Tuesday, December 9, 2003
Duke Cardiologists Offer New View Of Link Between Aging,
Atherosclerosis
By Richard Merritt, DukeMedNews
The exceptions have always fascinated Duke University Medical
Center cardiologist Pascal Goldschmidt, MD. In the case of atherosclerosis,
these exceptions — specifically how some people's bodies can
repair arterial damage better than others — might hold a key
to a new way of looking at the link between aging and the disease
process in general.
He cites as examples those individuals who smoke all their lives
but do not get cardiovascular disease, or those who have always
eaten an unhealthy diet but still make it to old age with clear
arteries.
Goldschmidt, chairman of the department of medicine, and fellow
cardiologist Eric Peterson, MD, DCRI, believe that medicine has
spent so much time investigating the risk factors for disease that
they have neglected to appreciate the other half of the equation
— the body's innate ability to protect and repair itself.
"It is this relationship between the body's ability to keep
up with the cumulative damage it suffers over time that could be
the key to who gets sick and who stays healthy into old age,"
Goldschmidt explained. "We believe that the key resides in
the bone marrow, which produces cells that can repair damage to
the body, and it is not until this restorative ability is exhausted
or overwhelmed that the disease process takes its toll."
The researchers published their theory on the online "Science
of Aging Knowledge Environment" (SAGE KE), (http://sageke.sciencemag.org/),
a joint effort of the journal Science and its publisher,
the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).
Said Peterson, "Age has always been considered a risk factor
for heart disease, but we haven't really understood why. Why do
some of us age faster than others? Why aren't the effects of aging
consistent from individual to individual? It may have to do with
the delicate balance between physical insults of daily life and
the ability to repair them.
"On one side of the equation are the factors that damage blood
vessels, like smoking, hypertension or high cholesterol," Peterson
continued. "On the other side is the ability to repair that
damage — people who can repair with a high degree of success
can withstand more damage and live longer."
Earlier this year (Circulation,
July 29, 2003), Duke researchers discovered that a major outcome
of aging is an unexpected failure of the bone marrow to produce
progenitor cells needed to repair and rejuvenate arteries exposed
to a genetically induced risk of high blood pressure in the mouse.
Stem cells are immature cells produced in the bone marrow that have
the potential to mature into a variety of different cells. The researchers
demonstrated that an age-related loss of these particular stem cells
– which reside in the marrow but are also designed to repair
arteries — is critical to determining the onset and progression
of atherosclerosis, which causes arteries to clog and become less
elastic.
Goldschmidt and Peterson believe that it might ultimately be possible
to forestall or even prevent the development of atherosclerosis
by injecting these cells into patients: or to retrain the patient's
own stem cells to differentiate into progenitor cells capable of
arterial repair.
"Our studies indicate that the inability of bone marrow to
produce progenitor cells which repair and rejuvenate the lining
of the arteries drives the process of atherosclerosis and the formation
of plaques in the arteries," said Goldschmidt. "For a
long time we've known that aging is an important risk factor for
coronary artery disease, and we've also known that this disease
can be triggered by smoking, bad diet, diabetes, high blood pressure,
lack of exercise and other factors.
"However, if you compare the chance of having a heart attack
between someone who is over 60 with someone who is 20 with the same
risk factors, there is obviously something else going on as well,"
he continued. "The possibility that stem cells may be involved
is a completely new piece of the puzzle that had not been anticipated
or appreciated before. These findings could be the clue to help
us explain why atherosclerosis complications like heart attacks
and strokes are almost exclusively diseases of older people."
Once the repair cells from the marrow become deficient, the inflammatory
process that destroys arteries is no longer held in check, said
Goldschmidt.
"Over time, the damaged tissue is not repaired, so it continues
to send out biochemical signals to continue the inflammatory response,"
he said. "It becomes a vicious cycle with a deadly end."
The researchers believe that living organisms, including humans,
are born with a finite capacity for stem-cell-mediated repair of
damaged tissues -- capacity that is perhaps determined by the genetic
makeup of the individual. A reduction in the consumption of these
cells may represent an important benefit of efficient preventative
maneuvers such as diet and exercise, the researchers said. While
they have proven the role of stem cells in repairing damaged arteries,
they believe the same situation could also hold true for other organ
systems in the body.
"A chronic problem in one organ system could divert cells
from another," Goldschmidt explained. "We know for example
that rheumatoid arthritis is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease,
so it may be the two are intimately related. The chronic process
of joint disease could consume stem cells that could otherwise be
used for the repair of the cardiovascular system at a later time."
While the direct use of stem cells as a treatment might be many
years off, the researchers said it is likely that strategies currently
used to reduce the risks for heart disease — such as lifestyle
modifications and/or different medications — preserve these
rejuvenating stem cells for a longer period of time, which delays
the onset of atherosclerosis.
"For those people whose repair system is weak or inefficient,
it would be very important to minimize their risk factors at a very
early age," Peterson said.
"Our newly developing insight into the role of stem cells
in the disease process should write new chapters in our understanding
of the disease process," he said. "We really don't truly
understand repair and rejuvenation, yet they are important factors
in determining who is at risk for disease and our ability to treat
it."
This article originally appeared online at DukeMedNews (http://news.mc.duke.edu/news/article.php?id=7244).
It is reprinted here with permission.
|