Related Searches: Tea Vitamin Nutrients Ingredients paper cup packing

Food & Health Ingredients
Health & Nutrition
Processing & Packaging
Starch & Starch Derivatives

Scientists find direct link between calcium and cholesterol

ingredientsnetwork 2017-08-03
Share       

Scientists at the University of Alberta and McGill University have discovered a direct link between calcium and cholesterol, a discovery that could pave the way for new ways of treating high blood cholesterol.

The researchers began the work after having their curiosity piqued while studying the role of a calcium-binding protein. They noticed an extreme rise of blood cholesterol concentration in mice when the protein was not present.

UAlberta researcher Marek Michalak and graduate student Wen-An Wang, along with McGill researcher Luis Agellon, teamed up with geneticist Joohong Ahnn from Hanyang University in Korea to discover that this physiological link between calcium and cholesterol is also preserved in worms.

"This link wasnt a trivial observation of a tissue cultured in a dish, but something that actually happens in animals. There is a mechanism inside the cell that senses when there is not enough cholesterol present and turns on the machinery to make more,” said Michalak, a Distinguished University Professor in the Department of Biochemistry. “What we found is that a lack of calcium can hide cholesterol from this machinery. If you lose calcium, your synthetic machinery thinks there’s no cholesterol and it starts making more even if there is already enough.”

High blood cholesterol is a known risk factor for developing heart disease.

“Factors that affect blood cholesterol concentration have been studied for a long time,” said Agellon, a professor at McGills School of Human Nutrition. “The general belief was that cholesterol controlled its own synthesis inside of cells, and then we discovered in our labs that calcium can control that function too. Finding this link potentially opens a door to developing new ways of controlling cholesterol metabolism.”

The researchers hope their finding leads to different approaches of patient care in the future, but say there is more work to be done. They are now looking to discover the common factor that allows calcium and cholesterol to communicate with each other in the cell and have received a four-year grant of $456,000 from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research to continue their work.

The research paper was published in Scientific Reports.

E-newsletter

Subscribe to our e-newsletter for the latest food ingredients news and trends.

Tags

Recommended Products

Seabuckthorn Concentrate Juice

Seabuckthorn Concentrate Juice

Instant fan drying line

Instant fan drying line

Solid Ink Coding Food Band Sealer

Solid Ink Coding Food Band Sealer

Stigmasterol

Stigmasterol

Octacosanol

Octacosanol

TLA Hand Pallet Truck

TLA Hand Pallet Truck

Top

SJGLE B2B Website : 中文版 | ChineseCustomer Service: 86-400 610 1188-3 ( Mon-Fri 9: 00-18: 00 BJT)

About Us|Contact Us|Privacy Policy|Intellectual Property Statement

Copyright 2006-2023 Shanghai Sinoexpo Informa Markets International Exhibition Co Ltd (All Rights Reserved). ICP 05034851-121