CAD has traditionally focused on investigation aimed at identifying disease-susceptibility genes. Recent evidence suggests that somatically acquired DNA mutations may also contribute significantly to the pathogenesis of the disease, underlining the similarity between atherosclerotic and carcinogenic processes. The generation of oxidative stress has been emphasized as an important cause of DNA damage in atherosclerosis. This review highlights some of the major atherogenic risk factors as likely mediators in the oxidative modification of DNA. It also examines the hypothesis that an increase in oxidative stress may derive from "oxidatively" damaged mitochondria. Accordingly, further research in this field should be given high priority, since increased somatic DNA damage could be an important pathogenic factor and an additional prognostic predictor, as well as a potential target for therapeutic strategies in coronary artery disease.

Coronary atherosclerosis and somatic mutations: an overview of the contributive factors for oxidative DNA damage

Andreassi Maria Grazia
2003

Abstract

Coronary artery disease (CAD) is a multifactorial process that appears to be caused by the interaction of environmental risk factors with multiple predisposing genes. Genetic research on CAD has traditionally focused on investigation aimed at identifying disease-susceptibility genes. Recent evidence suggests that somatically acquired DNA mutations may also contribute significantly to the pathogenesis of the disease, underlining the similarity between atherosclerotic and carcinogenic processes. The generation of oxidative stress has been emphasized as an important cause of DNA damage in atherosclerosis. This review highlights some of the major atherogenic risk factors as likely mediators in the oxidative modification of DNA. It also examines the hypothesis that an increase in oxidative stress may derive from "oxidatively" damaged mitochondria. Accordingly, further research in this field should be given high priority, since increased somatic DNA damage could be an important pathogenic factor and an additional prognostic predictor, as well as a potential target for therapeutic strategies in coronary artery disease.
2003
Istituto di Fisiologia Clinica - IFC
543
67
86
Coronary artery disease
Oxidative damage
nDNA and mtDNA
Questo articolo è stato pubblicato sulla rivista scientifica internazionale Reviews in Mutation Research (2003;543:67-86) che nel 2003 aveva un Impact Factor di 5.783. Questo paper è stato ampiamente riconosciuto dalla comunità scientifica internazionale ed è stato fonte di una richiesta di collaborazione da parte del Professor Mark. Evans, Genome Instability Group, Dept. Cancer Studies & Molecular Medicine, Level 1, RKCSB, P.O. Box 65, University of Leicester, United Kingdom per la richiesta di un grant al Wellcome Trust (United Kingdom).
1
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Andreassi Maria Grazia
01 Contributo su Rivista::01.01 Articolo in rivista
none
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/44933
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