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Penn Scientists Identify Novel Pathway in Aneurysms
Possible Implications for Some Anti-Inflammatory Drugs Used in Fighting
Cardiovascular Disease
(Philadelphia, PA) – Very little is known about how aortic aneurysms
initially form and progress. Now, researchers from the University
of Pennsylvania School of Medicine have shown in an atherosclerotic
animal model that susceptibility for developing aneurysms increases significantly
when an inflammation pathway important in asthma is activated. Mice without
the inflammation gene were protected from aneurysms.
Colin D. Funk, PhD, former Professor of Pharmacology
and Medicine, and Lei Zhao, MD, PhD, Research Associate,
both in Penn’s Center for Experimental Therapeutics, report their
findings in this week’s online publication and the September issue
of Nature Medicine. Funk is now the Canada Research Chair in
Molecular, Cellular and Physiological Medicine, Queen's University, Kingston,
Canada.
“This is the first time anyone has ever shown aneurysm formation
associated with this inflammation pathway,” says Funk. Drugs that
block the formation and action of this pathway are currently used to treat
inflammation in the airways of asthmatics. “Perhaps they may become
useful to treat patients who are susceptible to developing aortic aneurysms
by blocking their progression and eventual rupture,” he adds.
A gene for the 5-lipoxygenase-activating protein, which is required to
synthesize leukotrienes, potent inflammatory molecules, has been associated
with heart-disease risk. Leukotrienes, which constrict airways in asthmatics
and contribute to inflammation in the lungs, are also associated with
cardiovascular disease. They are secreted by inflammatory cells that gather
at injured blood vessels.
Abdominal
aortic aneurysms are a bulging region – up to twice the normal diameter
– in the largest artery of the body. (Click on thumbnail to view
full-size image). There is no known cure, with the only option of “watchful
waiting” until surgical repair is attempted, says Funk. Often, but
not always, these types of aneurysms are associated with arteriosclerosis,
a chronic inflammatory disease of the blood-vessel wall, consisting of
fatty deposits that progress into major plaques that eventually break
off from the inner lining and lead to heart attacks. “The danger
of aneurysms is that we don’t normally carry out routine screening
for their detection and by the time they are found most of the progressive
damage may have already occurred,” explains Funk.
“This is a surprising finding since at first we weren’t even
looking for aneurysms, we were trying to confirm the arteriosclerosis-leukotriene
connection,” comments Zhao. The researchers found the 5-lipoxygenase
enzyme mainly in macrophages in the outer layer of blood vessels not in
the fatty atherosclerotic lesions of the inner layer, as expected. (Macrophages
engulf such foreign objects as cellular debris, excess fats, and dying
cells.) When the researchers inactivated the gene in a mouse model of
arteriosclerosis, the number and degree of severity of aneurysms in the
mice was markedly reduced. “In humans it has been very difficult
to characterize the mechanisms for aneurysm formation and progression,”
says Funk. “Often, studies have only revolved around pathological
specimens obtained at autopsy or at the time of surgery.”
They concluded that leukotrienes derived from 5-lipoxygenase are one important
clue in the progression of aneurysms but not in early atherosclerosis.
More studies will be required in other models of aneurysm formation and
in larger animals using currently available 5-lipoxygenase blockers before
testing can begin in humans, say the researchers.
Penn colleagues on the paper are: Daniel J. Rader, Fredérique Pédrono,
and Jinjin Fan. This research was funded in part by the National Institutes
of Health and the American Heart Association.
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