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Archive for the ‘Population Health Management, Nutrition and Phytochemistry’ Category

Cigarette smoke induces pro-inflammatory cytokine release by activation of NF-kappaB and posttranslational modifications of histone deacetylase as seen in macrophages

Reporter and Curator: Dr. Sudipta Saha, Ph.D.

Abbreviations:

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)

Reactive oxygen species (ROS)

Hydroxyl radicals (·OH)

Glutathione (GSH)

Histone deacetylase (HDAC)

TNF (Tumour necrosis factor)

IκB kinase complex (IKK)

Interleukin (IL)

Cigarette smoking is the major etiologic factor in the pathogenesis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), which is characterized by an abnormal inflammatory response in the lungs to cigarette smoke with a progressive and irreversible airflow limitation. Chronic airway inflammation is an archetypal feature of COPD, and increased oxidative stress has been suggested to be responsible for triggering inflammatory events observed within the lungs of smokers and COPD patients. Although the precise mechanisms behind the pathogenesis of COPD are yet to be fully dissected, the current hypothesis suggests that cigarette smoke causes airway inflammation by activating macrophages, neutrophils, and T lymphocytes, which release proteases and reactive oxygen species (ROS) leading to cellular injury. As a consequence, chronic inflammatory processes are triggered that lead to small airway obstruction. An increased oxidant burden in smokers may be derived from the fact that cigarette smoke contains an estimated 1017 oxidants/free radicals and 4,700 chemical compounds, including reactive aldehydes (carbonyls) and quinones, per puff. Many of these are relatively long-lived, such as tar-semiquinone, which can generate hydroxyl radicals (·OH) and H2O2 by the Fenton reaction. One consequence of this increased oxidative stress is activation of redox-sensitive transcription factors, such as NF-κB and activator protein-1 (AP-1), which are critical to transcription of proinflammatory genes (IL-8, IL-6, and TNF-α). However, the precise transcriptional mechanisms leading to enhanced gene expression in response to cigarette smoke are still not clearly understood.

Cigarette smoke-mediated oxidative stress induces an inflammatory response in the lungs by stimulating the release of proinflammatory cytokines. Chromatin remodeling due to histone acetylation and deacetylation is known to play an important role in transcriptional regulation of proinflammatory genes. The aim of this study was to investigate the molecular mechanism(s) of inflammatory responses caused by cigarette smoke extract (CSE) in the human macrophage-like cell line MonoMac6 and whether the treatment of these cells with the antioxidant glutathione (GSH) monoethyl ester, or modulation of the thioredoxin redox system, can attenuate cigarette smoke-mediated IL-8 release. Exposure of MonoMac6 cells to CSE (1% and 2.5%) increased IL-8 and TNF-alpha production vs. control at 24 h and was associated with significant depletion of GSH levels associated with increased reactive oxygen species release in addition to activation of NF-kappaB. Inhibition of IKK ablated the CSE-mediated IL-8 release, suggesting that this process is dependent on theNF-kappaB pathway. CSE also reduced histone deacetylase (HDAC) activity and HDAC1, HDAC2, and HDAC3 protein levels. This was associated with posttranslational modification of HDAC1, HDAC2, and HDAC3 protein by nitrotyrosine and aldehyde-adduct formation. Pretreatment of cells with GSH monoethyl ester, but not thioredoxin/thioredoxin reductase, reversed cigarette smoke-induced reduction in HDAC levels and significantly inhibited IL-8 release. Thus cigarette smoke-induced release of IL-8 is associated with activation of NF-kappaB via IKK and reduction in HDAC levels/activity in macrophages. Moreover, cigarette smoke-mediated proinflammatory events are regulated by the redox status of the cells.

Source References:

http://ajplung.physiology.org/content/291/1/L46.long

http://carcin.oxfordjournals.org/content/23/9/1511.abstract?ijkey=3ea9eff65782ab8153fac166b1d85336efb795b8&keytype2=tf_ipsecsha

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/101105?dopt=Abstract

http://www.sciencemag.org/content/293/5535/1653.abstract?ijkey=cde39cb6af6142beff66405c8aed965e998d48c1&keytype2=tf_ipsecsha

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8319604?dopt=Abstract

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Metabolomics: its Applications in Food and Nutrition Research

Reporter and Curator: Sudipta Saha, Ph.D.

 

Metabolomics is a relatively new field of “omics” research concerned with the high-throughput identification and quantification of small molecule (<1500 Da) metabolites in the metabolome. The metabolome is formally defined as the collection of all small molecule metabolites or chemicals that can be found in a cell, organ or organism. These small molecules can include a range of endogenous and exogenous chemical entities such as peptides, amino acids, nucleic acids, carbohydrates, organic acids, vitamins, polyphenols, alkaloids, minerals and just about any other chemical that can be used, ingested or synthesized by a given cell or organism.

Metabolomics is ideally positioned to be used in many areas of food science and nutrition research including food component analysis, food quality/authenticity assessment, food consumption monitoring and physiological monitoring in food intervention studies. However, the potential impact of metabolomics is still limited by two factors: (1) technology and (2) databases. In terms of instrumentation, it is clear that significant improvements need to be made to make metabolite detection and quantification technology more robust, automated and comprehensive. While promising advances have been made, current techniques are only capable of detecting perhaps 1/10th of the relevant metabolome. This expanded breadth and depth of coverage is particularly important in food and nutrition studies.

Many more reference spectral or chromatographic databases on metabolites, food components and phytochemicals need to be developed and made public. It is only through these databases that nutritionally relevant compounds can be routinely identified or quantified. Indeed a comprehensive effort, similar to that undertaken to annotate the human metabolome, needs to be made to complete and annotate the “food metabolome”. Similar efforts also need to be directed towards creating publicly accessible, comprehensive nutritional phenotype databases that include quantitative metabolomic (and other omic) data collected from diet-challenge or food intervention experiments. While these kinds of endeavours may take years to complete and cost millions of dollars, hopefully the food science community (and its funding agencies) will find a way of coordinating its activities to complete these efforts. Indeed, having public resource like a food metabolome database or a nutritional phenotype database could be as valuable to food scientists as GenBank has been to molecular biologists.

Source References:

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0924224408000770

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/B9780123945983000010

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S092422440900226X

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1359644605036093

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/B9780080885049000520

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/B9780123744135000051

Other articles related to this topic were published on this Open Access Online Scientific Journal, including the following:

Ca2+ signaling: transcriptional control

Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Reporter, RN 03/06/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/06/ca2-signaling-transcriptional-control/

Harnessing Personalized Medicine for Cancer Management, Prospects of Prevention and Cure: Opinions of Cancer Scientific Leaders @ http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 01/12/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/12/harnessing-personalized-medicine-for-cancer-management-prospects-of-prevention-and-cure-opinions-of-cancer-scientific-leaders-httppharmaceuticalintelligence-com/

Breakthrough Digestive Disorders Research: Conditions affecting the Gastrointestinal Tract.

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 12/12/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/12/breakthrough-digestive-disorders-research-conditions-affecting-the-gastrointestinal-tract/

A Second Look at the Transthyretin Nutrition Inflammatory Conundrum

Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Reporter, RN 12/03/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/03/a-second-look-at-the-transthyretin-nutrition-inflammatory-conundrum/

Metabolic drivers in aggressive brain tumors

Prabodh Kandala, PhD, RN 11/11/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/11/metabolic-drivers-in-aggressive-brain-tumors/

Metabolite Identification Combining Genetic and Metabolic Information: Genetic association links unknown metabolites to functionally related genes

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 10/22/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/22/metabolite-identification-combining-genetic-and-metabolic-information-genetic-association-links-unknown-metabolites-to-functionally-related-genes/

Advances in Separations Technology for the “OMICs” and Clarification of Therapeutic Targets

Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Reporter, RN 10/22/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/22/advances-in-separations-technology-for-the-omics-and-clarification-of-therapeutic-targets/

Expanding the Genetic Alphabet and linking the genome to the metabolome

Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Reporter, RN 09/24/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/24/expanding-the-genetic-alphabet-and-linking-the-genome-to-the-metabolome/

Therapeutic Targets for Diabetes and Related Metabolic Disorders

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 08/20/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/20/therapeutic-targets-for-diabetes-and-related-metabolic-disorders/

The Automated Second Opinion Generator

Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Reporter, RN 08/13/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/13/the-automated-second-opinion-generator/

 

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Late Onset of Alzheimer’s Disease and One-carbon Metabolism

Reporter and Curator: Dr. Sudipta Saha, Ph.D.

Abbreviations:

AD (Alzheimer’s disease)

amyloid-beta ()

late onset AD (LOAD)

GSK-3β (glycogen synthase kinase 3-beta)

PP2A (protein phosphatase 2A)

homocysteine (HCY)

S-adenosylmethionine (SAM)

methionine synthase (MS)

betaine-homocysteine methyltransferase (BHMT)

cystathionine beta synthase (CBS)

cysteine (Cys)

glutathione (GSH)

S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH)

adenosine (Ado)

presenilin 1 (PSEN1)

beta-site APP cleaving enzyme 1 (BACE)

The two main molecular signs of AD are:

  • Extracellular deposits of Amyloid-beta (Aβ) peptides (amyloidogenic pathway) and
  • Intracellular deposits of phosphorylated protein TAU (fibrillogenic pathway)

For many years, both these two pathways (amyloidogenic and fibrillogenic) contended the role of “responsible” for AD onset in the researchers’ debates, even originating respectively the two groups of “BAptists” and “TAUists” scientists. In the recent years, however, these absolutist hypotheses were confuted by the emerging data evidencing that late onset AD (LOAD) has the characteristics to be considered a multifactorial disease and by scientific reports demonstrating possible interconnection between (but not limited to) the two above-mentioned “pathogenic” pathways.

For example, it was demonstrated that

  • GSK-3β (glycogen synthase kinase 3-beta), a phosphorylase involved in tau phosphorylation, is also responsible for APP (Amyloid Precursor Protein) phosphorylation and that
  • Aβ peptides are able to induce GSK-3β.

Among the several possible cocauses and interconnected pathways involved in LOAD onset and progression, a very rapidly emerging topic is related to the role of epigenetics. Moreover, it was hypothesized that methylation impairment could be a common promoter and/or a connection between amyloid and tau pathogenic pathways involving not only DNA methylation but also protein methylation mechanisms. This observation rises from studies on PP2A (protein phosphatase 2A) protein methylation showing that downregulation of neuronal PP2A methylation occurs in affected brain regions from AD patients, causing the accumulation of both phosphorylated tau and APP isoforms and increased secretion of Aβ peptides.

Altered methylation metabolism could represent the connection between B vitamins and LOAD. B vitamins are essential cofactors of homocysteine (HCY) metabolism, also called 1-carbon metabolism. One-carbon metabolism is a complex biochemical pathway regulated by the presence of folate, vitamin B12 and B6 (among other metabolites), and leading to the production of methyl donor molecule S-adenosylmethionine (SAM). High HCY and low B vitamin levels are associated to LOAD, even if a cause-effect relationship is still far to be ascertained; moreover, a clear correlation between HCY and Aβ levels has been found.

In addition, SAM, the principal metabolite in the HCY cycle and the main methyl donor in eukaryotes, appears to be altered in some neurological disorders, including AD. HCY, a thiol containing amino acid produced during the methionine metabolism via the adenosylated compound SAM, once formed is either converted to cysteine by transsulfuration or remethylated to form methionine. In the remethylation pathway HCY is remethylated by the vitamin B12-dependent enzyme methionine synthase (MS) using 5-methyltetrahydrofolate as cosubstrate. Alternatively, mainly in liver, betaine can donate a methyl group in a vitamin B12-independent reaction, catalyzed by betaine-homocysteine methyltransferase (BHMT). In the transsulfuration pathway, HCY can condense with serine to form cystathionine in a reaction catalyzed by the cystathionine beta synthase (CBS), a vitamin B6-dependent enzyme, and the cystathionine is hydrolyzed to cysteine (Cys). Cysteine is used for protein synthesis, metabolized to sulfate, or used for glutathione (GSH) synthesis. The tripeptide GSH is the most abundant intracellular nonprotein thiol, and it is a versatile reductant, serving multiple biological functions, acting, among others, as a quencher of free radicals and a cosubstrate in the enzymatic reduction of peroxides. HCY accumulation causes the accumulation of S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH) because of the reversibility of the reaction converting SAH to HCY and adenosine (Ado); the equilibrium dynamic favors SAH synthesis. The reaction proceeds in the hydrolytic direction only if HCY and adenosine are efficiently removed. SAH is a strong DNA methyltransferases inhibitor, which reinforces DNA hypomethylation (Chiang et al., 1996). Thus, an alteration of the metabolism through either remethylation or transsulfuration pathways can lead to hyperhomocysteinemia, decrease of SAM/SAH ratio (methylation potential; MP), and alteration of GSH levels, suggesting that hypomethylation is a mechanism through which HCY is involved in vascular disease and AD, together with the oxidative damage. To add insult to injury, oxidative stress also promotes the formation of oxidized derivatives of HCY, like homocysteic acid and homocysteine sulfinic acid. These compounds, through the interaction with glutamate receptors, generate intracellular free radicals.

The first observations about B vitamins or HCY deficiency in neurological disorders were hypothesized in the 80 seconds. Despite this recent acknowledgement, alterations of HCY levels and related compounds were only recently widely recognized as risk factors for LOAD and other forms of dementia. Few mechanisms are suggested as possible protagonists in the toxic pathway of HCY in LOAD onset:

  • oxidative stress and neurotoxicity,
  • vascular damage,
  • alteration of cholesterol and lipids,
  • alteration of protein function by methylation and
  • deregulation of gene expression by DNA methylation.

These results were obtained by using both transgenic and dietary models of hyperhomocysteinemia or altered 1-carbon metabolism. On the one hand, this variety of experimental models allowed to investigate multiple aspects of the biochemical alterations and their consequences; on the other, the lacking of common methods or goals generated a large body of literature in part overlapping for some aspects but fragmentary or incomplete for others. This aspect represents, together with the scarce interplay between clinical/epidemiological and biomolecular research, one of the reasons for the poor relevance given by the scientific community to the role of 1-carbon metabolism in certain diseases like dementia.

A causal connection between 1-carbon alterations:

  • hyperhomocysteinemia,
  • low B vitamins,
  • low SAM, or
  • high SAH

and biological alterations responsible for LOAD onset and progression is still missing. So, it was previously demonstrated that 1-carbon metabolism was related to AD-like hallmarks (increased Aβ production) via PSEN1 (presenilin 1) and BACE (beta-site APP cleaving enzyme 1) upregulation in cellular and animal models. More recently, it was added to the rising literature body dealing with 1-carbon metabolism and GSK-3β and PP2A modulation; it was also demonstrated that PSEN1 promoter is regulated by site-specific DNA methylation in cell cultures and mice and that this modulation of methylation is dependent on the regulation of the DNA methylation machinery. Although all the proposed pathways of HCY toxicity are possibly involved and nonmutually exclusive, as suggested by the multifactorial origin of LOAD, the recent advances in the connection between epigenetics and LOAD (as discussed above) stress a primary role for methylation dishomeostasis dependent on 1-carbon metabolism alterations.

Source References:

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0197458011000741

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0306987784901543

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1044743107002953

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1196/annals.1297.059/abstract;jsessionid=FE6A683C10230B201295DDF1388DAC68.d02t01

http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa011613

Other articles related to this topic were published on this Open Access Online Scientific Journal, including the following:

Introduction to Nanotechnology and Alzheimer disease

Tilda Barliya PhD, RN 03/14/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/14/introduction-to-nanotechnology-and-alzheimer-disease/

Alzheimer’s disease conundrum – Are we near the end of the puzzle?

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP, RN 03/09/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/09/alzheimers-disease-conundrum-are-we-near-the-end-of-the-puzzle/

Ustekinumab New Drug Therapy for Cognitive Decline resulting from Neuroinflammatory Cytokine Signaling and Alzheimer’s Disease

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 02/27/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/02/27/ustekinumab-new-drug-therapy-for-cognitive-decline-resulting-from-neuroinflammatory-cytokine-signaling-and-alzheimers-disease/

The Alzheimer Scene around the Web

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Reporter, RN 11/02/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/02/the-alzheimer-scene-around-the-web/

Alzheimer’s before Symptoms show: Imaging Techniques for Detection and Pre-Clinical Diagnosis

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 09/29/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/29/alzheimers-before-symptoms-show-imaging-techniques-for-detection-and-pre-clinical-diagnosis/

Blood markers for Alzheimer’s disease

Dr. Venkat S Karra, Ph.D., RN 09/05/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/05/blood-markers-for-alzheimers-disease/

THREE new drugs for Alzheimer’s Disease: Two Antibodies against AMYLOID and one IV Immune Globulin

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 07/17/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/17/three-new-drugs-for-alzheimers-disease-two-antibodies-against-amyloid-and-one-iv-immune-globulin/

New ADNI Project to Perform Whole-genome Sequencing of Alzheimer’s Patients,

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 07/03/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/03/new-adni-project-to-perform-whole-genome-sequencing-of-alzheimers-patients/

New Bio-markers in Alzheimer’s & Stress Induced Changes in the Brains of Alzheimer’s Patients

Dr. Venkat S Karra, Ph.D., RN 06/26/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/06/26/new-bio-markers-in-alzeihmers-stress-induced-changes-in-the-brains-of-alzheimers-patients/

 

How Methionine Imbalance with Sulfur-Insufficiency Leads to Hyperhomocysteinemia

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 04/04/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/04/sulfur-deficiency-and-hyperhomocusteinemia/

 

Problems of vegetarianism

Dr. Sudipta Saha, Ph.D., RN 04/22/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/22/problems-of-vegetarianism/

 

Amyloidosis with Cardiomyopathy

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 03/31/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/31/amyloidosis-with-cardiomyopathy/

 

Liver endoplasmic reticulum stress and hepatosteatosis

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 03/10/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/10/liver-endoplasmic-reticulum-stress-and-hepatosteatosis/

 

Assessing Cardiovascular Disease with Biomarkers

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 12/25/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/25/assessing-cardiovascular-disease-with-biomarkers/

 

Telling NO to Cardiac Risk

Stephen J. Williams, PhD, RN 12/10/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/10/telling-no-to-cardiac-risk/

 

A Second Look at the Transthyretin Nutrition Inflammatory Conundrum

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 12/03/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/03/a-second-look-at-the-transthyretin-nutrition-inflammatory-conundrum/

 

Special Considerations in Blood Lipoproteins, Viscosity, Assessment and Treatment

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 11/28/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/28/special-considerations-in-blood-lipoproteins-viscosity-assessment-and-treatment/

 

The Molecular Biology of Renal Disorders: Nitric Oxide – Part III

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 11/26/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/26/the-molecular-biology-of-renal-disorders/

 

Nitric Oxide Function in Coagulation

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 11/26/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/26/nitric-oxide-function-in-coagulation/

 

The Potential for Nitric Oxide Donors in Renal Function Disorders

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 11/20/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/20/the-potential-for-nitric-oxide-donors-in-renal-function-disorders/

 

Nitric Oxide, Platelets, Endothelium and Hemostasis

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 11/08/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/08/nitric-oxide-platelets-endothelium-and-hemostasis/

 

Expanding the Genetic Alphabet and linking the genome to the metabolome

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 09/24/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/24/expanding-the-genetic-alphabet-and-linking-the-genome-to-the-metabolome/

 

Interaction of Nitric Oxide and Prostacyclin in Vascular Endothelium

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 09/14/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/14/interaction-of-nitric-oxide-and-prostacyclin-in-vascular-endothelium/

 

Positioning a Therapeutic Concept for Endogenous Augmentation of cEPCs — Therapeutic Indications for Macrovascular Disease: Coronary, Cerebrovascular and Peripheral

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 08/29/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/29/positioning-a-therapeutic-concept-for-endogenous-augmentation-of-cepcs-therapeutic-indications-for-macrovascular-disease-coronary-cerebrovascular-and-peripheral/

 

Drug Eluting Stents: On MIT’s Edelman Lab’s Contributions to Vascular Biology and its Pioneering Research on DES

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 04/25/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/25/contributions-to-vascular-biology/

 

Personalized Medicine in NSCLC

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 03/03/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/03/personalized-medicine-in-nsclc/

 

Nitric Oxide and Immune Responses: Part 2

Aviral Vatsa PhD, MBBS, RN 10/28/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/28/nitric-oxide-and-immune-responses-part-2/

 

Mitochondrial Damage and Repair under Oxidative Stress

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 10/28/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/28/mitochondrial-damage-and-repair-under-oxidative-stress/

 

Is the Warburg Effect the cause or the effect of cancer: A 21st Century View?

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 10/17/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/17/is-the-warburg-effect-the-cause-or-the-effect-of-cancer-a-21st-century-view/

 

Ubiquitin-Proteosome pathway, Autophagy, the Mitochondrion, Proteolysis and Cell Apoptosis: Part III

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 02/14/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/02/14/ubiquinin-proteosome-pathway-autophagy-the-mitochondrion-proteolysis-and-cell-apoptosis-reconsidered/

Special Considerations in Blood Lipoproteins, Viscosity, Assessment and Treatment

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 11/28/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/28/special-considerations-in-blood-lipoproteins-viscosity-assessment-and-treatment/

Nitric Oxide and iNOS have Key Roles in Kidney Diseases – Part II

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 11/26/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/26/nitric-oxide-and-inos-have-key-roles-in-kidney-diseases/

New Insights on Nitric Oxide donors – Part IV

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 11/26/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/26/new-insights-on-no-donors/

The Essential Role of Nitric Oxide and Therapeutic NO Donor Targets in Renal Pharmacotherapy

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 11/26/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/26/the-essential-role-of-nitric-oxide-and-therapeutic-no-donor-targets-in-renal-pharmacotherapy/

Paclitaxel vs Abraxane (albumin-bound paclitaxel)

Tilda Barliya PhD, RN 11/17/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/17/paclitaxel-vs-abraxane-albumin-bound-paclitaxel/

Ubiquinin-Proteosome pathway, autophagy, the mitochondrion, proteolysis and cell apoptosis

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 10/30/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/30/ubiquinin-proteosome-pathway-autophagy-the-mitochondrion-proteolysis-and-cell-apoptosis/

Advances in Separations Technology for the “OMICs” and Clarification of Therapeutic Targets

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 10/22/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/22/advances-in-separations-technology-for-the-omics-and-clarification-of-therapeutic-targets/

Nitric Oxide and Immune Responses: Part 1

Aviral Vatsa PhD, MBBS, RN 10/18/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/18/nitric-oxide-and-immune-responses-part-1/

Crucial role of Nitric Oxide in Cancer

Ritu Saxena, Ph.D., RN 10/16/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/16/crucial-role-of-nitric-oxide-in-cancer/

Nitric Oxide Covalent Modifications: A Putative Therapeutic Target?

Stephen J. Williams, PhD, RN 09/24/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/24/nitric-oxide-covalent-modifications-a-putative-therapeutic-target/

Nitric Oxide Signalling Pathways

Aviral Vatsa, PhD, MBBS, RN 08/22/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/22/nitric-oxide-signalling-pathways/

Proteomics and Biomarker Discovery

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 08/21/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/21/proteomics-and-biomarker-discovery/

The rationale and use of inhaled NO in Pulmonary Artery Hypertension and Right Sided Heart Failure

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 08/20/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/20/the-rationale-and-use-of-inhaled-no-in-pulmonary-artery-hypertension-and-right-sided-heart-failure/

Bystolic’s generic Nebivolol – positive effect on circulating Endothelial Progenitor Cells endogenous augmentation

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 07/16/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/16/bystolics-generic-nebivolol-positive-effect-on-circulating-endothilial-progrnetor-cells-endogenous-augmentation/

The mechanism of action of the drug ‘Acthar’ for Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE)

 Dr. Venkat S. Karra, Ph.D., RN 07/08/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/08/the-mechanism-of-action-of-the-drug-acthar-for-systemic-lupus-erythematosus-sle/

Arthritis, Cancer: New Screening Technique Yields Elusive Compounds to Block Immune-Regulating Enzyme

Prabodh Kandala, PhD, RN 05/11/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/05/11/arthritis-cancer-new-screening-technique-yields-elusive-compounds-to-block-immune-regulating-enzyme/

In Focus: Targeting of Cancer Stem Cells

Ritu Saxena, Ph.D, RN 03/27/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/27/in-focus-targeting-of-cancer-stem-cells/

Novel Cancer Hypothesis Suggests Antioxidants Are Harmful

Ritu Saxena, Ph.D, RN 01/27/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/27/novel-cancer-hypothesis-suggests-antioxidants-are-harmful/

What can we expect of tumor therapeutic response?

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 12/05/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/05/what-can-we-expect-of-tumor-therapeutic-response/

Nitric Oxide has a ubiquitous role in the regulation of glycolysis -with a concomitant influence on mitochondrial function

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 09/16/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/16/nitric-oxide-has-a-ubiquitous-role-in-the-regulation-of-glycolysis-with-a-concomitant-influence-on-mitochondrial-function/

Targeting Mitochondrial-bound Hexokinase for Cancer Therapy

Ziv Raviv, PhD, RN 04/06/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/06/targeting-mitochondrial-bound-hexokinase-for-cancer-therapy/

Genomics-based cure for diabetes on-the-way

Ritu Saxena, Ph.D, RN 03/04/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/04/genomics-based-cure-for-diabetes-on-the-way/

PLATO Trial on ACS: BRILINTA (ticagrelor) better than Plavix® (clopidogrel bisulfate): Lowering chances of having another heart attack

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 12/28/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/28/plato-trial-on-acs-brilinta-ticagrelor-better-than-plavix-clopidogrel-bisulfate-lowering-chances-of-having-another-heart-attack/

Biochemistry of the Coagulation Cascade and Platelet Aggregation – Part I

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 11/26/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/26/biochemistry-of-the-coagulation-cascade-and-platelet-aggregation/

Mitochondria: Origin from oxygen free environment, role in aerobic glycolysis, metabolic adaptation

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 09/26/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/26/mitochondria-origin-from-oxygen-free-environment-role-in-aerobic-glycolysis-metabolic-adaptation/

Mitochondrial Mechanisms of Disease in Diabetes Mellitus

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 08/01/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/01/mitochondrial-mechanisms-of-disease-in-diabetes-mellitus/

Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) and the Role of Agent Alternatives in endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase (eNOS) Activation and Nitric Oxide Production

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 07/19/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/19/cardiovascular-disease-cvd-and-the-role-of-agent-alternatives-in-endothelial-nitric-oxide-synthase-enos-activation-and-nitric-oxide-production/

Mitochondria: More than just the “powerhouse of the cell”

Ritu Saxena, Ph.D, RN 07/09/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/09/mitochondria-more-than-just-the-powerhouse-of-the-cell/

Ovarian Cancer and fluorescence-guided surgery: A report

Tilda Barliya PhD, RN 01/19/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/19/ovarian-cancer-and-fluorescence-guided-surgery-a-report/

NO Nutritional remedies for hypertension and atherosclerosis. It’s 12 am: do you know where your electrons are?

Meg Baker, Ph.D., Registered Patent Agent, RN 10/07/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/07/no-nutritional-remedies-for-hypertension-and-atherosclerosis-its-12-am-do-you-know-where-your-electrons-are/

High Doses of Certain Dietary Supplements Increase Cancer Risk

Prabodh Kandala, PhD, RN 05/17/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/05/17/high-doses-of-certain-dietary-supplements-increase-cancer-risk/

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Importance of Omega-3 Fatty Acids in Reducing Cardiovascular Disease

Reporter and Curator: Dr. Sudipta Saha, Ph.D.

 

UPDATED on 7/24/2018

Omega-3 fats Supplements Effect on Cardiovascular Health: EPA and DHA has little or no effect on Mortality or Cardiovascular Health

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2018/07/24/omega-3-fats-supplements-effect-on-cardiovascular-health-epa-and-dha-has-little-or-no-effect-on-mortality-or-cardiovascular-health/

 

The available evidence for cardiovascular effects of n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) consumption has been reviewed here, focusing on long chain (seafood) n-3 PUFA, including their principal dietary sources, effects on physiological risk factors, potential molecular pathways and bioactive metabolites, effects on specific clinical endpoints, and existing dietary guidelines. Major dietary sources include fatty fish and other seafood. n-3 PUFA consumption lowers plasma triglycerides, resting heart rate, and blood pressure and might also improve myocardial filling and efficiency, lower inflammation, and improve vascular function. Experimental studies demonstrate direct anti-arrhythmic effects, which have been challenging to document in humans. n-3 PUFA affect a myriad of molecular pathways, including alteration of physical and chemical properties of cellular membranes, direct interaction with and modulation of membrane channels and proteins, regulation of gene expression via nuclear receptors and transcription factors, changes in eicosanoid profiles, and conversion of n-3 PUFA to bioactive metabolites. In prospective observational studies and adequately powered randomized clinical trials, benefits of n-3 PUFA seem most consistent for coronary heart disease mortality and sudden cardiac death. Potential effects on other cardiovascular outcomes are less-well-established, including conflicting evidence from observational studies and/or randomized trials for effects on nonfatal myocardial infarction, ischemic stroke, atrial fibrillation, recurrent ventricular arrhythmias, and heart failure. Research gaps include the relative importance of different physiological and molecular mechanisms, precise dose-responses of physiological and clinical effects, whether fish oil provides all the benefits of fish consumption, and clinical effects of plant-derived n-3 PUFA. Overall, current data provide strong concordant evidence that n-3 PUFA are bioactive compounds that reduce risk of cardiac death. National and international guidelines have converged on consistent recommendations for the general population to consume at least 250 mg/day of long-chain n-3 PUFA or at least 2 servings / week of oily fish.

Source References:

http://content.onlinejacc.org/article.aspx?articleid=1146941

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17047219

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18614744

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19364995

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16172267

Other articles related to this topic were published on this Open Access Online Scientific Journal, including the following:

Reversal of Cardiac mitochondrial dysfunction

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 04/14/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/14/reversal-of-cardiac-mitochondrial-dysfunction/

Can resolvins suppress acute lung injury?

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACB, RN 03/06/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/06/can-resolvins-suppress-acute-lung-injury/

Calcium (Ca) supplementation (>1400 mg/day): Higher Death Rates from all Causes and Cardiovascular Disease in Women

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD., RN 02/19/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/02/19/calcium-ca-supplementation-1400-mgday-higher-death-rates-from-all-causes-and-cardiovascular-disease-in-women/

Endothelial Function and Cardiovascular Disease

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Pathologist, Contributor, RN 10/25/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/25/endothelial-function-and-cardiovascular-disease/

Mediterranean Diet is BEST for patients with established Heart Disorders

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 10/15/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/15/mediterranean-diet-is-best-for-patients-with-established-heart-disorders/

Read Full Post »

Drug Eluting Stents: On MIT’s Edelman Lab’s Contributions to Vascular Biology and its Pioneering Research on DES

Drug Eluting Stents: On MIT‘s Edelman Lab’s Contributions to Vascular Biology and its Pioneering Research on DES

Author: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP

and 

Curator: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN
http://PharmaceuticalIntelligence.com/2013/04/25/Contributions
-to-vascular-biology/

This is the first of a three part series on the evolution of vascular biology and the studies of the effects of biomaterials in vascular reconstruction and on drug delivery, which has embraced a collaboration of cardiologists at Harvard Medical School , Affiliated Hospitals, and MIT,
requiring cardiovascular scientists at the PhD and MD level, physicists, and computational biologists working in concert, and
an exploration of the depth of the contributions by a distinguished physician, scientist, and thinker.

The first part – Vascular Biology and Disease – will cover the advances in the research on

  • vascular biology,
  • signaling pathways,
  • drug diffusion across the endothelium and
  • the interactions with the underlying muscularis (media),
  • with additional considerations for type 2 diabetes mellitus.

The second part – Stents and Drug Delivery – will cover the

  • purposes,
  • properties and
  • evolution of stent technology with
  • the acquired knowledge of the pharmacodynamics of drug interactions and drug distribution.

The third part – Problems and Promise of Biomaterials Technology – will cover the shortcomings of the cardiovascular devices, and opportunities for improvement

Vascular Biology and Cardiovascular Disease

Early work on endothelial injury and drug release principles

The insertion of a catheter for the administration of heparin is not an innocuous procedure. Heparin is infused to block coagulation, lowering the risk of a dangerous

  • clot formation and
  • dissemination.

It was shown experimentally that the continuous infusion of heparin

  • suppresses smooth muscle proliferation after endothelial injury. It may lead to
  • hemorrhage as a primary effect.

The anticoagulant property of heparin was removed by chemical modification without loss of the anti-proliferative effect.

In this study, MIT researches placed ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymer matrices containing standard and modified heparin adjacent to rat carotid arteries at the time of balloon deendothelialization.

Matrix delivery of both heparin compounds effectively diminished this proliferation in comparison to controls without producing systemic anticoagulation or side effects.

This mode of therapy appeared more effective than administering the agents by either

  • intravenous pumps or
  • heparin/polymer matrices placed in a subcutaneous site distant from the injured carotid artery

This indicated that the site of placement at the site of injury is a factor in the microenvironment, and is a preference for avoiding restenosis after angioplasty and other interventions.

This raised the question of why the proliferation of vascular muscle occurs in the first place.
 Edelman, Nugent and Karnovsky  (1) showed that the proliferation required first the denudation of vascular surface endothelium. This exposed the underlayer to the effect of basic fibroblast growth factor, which stimulates mitogenesis of the exposed cell, explained by the endothelium as a barrier from circulating bFGF.

To answer this question, they compared the effect of

  • 125I-labelled bFGF intravenously given with perivascular controlled bFGF release.
  • Polymeric controlled release devices delivered bFGF to the extravascular space without transendothelial transport. 
Deposition within the blood vessel wall was rapidly distributed circumferentially and was substantially greater than that observed following intravenous injection.

The amount of bFGF deposited in arteries adjacent to the release devices was 40 times that deposited in similar arteries in animals who received a single intravenous bolus of bFGF.

The presence of intimal hyperplasia increased deposition of perivascularly released bFGF 2.4-fold but decreased the deposition of intravenously injected bFGF by 67%.

  • bFGF was 5- to 30-fold more abundant in solid organs after intravenous injection than it was following perivascular release, and
  • bFGF deposition was greatest in the kidney, liver, and spleen and was substantially lower in the heart and lung.

This result indicated that vascular deposition of bFGF is independent of endothelium, and

  • bFGF delivery is effectively perivascular. (2)

Drug activity studies have to be done in well controlled and representative conditions.
 Edelsman’s Lab researchers studied the

  • dose response of injured arteries to exogenous heparin in vivo by providing steady and predictable arterial levels of drug.
  • Controlled-release devices were fabricated to direct heparin uniformly and at a steady rate to the adventitial surface of balloon-injured rat carotid arteries.

Researchers predicted the distribution of heparin throughout the arterial wall using computational simulations and correlated these concentrations with the biologic response of the tissues.

Researchers determined from this process that an in vivo arterial concentration of 0.3 mg/ml of heparin is required to maximallyinhibit intimal hyperplasia after injury.

This estimation of the required tissue concentration of a drug is

  • independent of the route of administration and
  • applies to all forms of drug release.

In this way the Team was able to

  • evaluate the potential of  widely disparate forms of drug release and, to finally
  • create some rigorous criteria by which to guide the development of particular delivery strategies for local diseases. (3)

Chiefly, the following three effects:

(1) Effect of controlled adventitial heparin delivery on smooth muscle cell proliferation following endothelial injury. ER Edelman, DH Adams, and MJ Karnovsky. PNAS May 1990; 87: 3773-3777.


(2) Perivascular and intravenous administration of basic fibroblast growth factor: Vascular and solid organ deposition. ER Edelman, MA Nugent, and MJ Karnovsky. PNAS Feb 1993; 90: 1513-1517.


(3) Tissue concentration of heparin, not administered dose, correlates with the biological response of injured arteries in vivo. MA Lovich and ER Edelman. PNAS Sep 1999; 96: 11111–11116.

Vascular Injury and Repair

Perlecan is a heparin-sulfate proteoglycan that might be critical for regulation of vascular repair by inhibiting the binding and mitogenic activity of basic fibroblast growth factor-2 (bFGF-2) in vascular smooth muscle cells .

The Team generated

  • Clones of endothelial cells expressing an antisense vector targeting domain III of perlecan. The transfected cells produced significantly less perlecan than parent cells, and they had reduced bFGF in vascular smooth muscle cells.
  • Endothelial cells were seeded onto three-dimensional polymeric matrices and implanted adjacent to porcine carotid arteries subjected to deep injury.
  • The parent endothelial cells prevented thrombosis, but perlecan deficient cells were ineffective.

The ability of endothelial cells to inhibit intimal hyperplasia, however, was only in part suppressed by perlecan. The differential regulation by perlecan of these aspects of vascular repair may clarify why control of clinical clot formation does not lead to full control of intimal hyperplasia.

The use of genetically modified tissue engineered cells provides a new approach for dissecting the role of specific factors within the blood vessel wall.(1) Successful implementation of local arterial drug delivery requires transmural distribution of drug. The physicochemical properties of the applied compound govern its transport and tissue binding.

  • Hydrophilic compounds are cleared rapidly.
  • Hydrophobic drugs bind to fixed tissue elements, potentially prolonging tissue residence and biological effect.

Local vascular drug delivery provides

  • elevated concentrations of drug in the target tissue while
  • minimizing systemic side effects.

To better characterize local pharmacokinetics the Team examined the arterial transport of locally applied dextran and dextran derivatives in vivo.

Using a two-compartment pharmacokinetic model to correct

  • The measured transmural flux of these compounds for systemic
  • Redistribution and elimination as delivered from a photo-polymerizable hydrogel.
  • The diffusivities and the transendothelial permeabilities were strongly dependent on molecular weight and charge
  • For neutral dextrans, the diffusive resistance increased with molecular weightapproximately 4.1-fold between the molecular weights of 10 and 282 kDa.
  • Endothelial resistance increased 28-fold over the same molecular weight range.
  • The effective medial diffusive resistance was unaffected by cationic charge as such molecules moved identically to neutral compounds, but increased approximately 40% when dextrans were negatively charged.

Transendothelial resistance was 20-fold lower for the cationic dextrans, and 11-fold higher for the anionic dextrans, when both were compared to neutral counterparts.

These results suggest that, while

  • low molecular weight drugs will rapidly traverse the arterial wall with the endothelium posing a minimal barrier,
  • the reverse is true for high molecular weight agents.

The deposition and distribution of locally released vascular therapeutic compounds might be predicted based upon chemical properties, such as molecular weight and charge. (2)

Paclitaxel is hydrophobic and has therapeutic potential against proliferative vascular disease.
 The favorable preclinical data with this compound may, in part, result from preferential tissue binding.
 The complexity of Paclitaxel pharmacokinetics required in-depth investigation if this drug is to reach its full clinical potential in proliferative vascular diseases.

Equilibrium distribution of Paclitaxel reveals partitioning above and beyond perfusate concentration and a spatial gradient of drug across the arterial wall.

The effective diffusivity (Deff) was estimated from the Paclitaxel distribution data to

  • facilitate comparison of transport of Paclitaxel through arterial parenchyma with that of other vasoactive agents and to
  • characterize the disparity between endovascular and perivascular application of drug.

This transport parameter described the motion of drug in tissues given an applied concentration gradient and includes, in addition to diffusion,

  • the impact of steric hindrance within the arterial interstitium;
  • nonspecific binding to arterial elements; and, in the preparation used here,
  • convective effects from the applied transmural pressure gradient.

At all times, the effective diffusivity for endovascular delivery exceeded that of perivascular delivery. The arterial transport of Paclitaxel was quantified through application ex vivo and measurement of the subsequent transmural distribution.

  • Arterial Paclitaxel deposition at equilibrium varied across the arterial wall.
  • Permeation into the wall increased with time, from 15 minutes to 4 hours, and
  • varied with the origin of delivery.

In contrast to hydrophilic compounds, the concentration in tissue exceeded the applied concentration and the rate of transport was markedly slower. Furthermore, endovascular and perivascular Paclitaxel application led to differences in deposition across the blood vessel wall.

This leads to a conclusion that Paclitaxel interacts with arterial tissue elements  as it moves under the forces of

  • diffusion and
  • convection and
  • can establish substantial partitioning and spatial gradients across the tissue. (3)

Endovascular drug-eluting stents have changed the practice of  cardiovascular vascularization, and yet it is unclear how they so dramatically reduce restenosis

We don’t know how to distinguish between the different formulations available.
 Researchers are now questioning whether individual properties of different drugs beyond lipid avidity effect arterial transport and distribution.

In bovine internal carotid segments, tissue-loading profiles for

  • Hydrophobic Paclitaxel and Rapamycin are indistinguishable, reaching load steady state after 2 days.
  • Hydrophilic dextran reaches equilibrium in hours.

Paclitaxel and Rapamycin bind to the artery at 30–40 times bulk concentration, and bind to specific tissue elements.

Transmural drug distribution profiles are markedly different for the two compounds.

  • Rapamycin binds specifically to FKBP12 binding protein and it distributes evenly through the artery,
  • Paclitaxel binds specifically to microtubules, and remains primarily in the subintimal space.

The binding of Rapamycin and Paclitaxel to specific intracellular proteins plays an essential role in

  • determining arterial transport and distribution and in
  • distinguishing one compound from another.

These results offer further insight into the

  • mechanism of local drug delivery and the
  • specific use of existing drug-eluting stent formulations. (4)

The Role of Amyloid beta (A) in Creation of Vascular Toxic Plaque

Amyloid beta (A) is a peptide family produced and deposited in neurons and endothelial cells (EC).
It is found at subnanomolar concentrations in the plasma of healthy individuals.
 Simple conformational changes produce a form of A-beta , A-beta 42, which creates toxic plaque in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients.

Oxidative stress induced blood brain barrier degeneration has been proposed as a key factor for A-beta 42 toxicity.

This cannot account for lack of injury from the same peptide in healthy tissues.
Researchers hypothesized that cell state mediates A-beta’s effect.
 They examined the viability in the presence of A-beta secreted from transfected
Chinese hamster ovary cells (CHO) of

  • aortic Endothelial Cells (EC),
  • vascular smooth muscle cells (SMC) and
  • epithelial cells (EPI) in different states

A-beta was more toxic to all cell types when they were subconfluent.
 Subconfluent EC sprouted and SMC and EPI were inhibited by A-beta.
Confluent EC were virtually resistant to A-beta and suppressed A-beta production by A-beta +CHO.

Products of subconfluent EC overcame this resistant state, stimulating the production and toxicity of A-beta 42. Confluent EC overgrew >35% beyond their quiescent state in the presence of A-beta conditioned in media from subconfluent EC.

These findings imply that A-beta 42 may well be even more cytotoxic to cells in injured or growth states and potentially explain the variable and potent effects of this protein.

One may now need to consider tissue and cell state in addition to local concentration of and exposure duration to A-beta.

The specific interactions of A-beta and EC in a state-dependent fashion may help understand further the common and divergent forms of vascular and cerebral toxicity of A-beta and the spectrum of AD. (5)

(1) Perlecan is required to inhibit thrombosis after deep vascular injury and contributes
to endothelial cell-mediated inhibition of intimal hyperplasia. MA Nugent, HM Nugent,
RV Iozzoi, K Sanchack, and ER Edelman. PNAS Jun 2000; 97(12): 6722-6727


(2) Correlation of transarterial transport of various dextrans with their physicochemical properties.
O Elmalak, MA Lovich, E Edelman. Biomaterials 2000; 21: 2263-2272


(3) Arterial Paclitaxel Distribution and Deposition. CJ Creel, MA Lovich, ER Edelman. Circ Res. 2000;86:879-884


(4) Specific binding to intracellular proteins determines arterial transport properties for rapamycin and Paclitaxel.
AD Levin, N Vukmirovic, Chao-Wei Hwang, and ER Edelman. PNAS Jun 2004; 101(25): 9463–9467.
www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.0400918101

(5) Amyloid beta toxicity dependent upon endothelial cell state. M Balcells, JS Wallins, ER Edelman.
Neuroscience Letters 441 (2008) 319–322

Endothelial Damage as an Inflammatory State

Autoimmunity may drive vascular disease through anti-endothelial cell (EC) antibodies. This raises a question about whether an increased morbidity of cardiovascular diseases in concert with systemic illnesses may involve these antibodies.

Matrix-embedded ECs act as powerful regulators of vascular repair accompanied by significant reduction in expected systemic and local inflammation.

The Lab researchers compared the immune response against free and matrix-embedded ECs in naive mice and mice with heightened EC immune reactivity. Mice were presensitized to EC with repeated subcutaneous injections of saline-suspended porcine EC (PAE) (5*10^5 cells).

On day 42, both naive mice (controls) and mice with heightened EC immune reactivity received 5*10^5 matrix-embedded or free PAEs. Circulating PAE-specific antibodies and effector T-cells were analyzed 90 days after implantation for –

  • PAE-specific antibody-titers,
  • frequency of CD4+-effector cells, and
  • xenoreactive splenocytes

These were 2- to 4-fold lower (P<0.0001) when naıve mice were injected with matrix-embedded instead of saline-suspended PAEs.

Though basal levels of circulating antibodies were significantly elevated after serial PAE injections (2210+341 mean fluorescence intensity, day 42) and almost doubled again 90 days after injection of a fourth set of free PAEs, antibody levels declined by half in recipients of matrix-embedded PAEs at day 42 (P<0.0001), as did levels of CD4+-effector cells and xenoreactive splenocytes.

A significant immune response to implantation of free PAE is elicited in naıve mice, that is even more pronounced in mice with pre-developed anti-endothelial immunity.

Matrix-embedding protects xenogeneic ECs against immune reaction in naive mice and in mice with heightened immune reactivity.

Matrix-embedded EC might offer a promising approach for treatment of advanced cardiovascular disease. (1)

Researchers examined the molecular mechanisms through which

mechanical force and hypertension modulate

endothelial cell regulation of vascular homeostasis.

Exposure to mechanical strain increased the paracrine inhibition of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) by endothelial cells.

Mechanical strain stimulated the production by endothelial cells of perlecan and heparan-sulfate glycosaminoglycans. By inhibiting the expression of perlecan with an antisense vector researchers demonstrated that perlecan was essential to the strain-mediated effects on endothelial cell growth control.

Mechanical regulation of perlecan expression in endothelial cells was

  • governed by a mechano-transduction pathway
  • requiring transforming growth factor (TGF-β) signaling and
  • intracellular signaling through the ERK pathway.

Immunohistochemical staining of the aortae of spontaneously hypertensive rats
demonstrated strong correlations between

  • endothelial TGF-β,
  • phosphorylated signaling intermediates, and
  • arterial thickening.

Studies on ex vivo arteries exposed to varying levels of pressure demonstrated that

ERK and TGF-beta signaling were required for pressure-induced upregulation of endothelial HSPG.

The Team’s findings suggest a novel feedback control mechanism in which

  • net arterial remodeling to hemodynamic forces is controlled by a dynamic interplay between growth stimulatory signals from vSMCs and
  • growth inhibitory signals from endothelial cells. (2)

Heparan-sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) are potent regulators of vascular remodeling and repair.
 The major enzyme capable of degrading HSPGs is heparanase, which led us to examine
the role of heparanase in controlling

  • arterial structure,
  • mechanics, and
  • remodeling.

In vitro studies suggested heparanase expression in endothelial cells serves as a negative regulator of endothelial inhibition of vascular smooth muscle cell (vSMC) proliferation.

ECs inhibit vSMC proliferation through the interplay between

  • growth stimulatory signals from vSMCs and
  • growth inhibitory signals from ECs.

This would be expected if ECs had HSPGs that are degraded by heparanase.
Arterial structure and remodeling to injury is modified by heparanase expression.
Transgenic mice overexpressing heparanase had

  • increased arterial thickness,
  • cellular density, and
  • mechanical compliance.

Endovascular stenting studies in Zucker rats demonstrated increased heparanase expression in the neointima of obese, hyperlipidemic rats in comparison to lean rats.

The extent of heparanase expression within the neointima strongly correlated with the neointimal thickness following injury. To test the effects of heparanase overexpression on arterial repair, researchers developed a novel murine model of stent injury using small diameter self-expanding stents.

Using this model, researchers found that increased

  • neointimal formation and
  • macrophage recruitment occurs in transgenic mice overexpressing heparanase.
  • Taken together, these results support a role for heparanase in the regulation of arterial structure, mechanics, and repair. (3)

The first host–donor reaction in transplantation occurs at the blood–tissue interface.
When the primary component of the implant (donor) is the endothelial cells, it incites an immunologic reaction. Injections of free endothelial cell implants elicit a profound major histocompatibility complex (MHC) II dominated immune response.

Endothelial cells embedded within three-dimensional matrices behave like quiescent endothelial cells.

Perivascular implants of such embedded ECs cells are the most potent inhibitor of intimal hyperplasia and thrombosis following controlled vascular injury, but without any immune reactivity.

Allo- and even exenogenic endothelial cells evoke no significant humoral or
cellular immune response in immune-competent hosts when embedded within matrices.
 Moreover,  endothelial implants are immune-modulatory, reducing the extent of the memory response to previous free cell implants.

Attenuated immunogenicity results in muted activation of adaptive and innate immune cells. These findings point toward a pivotal role of matrix–cell-interconnectivity for

  • the cellular immune phenotype and might therefore assist in the design  of
  • extracellular matrix components for successful tissue engineering. (4)

Because changes in subendothelial matrix composition are associated with alterations of the endothelial immune phenotype, researchers sought to understand if

  • cytokine-induced NF-κB activity and
  • downstream effects depend on substrate adherence of endothelial cells (EC).

The team compared the upstream

  • phosphorylation cascade,
  • activation of NF-ĸβ, and
  • expression/secretion

of downstream effects of EC grown on tissue culture polystyrene plates (TCPS) with EC embedded within collagen-based matrices (MEEC).

Adhesion of natural killer (NK) cells was quantified in vitro and in vivo.

  • NF-κβ subunit p65 nuclear levels were significantly lower and
  • p50 significantly higher in cytokine-stimulated MEEC than in EC-TCPS.

Despite similar surface expression of TNF-α receptors, MEEC had significantly decreased secretion and expression of IL-6, IL-8, MCP-1, VCAM-1, and ICAM-1.

Attenuated fractalkine expression and secretion in MEEC (two to threefold lower than in EC-TCPS; p < 0.0002) correlated with 3.7-fold lower NK cell adhesion to EC (6,335 ± 420 vs. 1,735 ± 135 cpm; p < 0.0002).

Furthermore, NK cell infiltration into sites of EC implantation in vivo was significantly reduced when EC were embedded within matrix.

Matrix embedding enables control of EC substratum interaction.

This in turn regulates chemokine and surface molecule expression and secretion, in particular – of those compounds within NF-κβ pathways,

  • chemoattraction of NK cells,
  • local inflammation, and
  • tissue repair. (5)

Monocyte recruitment and interaction with the endothelium is imperative to vascular recovery.

Tie2 plays a key role in endothelial health and vascular remodeling.
Researchers studied monocyte-mediated Tie2/angiopoietin signaling following interaction of primary monocytes with endothelial cells and its role in endothelial cell survival.

The direct interaction of primary monocytes with subconfluent endothelial cells

resulted in transient secretion of angiopoietin-1 from monocytes and

the activation of endothelial Tie2. This effect was abolished by preactivation of monocytes with tumor necrosis factor-α (TNFα).

Although primary monocytes contained high levels of

  • both angiopoietin 1 and 2,
  • endothelial cells contained primarily angiopoietin 2.

Seeding of monocytes on serum-starved endothelial cells reduced caspase-3 activity by 46+5.1%, and 52+5.8% after TNFα treatment, and it decreased single-stranded DNA levels by 41+4.2% and 40+ 3.5%, respectively.

This protective effect of monocytes on endothelial cells was reversed by Tie2 silencing with specific short interfering RNA.

The antiapoptotic effect of monocytes was further supported by the

  • activation of cell survival signaling pathways involving phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase,
  • STAT3, and
  • AKT.

Monocytes and endothelial cells form a unique Tie2/angiopoietin-1 signaling system that affects endothelial cell survival and may play critical a role in vascular remodeling and homeostasis. (6)

(1) Cell–Matrix Contact Prevents Recognition and Damage of Endothelial Cells in States of Heightened Immunity.
H Methe, ER Edelman. Circulation. 2006;114[suppl I]:I-233–I-238.
http://www.circulationaha.org/DOI/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.105.000687

(2) Endothelial Cells Provide Feedback Control for Vascular Remodeling Through a Mechanosensitive Autocrine
TGFβ Signaling Pathway. AB Baker, DS Ettenson, M Jonas, MA Nugent, RV Iozzo, ER Edelman.
Circ. Res. 2008;103;289-297   http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.108.179465http://circres.ahajournals.org/cgi/content/full/103/3/289

(3) Heparanase Alters Arterial Structure, Mechanics, and Repair Following Endovascular Stenting in Mice.
AB Baker, A Groothuis, M Jonas, DS Ettenson…ER Edelman.   Circ. Res. 2009;104;380-387;
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.108.180695  http://circres.ahajournals.org/cgi/content/full/104/3/380

(4) The effect of three-dimensional matrix-embedding of endothelial cells on the humoral and cellular immune response.
H Methe, S Hess, ER Edelman. Seminars in Immunology 20 (2008) 117–122. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.smim.2007.12.005

(5) NF-kB Activity in Endothelial Cells Is Modulated by Cell Substratum Inter-actions and Influences Chemokine-Mediated
Adhesion of Natural Killer Cells.  S Hess, H Methe, Jong-Oh Kim, ER Edelman.
Cell Transplantation 2009; 18: 261–273


(6) Primary Monocytes Regulate Endothelial Cell Survival Through Secretion of Angiopoietin-1 and Activation of Endothelial Tie2.
SY Schubert, A Benarroch, J Monter-Solans and ER Edelman. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 2011;31;870-875
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/ATVBAHA.110.218255

Neointimal Formation, Shear Stress, and Remodelling with Reference to Diabetes

Innate immunity is of major importance in vascular repair. The present study evaluated whether

  • systemic and transient depletion of monocytes and macrophages with
  • liposome-encapsulated bisphosphonates inhibits experimental in-stent neointimal formation.

The Experiment

Rabbits fed on a hypercholesterolemic diet underwent bilateral iliac artery balloon denudation and stent deployment.

Liposomal alendronate (3 or 6 mg/kg) was given concurrently with stenting.

  • Monocyte counts were reduced by 90% 24 to 48 hours aftera single injection of liposomal alendronate, returning to basal levels at 6 days.

This treatment significantly reduced

  • intimal area at 28 days, from 3.88+0.93 to 2.08+0.58 and 2.16 +0.62 mm2.
  • Lumen area was increased from 2.87+0.44 to 3.57­+0.65 and 3.45+0.58 mm2, and
  • arterial stenosis was reduced from 58 11% to 37 8% and 38 7% in controls, in rabbits treated with 3 mg/kg, and with 6 mg/kg, respectively (mean+SD, n=8 rabbits/group, P< 0.01 for all 3 parameters).

No drug-related adverse effects were observed.
Reduction in neointimal formation was associated with

  • reduced arterial macrophage infiltration and proliferation at 6 days and with an
  • equal reduction in intimal macrophage and smooth muscle cell content at 28 days after injury.

Conversely, drug regimens ineffective in reducing monocyte levels did not inhibit neointimal formation.
Researchers have shown that a

  • single liposomal bisphosphonates injection concurrent with injury reduces in-stent neointimal formation and
  • arterial stenosis in hypercholesterolemic rabbits, accompanied by systemic transient depletion of monocytes and macrophages. (1)

Diabetes and insulin resistance are associated with increased disease risk and poor outcomes from cardiovascular interventions.

Even drug-eluting stents exhibit reduced efficacy in patients with diabetes.
Researchers reported the first study of vascular response to stent injury in insulin-resistant and diabetic animal models.

Endovascular stents were expanded in the aortae of

  • obese insulin-resistant and
  • type 2 diabetic Zucker rats,
  • in streptozotocin-induced type 1 diabetic Sprague-Dawley rats, and
  • in matched controls.

Insulin-resistant rats developed thicker neointima (0.46+0.08 versus 0.37+0.06 mm2, P 0.05), with  decreased lumen area (2.95+0.26 versus 3.29+0.15 mm2, P 0.03) 14 days after stenting compared with controls, but without increased vascular inflammation (tissue macrophages).

Insulin-resistant and diabetic rat vessels did exhibit markedly altered signaling pathway activation 1 and 2 weeks after stenting, with up to a 98% increase in p-ERK (anti-phospho ERK) and a 54% reduction in p-Akt (anti-phospho Akt) stained cells. Western blotting confirmed a profound effect of insulin resistance and diabetes on Akt and ERK signaling in stented segments. p-ERK/p-Akt ratio in stented segments uniquely correlated with neointimal response (R2 = 0.888, P< 0.04) , but not in lean controls.

Transfemoral aortic stenting in rats provides insight into vascular responses in insulin resistance and diabetes.

Shifts in ERK and Akt signaling related to insulin resistance may reflect altered tissue repair in diabetes accompanied by a

  • shift in metabolic : proliferative balance.

These findings may help explain the increased vascular morbidity in diabetes and suggest specific therapies for patients with insulin resistance and diabetes. (2)

Researchers investigated the role of Valsartan (V) alone or in combination with Simvastatin (S) on coronary atherosclerosis and vascular remodeling, and tested the hypothesis that V or V/S attenuate the pro-inflammatory effect of low endothelial shear stress (ESS).

Twenty-four diabetic, hyperlipidemic swine were allocated into Early (n = 12) and Late (n=12) groups.
Diabetic swine in each group were treated with Placebo (n=4), V (n = 4) and V/S (n = 4) and  followed for 8 weeks in the Early group and 30 weeks in the Late group.

Blood pressure, serum cholesterol and glucose were similar across the treatment subgroups.
ESS was calculated in plaque-free subsegments of interest (n = 109) in the Late group at week 23.
Coronary arteries of this group were harvested at week 30, and the subsegments of interest were identified, and analyzed histopathologically.

Intravascular geometrically correct 3-dimensional reconstruction of the coronary arteries of 12 swine was performed 23 weeks after initiation of diabetes mellitus and a hyperlipidemic diet. Local endothelial shear stress was calculated

  • in plaque-free subsegments of interest (n=142) with computational fluid dynamics, and
  • the coronary arteries (n=31) were harvested and the same subsegments were identified at 30 weeks.

V alone or with S

  • reduced the severity of inflammation in high-risk plaques.
Both regimens attenuated the severity of enzymatic degradation of the arterial wall, reducing the severity of expansive remodeling.
  • attenuated the pro-inflammatory effect of low ESS.
V alone or with S
  • exerts a beneficial effect of reducing and stabilizing high-risk plaque characteristics independent of a blood pressure- and lipid-lowering effect. (3)

This study tested the hypothesis that low endothelial shear stress  augments the

  • expression of matrix-degrading proteases, promoting the
  • formation of thin-capped atheromata.

Researchers assessed the messenger RNA and protein expression, and elastolytic activity of selected elastases and their endogenous inhibitors.

Subsegments with low endothelial shear stress at week 23 showed

  • reduced endothelial coverage,
  • enhanced lipid accumulation, and
  • intense infiltration of activated inflammatory cells at week 30.

These lesions showed increased expression of messenger RNAs encoding

  • matrix metalloproteinase-2, -9, and -12, and cathepsins K and S
  • relative to their endogenous inhibitors and
  • increased elastolytic activity.

Expression of these enzymes correlated positively with the severity of internal elastic lamina fragmentation.

Thin-capped atheromata in regions with

  • lower preceding endothelial shear stress had
  • reduced endothelial coverage,
  • intense lipid and inflammatory cell accumulation,
  • enhanced messenger RNA expression and
  • elastolytic activity of MMPs and cathepsins with
  • severe internal elastic lamina fragmentation.

Low endothelial shear stress induces endothelial discontinuity and

  • accumulation of activated inflammatory cells, thereby
  • augmenting the expression and activity of elastases in the intima and
  • shifting the balance with their inhibitors toward matrix breakdown.

Team’s results provide new insight into the mechanisms of regional formation of plaques with thin fibrous caps. (4)

Elevated CRP levels predict increased incidence of cardiovascular events and poor outcomes following interventions. There is the suggestion that CRP is also a mediator of vascular injury.

Transgenic mice carrying the human CRP gene (CRPtg) are predisposed to arterial thrombosis post-injury.

Researchers examined whether CRP similarly modulates the proliferative and hyperplastic phases of vascular repair in CRPtg when thrombosis is controlled with daily aspirin and heparin at the time of trans-femoral arterial wire-injury.

Complete thrombotic arterial occlusion at 28 days was comparable for wild-type and CRPtg mice (14 and 19%, respectively). Neointimal area at 28d was 2.5 fold lower in CRPtg (4190±3134 m2, n = 12) compared to wild-types (10,157±8890 m2, n = 11, p < 0.05).

Likewise, neointimal/media area ratio was 1.10±0.87 in wild-types and 0.45±0.24 in CRPtg (p < 0.05).

  • Seven days post-injury, cellular proliferation and apoptotic cell number in the intima were both less pronounced in CRPtg than wild-type.
  • No differences were seen in leukocyte infiltration or endothelial coverage.
CRPtg mice had significantly reduced p38 MAPK signaling pathway activation following injury.

The pro-thrombotic phenotype of CRPtg mice was suppressed by aspirin/heparin, revealing CRP’s influence on neointimal growth after trans-femoral arterial wire-injury.

  • Signaling pathway activation,
  • cellular proliferation, and
  • neointimal formation

were all reduced in CRPtg following vascular injury.
 Increasingly the Team was aware of CRP multipotent effects.
 Once considered only a risk factor, and recently a harmful agent, CRP is a far more complex regulator of vascular biology. (5)

(1) Liposomal Alendronate Inhibits Systemic Innate Immunity and Reduces In-Stent Neointimal
Hyperplasia in Rabbits. HD Danenberg, G Golomb, A Groothuis, J Gao…, ER Edelman.
Circulation. 2003;108:2798-2804


(2) Vascular Neointimal Formation and Signaling Pathway Activation in Response to Stent Injury
in Insulin-Resistant and Diabetic Animals. M Jonas, ER Edelman, A Groothuis, AB Baker, P Seifert, C Rogers.
Circ. Res. 2005;97;725-733.        http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/01.RES.0000183730.52908.C6
http://circres.ahajournals.org/cgi/content/full/97/7/725

(3) Attenuation of inflammation and expansive remodeling by Valsartan alone or in combination with
Simvastatin in high-risk coronary atherosclerotic plaques. YS Chatzizisis, M Jonas, R Beigel, AU Coskun…
ER Edelman, CL Feldman, PH Stone.  Atherosclerosis 203 (2009) 387–394


(4) Augmented Expression and Activity of Extracellular Matrix-Degrading Enzymes in Regions of Low
Endothelial Shear Stress Colocalize With Coronary Atheromata With Thin Fibrous Caps in Pigs.
YS Chatzizisis, AB Baker, GK Sukhova,…P Libby, CL Feldman, ER Edelman, PH Stone
Circulation 2011;123;621-630     http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.110.970038
http://circ.ahajournals.org/cgi/content/full/123/6/621


(5) Neointimal formation is reduced after arterial injury in human crp transgenic mice
HD Danenberg, E Grad, RV Swaminathan, Z Chenc,…ER Edelman
Atherosclerosis 201 (2008) 85–91

A Rattle Bag of Science and the Art of Translation

Science Translational Medicine – A rattle bag of science and the art of translation
E. R. Edelman, G. A. FitzGerald.
Sci.Transl. Med. 3, 104ed3 (2011). http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/scitranslmed.3002131

Elazer R. Edelman is the Thomas D. and Virginia W. Cabot Professor of Health Sciences and Technology at MIT,
Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, a coronary care unit cardiologist at the Brigham and Women’s
Hospital, and Director of the Harvard-MIT Biomedical Engineering Center. E-mail: ere@mit.edu

Garret A. FitzGerald is the McNeil Professor in Translational Medicine and Therapeutics, Chair of the Department of
Pharmacology, and Director of the Institute for Translational Medicine & Therapeutics, University of Pennsylvania.
E-mail: garret@upenn.edu

In 2011, the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)  founded Science Translational Medicine (STM)
to disseminate interdisciplinary science integrating basic and clinical research that defines and fosters new therapeutics, devices, and diagnostics.

Conceived and nourished under the creative vision of Elias Zerhouni and Katrina Kelner, the journal has attracted widespread attention.
Now, as we assume the mantle of co-chief scientific advisors, we look back on the journal’s early accomplishments, restate our mission, and make clear the kinds of manuscripts we seek and accept for publication.

STM’s mission, as articulated by Elias and Katrina, was to

“promote human health by providing a forum for communication and cross-fertilization among basic, translational, and clinical research practitioners and trainees from all relevant established and emerging disciplines.”

This statement remains relevant and accurate today.
 With this mission on our masthead, STM now receives ~25 manuscripts (full-length research articles) per week and publishes ~10% of them. Roughly half of the submissions are deemed inappropriate for the journal and are returned without review within 8 to 10 days of receipt.

Of those papers that undergo full peer review,

decisions to reject are made within 48 days and

the mean time to acceptance (including the revision period) is 125 days.

There is now an average wait of only 24 days between acceptance and publication.

Defining TRANSLATIONAL Medicine

In accord with the journal’s broad readership, the ideal manuscript meets five criteria: It
(i) reports a discovery of translational relevance with high-impact potential;
(ii) has a conceptual focus with interdisciplinary appeal;
(iii) elucidates a biological mechanism;
(iv) is innovative and novel; and
(v) is presented in clear, broadly accessible language.
 STM seeks to publish research that describes

  • how innovative concepts drive the creative biomedical science
  • that ultimately improves the quality of people’s lives—

This is the broadest of our journal’s criteria but is the one that sets us apart as well.
Translational relevance does not require demonstration of benefit in humans but does require the evident potential to advance clinical medicine, thus impacting the direction of our culture and the welfare of our communities. Conceptual focus and mechanistic emphasis discriminate our papers from those that contain observational descriptions of technical findings for which value is restricted to a specific discipline.

However, innovation and novelty may apply to a fundamental scientific discovery or to the nature of its application and relevance to the translational process. Criteria enable the journal to consider versatile technological advances that apply new and creative thinking but may not necessarily offer fresh insights into biological mechanisms. Finally, while the subsequent additional efforts of the STM editorial staff are not to be discounted, the clarity of writing and coherence of argument presented within a submitted manuscript are likely to facilitate its progress through the challenge of peer review.

On Causes – Hippocrates, Aristotle, Robert Koch, and the Dread Pirate Roberts

Elazer R. Edelman
Circulation 2001;104:2509-2512

The idea of risk factors for vascular disease has evolved

  • from a dichotomous to continuous hazard analysis and
  • from the consideration of a few factors to
  • mechanistic investigation of many interrelated risks.

However, confusion still abounds regarding issues of association and causation. Originally, the simple presence of

  • tobacco abuse, hypertension, and/or hypercholesterolemia were tallied, and
  • the cumulative score was predictive of subsequent coronary artery disease.

Since then, dose responses have been defined for these and other factors and it has been suggested that almost 300 factors place patients at risk; these factors include elevations in plasma homocysteine.
 Recent studies shed interesting light on the mechanism of this potentially causal relationship, which was first noted in 1969.

Aside from putative effects on vessel wall dynamics, there is now direct evidence that homocysteine is atherogenic. Twenty-fold increases in plasma homocysteine achieved by dietary manipulation of apoE–/– mice increased aortic root lesion size 2-fold and produced a prolonged chronic inflammatory mural response accompanied by elevations in vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM) and tumor necrosis factor-a (TNF-a).

In long term followup, homocysteine levels elevated by

  • dietary supplementation with methionine or homocysteine
  • promoted lesion size and plaque fibrosis in these
  • atherosclerosis-prone mice early in life, but without influencing ultimate plaque burden as the animals aged.

A number of mechanisms were proposed by which homocysteine achieved this effect, including

  • promotion of inflammation,
  • regulation of lipoprotein metabolism, and
  • modification of critical biochemical pathways and
  • metabolites including nitric oxide (NO).

See p 2569
In the present issue of Circulation,

Stühlinger et al 7 advance these mechanistic insights one critical step further by defining homocysteine’s effects at an enzymatic level.

The group led by Lentz published an association between levels of the

  • endogenous inhibitor of Nirtic Oxide synthase,
  • asymmetric dimethyl arginine (ADMA), and
  • homocysteine in cultured endothelial cells and in the serum of cynomolgus monkeys.

Such an association is interesting because the L-arginine–NO synthase pathway seems to be a critical component in the full range of endothelial cell biology and vascular dysfunction.

Stühlinger et al 7  now show that increased cultured endothelial cell elaboration of ADMA by homocysteine and its precursor L-methionine is associated with a dose-dependent impairment of the activity of endothelial dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase (DDAH), the enzyme that degrades ADMA. Homocysteine directly inhibited DDAH activity in a cell-free system by targeting a critical sulfhydryl group on this enzyme.

Thus, one could envision that the balance of cardiovascular health and disease could well be determined by the ability of an intact Nirtic Oxide synthase system to overcome environmental, dietary, and even genetic factors.

In patients with altered enzymatic defense systems,

  • elevated homocysteine,
  • oxidized lipoproteins,
  • inflammation, and other
  • vasotoxins

may dominate even the most potent defense mechanisms.
These studies raise a number of issues.
Do we need to add to our list of established cardiovascular risk factors to accommodate new findings and associations?
Is there a final common pathway for all risk factors or perhaps even a unified factor theory into which all potential risks can be grouped?
And, as always, should we consider Nirtic Oxide at the core of this universality?
Finally, should we change our focus altogether and speak not of risk factors but of

  • genetic predisposition,
  • extent of biochemical aberration, and
  • degree of physical damage?

Some would view these remarkable success stories and the repeated association of hyperhomocyst(e)inemia with coronary, cerebral, and peripheral vascular disease and simply advocate for increased folic acid intake for all.

Indeed, this intervention of negligible cost and

  • insignificant side effect is already partially in place;
  • many foods are fortified with folate to prevent congenital neural tube defects.

This reader considers the seminal work by Vernon Young and Yves Ingenbleek on the relationship between

  • S8 and regions distant from lava flows in Asia and Indian subcontinents,
  • where they have determined hyperhomocysteinemia and the consequence associated with:
  • veganism (not voluntary)
  • impaired methyl donor reactions and transsulfuration pathways (not corrected by B12, folate)
  • loss of lean body mass due to the constant relationship of S:N (insufficient from plant sources)

What happens, when we fail to continue to pursue causality,

  • the linkage of biological significance or scientific plausibility with
  • epidemiologically or statistically significant association?

In medicine, risk becomes the likelihood that people without a disease will acquire the disease through contact with factors thought to increase disease risk.

All of these risk factors are then, by nature, imprecise and nonspecific.
 They are stochastic measures of what will happen to normal people who fall into particular measures of these parameters.

The daring may be willing to accept these risks, citing friend and foe who live well beyond or for far lesser times than anticipated by risk alone. Such concerns may well become moot if we can simultaneously identify patients at risk

  • by linking phenotype with genotype,
  • gene expression with protein elaboration, and
  • environmental exposures with the biochemical consequences and
  • direct anatomic aberrations they induce.

This kind of characterization may well replace a family history of arterial disease as a rough estimate of

  • genotype,
  • serum cholesterol as an indirect measure of the health of lipoprotein metabolism,
  • serum glucose as a crude determinant of the ravages of diabetes mellitus,
  • blood pressure measurement as a marker of long-standing endogenous exposure to altered flow, and
  • tobacco abuse as a maker of long-standing exposure to exogenous toxins.

Rather than identifying patients on the basis of their serum cholesterol, we will have a direct measure of their

  • LDL receptor number,
  • internalization rate,
  • macrophage content in the blood vessel wall,
  • metalloproteinase activity, etc.
  • insulin receptor metabolism,
  • oxidative state, and
  • glycated burden.
  • Serum glucose will similarly give way to these tests

Evaluating a new way to open clogged arteries: Computational model offers insight into mechanisms of drug-coated balloons.

A new study from MIT analyzes the potential usefulness of a new treatment that combines the benefits of angioplasty balloons and drug-releasing stents, but may pose fewer risks. With this new approach, a balloon is inflated in the artery for only a brief period, during which it releases a drug that prevents cells from accumulating and clogging the arteries over time.
While approved for limited use in Europe, these drug-coated balloons are still in development in the United States and have not received FDA approval. The MIT study, which models the behavior of the balloons, should help scientists optimize their performance and aid regulators in evaluating their effectiveness and safety.
“Until now, people who evaluate such technology could not distinguish hype from promise,” says Elazer Edelman, the Thomas D. and Virginia W. Cabot Professor of Health Sciences and Technology and senior author of the paper describing the study, which appeared online recently in the journal Circulation.
Lead author of the paper is Vijaya Kolachalama, a former MIT postdoc who is now a principal member of the technical staff at the Charles Stark Draper Laboratory.
Edelman’s lab is investigating a possible alternative to the current treatments: drug-coated balloons. “We’re trying to understand how and when this therapy could work and identify the conditions in which it may not,” Kolachalama says. “It has its merits; it has some disadvantages.”

Modeling drug release

The drug-coated balloons are delivered by a catheter and inflated at the narrowed artery for about 30 seconds, sometimes longer. During that time, the balloon coating, containing a drug such as Zotarolimus, is released from the balloon. The properties of the coating allow the drug to be absorbed in the body’s tissues. Once the drug is released, the balloon is removed.
In their new study, Kolachalama, Edelman and colleagues set out to rigorously characterize the properties of the drug-coated balloons. After performing experiments in tissue grown in the lab and in pigs, they developed a computer model that explains the dynamics of drug release and distribution. They found that factors such as the size of the balloon, the duration of delivery time, and the composition of the drug coating all influence how long the drug stays at the injury site and how effectively it clears the arteries.
One significant finding is that when the drug is released, some of it sticks to the lining of the blood vessels. Over time, that drug is slowly released back into the tissue, which explains why the drug’s effects last much longer than the initial 30-second release period.
“This is the first time we can explain the reasons why drug-coated balloons can work,” Kolachalama says. “The study also offers areas where people can consider thinking about optimizing drug transfer and delivery.”

http://circ.ahajournals.org/content/127/20/2047.short  
http://www.mit.edu/people/vbk/Circulation_2013.pdf 
http://www.sciencedaily.com/…13/05/130521121513.ht…    
Circulation, 2013; 127 (20): 2047 – 2055
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.113.002051;

 

Conclusion

MIT’s Edelman’s Lab conducted the pioneering work in Vascular biology, animal models of drug eluting stents and was at the forefront of Empirical Molecular Cardiology in its studies in vascular physiology, biology and biomaterials for medical devices.

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The Heart Revolution By Kilmer McCully, Martha McCully

HarperCollinsPublishers, 1969

http://books.google.com/books?id=iYLbuZFxEt8C&pg=PR20&dq=New+York+Times+homocysteine+and+Cholesterol&hl=en&sa=X&ei=_0F7UfDRA8zB4APozIHQAQ&ved=0CEMQ6AEwAg

 

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Blood_Vessels (Photo credit: shoebappa)

Visceral Myopathy in Statins

Visceral Myopathy in Statins (Photo credit: Snipergirl)

Medical science has advanced significantly sin...

Medical science has advanced significantly since 1507, when Leonardo da Vinci drew this diagram of the internal organs and vascular systems of a woman. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

English: Lee Hood, MD, PhD, President and Co-f...

English: Lee Hood, MD, PhD, President and Co-found of the Institute for Systems Biology (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

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Reporter and Curator: Dr. Sudipta Saha, Ph.D.

 

Abbreviations:

CVD: Cardiovascular Disease

HHcy: Hyperhomocysteinemia

Hcy: Homocysteine

SAAs: Sulfur Amino Acids

Cys: Cysteine

GSH: Glutathione

S8: Elemental Sulfur

LBM: Lean Body Mass

 

According to World Health Organization estimates, 16.7 million deaths are attributable to cardiovascular disease (CVD) each year, accounting for 30% of all deaths worldwide and constituting an international pandemic. More than half of these deaths occur in developing countries where vegetarian diets consisting of several varieties of legumes and starchy foods have prevailed for millennia. The beneficial health effects of such regimens in the prevention of chronic disorders such as CVD, diabetes, and cancer have been documented by many investigators and, explaining their growing popularity in Westernized countries during the past several decades. It is estimated that about 2% to 5% of individuals living in developed countries have adopted vegetarianism as a lifestyle choice.

Plant-based regimens, however, do not optimally fulfill the nutritional requirements of population groups living in developing countries, as illustrated by the increasing incidence of hyperhomocysteinemia (HHcy) states, now recognized as a critical factor in occurrence of CVD and stroke. HHcy was originally associated with the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis by the study of the vascular pathology of children with inherited disorders of methionine (Met) metabolism. Dietary insufficiency or malabsorption of any of three water-soluble B vitamins (B6, pyridoxal-5′-phosphate; B9, folates; or B12, cobalamins) regulating the Met–homocysteine (Hcy) cycle are regarded as key determinants of acquired HHcy. In particular, cobalamin deficiency constitutes a worldwide problem and is currently regarded as the principal causal factor of HHcy in vegetarian populations and because vitamin B12 is almost totally absent from plant foods. In contrast, folates are abundant in plant foods, and pyridoxal-5′-phosphate is ubiquitous in unprocessed foods from plant and animal sources. Nevertheless, some studies undertaken in developing areas have shown that HHcy status may develop despite normal B12 status, prompting the search for alternative explanations.

A possible causal factor for HHcy in vegetarian populations is related to the observation that most plant foods contain lower concentrations of protein and essential amino acids, especially lysine and Met, than animal foods. White beans, for example, contain about half the sulfur amino acids (SAAs; 422 mg/100 g of edible portion) contained in bovine meat (930 mg/100 g). As a result, the Met provided by vegetarian diets does not meet the tissue requirements of mammalian species. Clinical investigations conducted in subclinically malnourished patients and recent experimental studies of the mouse and rat models have revealed that restriction of dietary Met intake inhibits the trans-sulfuration cascade and leads to HHcy, irrespective of cobalamin status. The present field study was undertaken to investigate the importance of dietary vitamin B12 and Met deficiency in the development of HHcy. The results explain how the altered body composition of vegetarian subjects affects SAA metabolism and produces HHcy, a risk factor for CVD in vegetarian populations.

The discovery that Cys (Cysteine)and GSH (Glutathione) participate in the non-enzymatic conversion of elemental sulfur (S8) into H2S is also important. This converting process may be impeded in the case of insufficient dietary S8 intake and underlying malnutrition, causing decreased Cys and GSH bioavailability. Pedologists and agronomists have demonstrated for many decades that S8 is an essential element in plant nutrition, because deficiency of S8 produces growth retardation, decreased chlorophyll synthesis, and decreases in fertility and crop yields. Because plant foods supply inadequate SAAs for mammalian tissue requirements, consumption of foods with imbalanced nitrogen:sulfur ratios grown in S8-deficient agricultural soils will exacerbate protein malnutrition. S8 deficiency is a worldwide soil problem affecting more than half the countries producing mainly foodstuffs of plant origin, including rice, soybeans, wheat, maize, and oilseeds.

The status of plant agronomy, the mammalian requirements for elemental S8 are presently unknown. Only very recently has the essentiality of sulfur has been recognized in human nutrition, causing Hcy elevation in deficient subjects. The Indian subcontinent, notably the northern region extending from Pakistan to Bangladesh, is one of the areas with soil that is most severely deficient in S8, contributing to the public health problem of CVD. More than 40% of Indian patients with HHcy-induced CVD are refractory to combined administration of folates and cobalamins, supporting the concept of S8 deficiency as the key etiologic factor. The concept of sulfur deficiency may explain why many clinical trials using B vitamin interventions have proved ineffective in the prevention of recurrent vascular disease in patients with advanced CVD, cerebrovascular disease, renal failure, and inflammatory disorders. Many other countries in southeastern Asia with vegetarian lifestyles, such as China, Taiwan, Indonesia, Philippines, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka, are also affected by increasing CVD morbidity and mortality. These developments call attention to the need to redefine CVD risk factors in South Asia and explain why cardiologists from five of these countries, Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Nepal, and Sri Lanka, have exhorted their governments to focus more attention on CVD epidemiology.

In conclusion, the investigation shows that a vegetarian population consuming a diet deficient in SAAs is characterized by normal B vitamin status, normal serum lipids, subclinical protein malnutrition, and decreased LBM (Lean Body Mass), leading to an adaptive downregulation of the trans-sulfuration pathway, HHcy, and oxidative stress, thereby increasing the vulnerability to CVD.

 

Source References:

http://www.nutritionandmetabolism.com/content/9/1/80

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9155227

http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=814540

http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/59/5/1203S.abstract

http://www.eurekaselect.com/59886/article

 

Other related articles were published in this Open Access Online Scientific Journal:

Coming Soon (section under preparation)

 

Clinical Trials:

Study 1:

Title: Examining B12 Deficiency Associated With C677T Mutation on MTHFR Gene in Terms of Commonness and Endothelial Function

Recruitment:  Active, not recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: B12 Deficiency Combined With C677T Mutation on MTHFR Gene

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: B12 Vitamin|Dietary Supplement: Vitamin B12 + Folic Acid

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00730574

Study 2:

Title: Long-term Use of Proton Pump Inhibitors May Cause Vitamin B12 Deficiency in the Institutionalized Elderly

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Vitamin B12 Deficiency

Interventions: Other: blood collection|Drug: treatment (cyanocobalamin nasal spray)

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00843453

Study 3:

Title: Oral Vitamin B12 Administration for Vitamin B12 Deficiency After Total Gastrectomy

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Vitamin B12 Deficiency

Interventions: Drug: mecobalamin

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00699478

Study 4:

Title: Metformin Use and Vitamin B12 Deficiency

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Vitamin B12 Deficiency|Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus

Interventions:

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01136512

Study 5:

Title: Vitamin B12 Supplementation Study

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Vitamin B12 Deficiency

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Vitamin B12

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00826657

Study 6:

Title: Can Recombinant Human Intrinsic Factor Be Used for Evaluation of the Vitamin B12 Absorption?

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Vitamin B12 Deficiency

Interventions: Drug: Recombinant human intrinsic factor

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00279552

Study 7:

Title: How Many Patients Are in Need of Vitamin B12 Injections?

Recruitment: Active, not recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Vitamin B12 Deficiency

Interventions: Drug: vitamin B12

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00326833

Study 8:

Title: The Association Between Religious Origin and Age, and Vitamin B12 and Folic Acid Plasma Levels in Non Jewish Population in Western Galilee

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Vitamin B12 Deficiency|Folic Acid Deficiency

Interventions: Other: Blood Sample

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01297361

Study 9:

Title: The Role of Methycobalamin in Early Dementia Patients With Vitamin B12 Deficiency and Hyperhomocysteinaemia.

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Dementia With Vitamin B12 Deficiency

Interventions: Drug: Mecobalamin

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00165711

Study 10:

Title: The Role of Methylcobalamin in Early Dementia Patients With Vitamin B12 Deficiency and Hyperhomocysteinaemia ?

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Dementia

Interventions: Drug: methylcobal

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00164983

Study 11:

Title: Oral/Intramuscular B12 to Treat Cobalamin Deficiency

Recruitment: Not yet recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Vitamin B 12 Deficiency

Interventions: Drug: oral Cobalamin (vitamin B12)|Drug: intramuscular Cobalamin (vitamin B12)

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01476007

Study 12:

Title: Impact of Vitamin b12 Replacement on Epogen Requirements in Hemodialysis Patients and Impact on Quality of Life

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Vitamin B 12 Deficiency|End Stage Renal Disease

Interventions: Drug: Vitamin B12 injections monthly

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01360983

Study 13:

Title: Cobalamin Status in Young Children With Developmental Delay

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Vitamin B 12 Deficiency

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Hydroxycobalamin (Vitamin B12 Depot, Nycomed Pharma)

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00710138

Study 14:

Title: Cobalamin Status in Young Children With Gastrointestinal Symptoms or Feeding Problems

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Vitamin B 12 Deficiency

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Hydroxycobalamin (Vitamin B12 Depot, Nycomed Pharma)

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00710359

Study 15:

Title: Cobalamin Supplementation During Infancy; Effect on B-Vitamin Status, Growth and Psychomotor Development

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Vitamin B 12 Deficiency

Interventions: Drug: Hydroxycobalamin (Vitamin B12 Depot, Nycomed Pharma)

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00479479

Study 16:

Title: Supplementary Vitamin B12 Affects on Elevated Homocysteine Levels of Vegetarians – Clinical Trial

Recruitment: Recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Vitamin B12 Deficiency

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Inactive lozenge|Dietary Supplement: Methylcobalamin

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01661309

Study 17:

Title: Vitamin B12 Acceptance and Biomarker Response Study

Recruitment: Not yet recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Vitamin B 12 Deficiency

Interventions: Drug: Oral administration of vitamin B12|Drug: i.m. injection of vitamin B12

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01832129

Study 18:

Title: Efficacy and Safety Study of Oral Eligen® B12 in Subjects With Low Serum Cobalamin

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Vitamin B 12 Deficiency

Interventions: Other: Vitamin B12 (cyanocobalamin)

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01312831

Study 19:

Title: Holotranscobalamin Remains Unchanged During Pregnancy

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Vitamin B12 Deficiency

Interventions:

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00467623

Study 20:

Title: Relative Bioavailability of Folic Acid and L-5-Methlytetrahydrofolate

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Vitamin B12 Deficiency

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: L-5-methyltetrahydrofolate (Metafolin ®)|Dietary Supplement: folic acid|Dietary Supplement: Placebo

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01584050

Study 21:

Title: Cobalamin Absorption From Fortified Food

Recruitment: Recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Vitamin B-12 Deficiency|Achlorhydria

Interventions:  Other: 14C-B12 fortified bread

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01399164

Study 22:

Title: Vitamin B12 Supplementation During Pregnancy

Recruitment: Active, not recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Nutritional Anemia in Mothers.|Nutritional Anemia in Infants.

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Vitamin B12|Dietary Supplement: Placebo

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01795131

Study 23:

Title: Oral Vitamin B12 Supplementation and Cognitive Performance in Elderly People

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Cognitive Decline|Cognitive Symptoms

Interventions: Behavioral: vitamin B12 supplementation|Behavioral: vitamin B12 + folic acid combined supplementation

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00111267

Study 24:

Title: Postoperative Vitamin Supplementation in Morbidly Obese Patient (VITAAL Study)

Recruitment: Recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Obesity|Vitamin Deficiency

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Fit For me|Dietary Supplement: Davitamon

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01609387

Study 25:

Title: The Bread Trial: Effects of Bread Fortified With Folic Acid and Vitamin B12

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Healthy

Interventions: Procedure: consumption of fortified bread

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00353353

Study 26:

Title: Comparison of Vitamin B12 Supplementation to Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor (SSRI) Versus SSRI Antidepressant Treatment Alone

Recruitment: Active, not recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Major Depressive Disorder

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Vitamin B12

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00939718

Study 27:

Title: NAC-003 P.L.U.S. Program (Progress Through Learning Understanding & Support)

Recruitment: Active, not recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Early Memory Loss|Mild Cognitive Impairment|Alzheimer’s Disease|Vascular Dementia

Interventions: Other: CerefolinNAC®

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01370954

Study 28:

Title: Evaluation of Holotranscobalamin as an Indicator of Vitamin B12 Absorption

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: Has Results

Conditions: Disorder of Vitamin B12

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Vitamin B12

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00235573

Study 29:

Title: Evaluation of the Efficacy in Decreasing Iron Absorption in Patients With Congenital Dyserythropoietic Anemia Type I by Treatment With LOSEC

Recruitment: Not yet recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: CDA Type I

Interventions: Drug: omeprazole

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01795794

Study 30:

Title: WENBIT – Western Norway B Vitamin Intervention Trial

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Coronary Artery Disease|Myocardial Infarction|Cerebrovascular Stroke

Interventions: Drug: folic acid, vitamin B12 (cyanocobalamin), vitamin B6 (pyridoxine)|Drug: folic acid, vitamin B12 (cyanocobalamin)|Drug: vitamin B6 (pyridoxine)|Drug: placebo

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00354081

Study 31:

Title: The Norwegian Vitamin Trial (NORVIT)

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Acute Myocardial Infarction

Interventions: Drug: Folic acid|Drug: Vitamin B12|Drug: Vitamin B6

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00266487

Study 32:

Title: Efficacy of a Novel Multivitamin-Mineral Supplement in Preventing Vitamin Deficiency in Postoperative Bariatric Patients

Recruitment: Recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Bariatric Surgery Candidate

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: AquaVanta Chewable Tablet|Dietary Supplement: Flinstones Complete|Dietary Supplement: Nature Made Calcium Softgels|Dietary Supplement: Nature Made Calcium Softgels|Dietary Supplement: Twin Labs Iron Caps|Dietary Supplement: Rexall Vitamin B12 Tablet

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01475617

Study 33:

Title: Multiple Nutritional Deficiencies Causing Dementia of the Alzheimer Type

Recruitment: Not yet recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Mild Cognitive Impairment|Alzheimers Disease

Interventions:

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01479855

Study 34:

Title: Effect of Prenatal Nutritional Supplementation on Birth Outcome in Hounde District, Burkina Faso

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Intrauterine Growth Retardation|Low Birth Weight

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: UNIMMAP – multiple micronutrients|Dietary Supplement: Food supplement enriched with multiple micronutrients

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00909974

Study 35:

Title: Assessment of Nutritional Consequences of Sleeve Gastrectomy

Recruitment: Not yet recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Obesity

Interventions: Procedure: Longitudinal sleeve gastrectomy

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01475903

Study 36:

Title: A Retrospective Analysis of Neevo®/Neevo®DHA Compared to a Standard Prenatal Vitamin in Anemia During Pregnancy

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Anemia in Pregnancy|Preeclampsia

Interventions: Other: Neevo® (a medical food)|Other: Prenatal vitamins (≤1mg folic acid, 27 – 35mg iron, and ≤12mcg vitamin B12)

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01062958

Study 37:

Title: Interaction of Cobalamin Status With Nitrous Oxide in Relation to Postoperative Cognitive Changes in the Elderly

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Avitaminosis|Delirium, Dementia, Amnestic, Cognitive Disorders

Interventions: Drug: general anesthesia

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00212147

Study 38:

Title: A Retrospective Analysis of Neevo® and NeevoDHA® Compared to a Standard Prenatal Vitamin in Anemia During Pregnancy

Recruitment: Terminated

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Anemia in Pregnancy|Pre-eclampsia

Interventions: Other: Neevo®|Other: Prenatal vitamins

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01193192

Study 39:

Title: Efficacy Trial to Examine Efficacy of Multimicronutrient Home Supplementation in Infants

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Iron Deficiency Anemia|Infectious Diseases|Undernutrition

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Sprinkles|Dietary Supplement: Ferripel-3, Vitamins A&D drops

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00276198

Study 40:

Title: B Vitamin Status in Premature and Small for Gestational Age(SGA) Infants

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Biochemical Cobalamin Status|Motor Neurodevelopment

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Hydroxycobalamin|Dietary Supplement: Sham injection

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01201005

Study 41:

Title: Effect of Zinc and Vitamin A Supplementation on Diarrhea, Physical Growth and Immune Response in Malnourished Children

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Diarrhea|Pneumonia|Acute Respiratory Tract Infection

Interventions: Drug: Zinc and vitamin A single dose at enrollment|Drug: Placebo and vitamin A single dose at enrollment

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00272116

Study 42:

Title: The Contribution of Health in Utero to Capacity Formation, Education and Economic Outcomes: Experimental Evidence From Tanzania

Recruitment: Active, not recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: We Focus on the Effect of Folic Acid on Cognitive Development, Educational Outcomes and Parental Behavior.

Interventions: Drug: Folic Acid

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01412580

Study 43:

Title: Absorption of Heme and Non-Heme Iron in Pregnant and Non-pregnant Women and Mechanisms of Fetal Iron Transfer

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Iron Deficiency

Interventions:

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01019096

Study 44:

Title: Project Grow Smart: Intervention Trial of Multiple Micronutrients and Early Learning Among Infants in India

Recruitment: Recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Nutritional Deficiencies|Developmental Delay

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Micronutrient Intervention|Behavioral: Early Learning

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01660958

Study 45:

Title: Role of Vitamin D in the Prevention and Treatment of Deseases Associated With Insulin Resistance

Recruitment: Not yet recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Vitamin D-deficient|Insulin-resistant

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Vitamin D|Other: Placebo

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01779908

Study 46:

Title: Effectiveness of Selling Micronutrient Sprinkles in Rural Kenya

Recruitment: Active, not recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Anemia, Iron-deficiency

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Micronutrient powders (Sprinkles)

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01088958

Study 47:

Title: Prevention of Intrauterine Growth Retardation in Hounde District, Burkina Faso

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Multiple Micronutrient Deficiencies During Pregnancy

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Multiple micronutrient supplements (MMN)|Dietary Supplement: IFA

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00642408

Study 48:

Title: Néevo®/NéevoDHA® P.L.U.S. Program (Progress Through Learning, Understand & Support)

Recruitment: Active, not recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Pregnancy

Interventions: Other: Néevo®/ NéevoDHA®

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01358552

Study 49:

Title: The Effects of 8-week Choline, Betaine, and Folic Acid Supplementation on Plasma Homocysteine Concentration During Guanidinoacetic Acid Loading in Young Healthy Volunteers

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Hyperhomocysteinemia

Interventions: Drug: TEST 1|Drug: TEST 2|Drug: TEST 3|Drug: TEST 4

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01371357

Study 50:

Title: Prevention of Recurrent Aphthous Stomatitis Using Vitamins

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Aphthous Stomatitis

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: multivitamin

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00527306

Study 51:

Title: 5-Methyltetrahydrofolate Survival and Inflammation in ESRD Patients

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Mortality|Hyperhomocysteinemia|Inflammation

Interventions: Drug: 5-MTHF (5-methyltetrahydrofolate)|Drug: folic acid

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00626223

Study 52:

Title: Effects of Low-dose Complex B-vitamins on Homocysteine and Framingham Risk Score Among Chinese Elderly

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Hyperhomocysteinemia

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Low-dose complex B-vitamins

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00755664

Study 53:

Title: Nutrition Intervention in Drug Naive HIV-infected Kenyan Women and Their Children

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions:  HIV Infections

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Meat Biscuit|Dietary Supplement: Soy Biscuit|Dietary Supplement: Wheat Biscuit

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00562874

Study 54:

Title: Nutrition and Cognition in Indian Children

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Healthy

Interventions: Behavioral: micronutrients

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00467909

Study 55:

Title: Randomized Study of Folic Acid Therapy for Hyperhomocysteinemia in Patients With End Stage Renal Disease Receiving Hemodialysis

Recruitment: Recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: End Stage Renal Disease|Hyperhomocysteinemia

Interventions: Drug: cyanocobalamin|Drug: folic acid|Drug: pyridoxine

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00004495

Study 56:

Title: LEARN-6™: A Prospective, Observational Nursing Home Study

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Anemia|Chronic Kidney Disease

Interventions: Other: Observations

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00727571

Study 57:

Title: A Retrospective Analysis of Cerefolin NAC® in Cognitively Impaired Patients

Recruitment: Active, not recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Mild Cognitive Impairment

Interventions:

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01594541

Study 58:

Title: Antenatal Micronutrient Supplementation and Infant Survival

Recruitment: Active, not recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Infant Mortality|Preterm Birth|Low Birth Weight|Neonatal Mortality|Perinatal Mortality

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Iron (27 mg) – folic acid (600 ug)|Dietary Supplement: Multiple micronutrient

URL:                      http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00860470

Study 59:

Title: Changes in Microbiota and Iron Status After Iron Fortification of Complementary Foods

Recruitment: Active, not recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Bacterial Infections

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: fortification with iron and micronutrients|Dietary Supplement: Sprinkles

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01111864

Study 60:

Title: Homocyst(e)Ine, Vitamin Status, and CVD Risk

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Cardiovascular Diseases|Cerebrovascular Accident|Coronary Disease|Myocardial Infarction|Heart Diseases|Hyperhomocysteinemia

Interventions:

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00005482

Study 61:

Title: Screening for the Transthyretin-Related Familial Amyloidotic Polyneuropathy

Recruitment: Recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Polyneuropathies|Amyloidosis|Amyloid Neuropathies|Amyloidosis, Familial|Metabolic Diseases

Interventions:

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01705626

Study 62:

Title: Effect of Folic Acid Supplementation on Plasma Homocysteine Level in Obese Children

Recruitment: Recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Hyperhomocysteinemia|Obesity

Interventions: Drug: Folic Acid|Drug: placebo

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01766310

Study 63:

Title: Plasma Homocysteine Distribution in the United States

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Cardiovascular Diseases|Heart Diseases|Hyperhomocysteinemia

Interventions:

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00005483

Study 64:

Title: Effect of S-adenosylmethionine (SAMe) on Blood Levels of Homocysteine

Recruitment: Recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Hyperhomocysteinemia

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: S-adenosylmethionine

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00473200

Study 65:

Title: Iron and Vitamin Adminstration Prior to Joint Replacement to Prevent Transfusion

Recruitment: Not yet recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Excessive Amount of Blood / Fluid Transfusion

Interventions: Drug: Iron Supplement,|Drug: Placebo

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT01676740

Study 66:

Title: Micronutrients and Antioxidants in HIV Infection

Recruitment: Recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: HIV Infection

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Micronutrients and antioxidants|Dietary Supplement: Multivitamins and minerals

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00798772

Study 67:

Title: Multivitamin Dosage Regimens in the Prevention of Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes Among HIV-Positive Women

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: HIV Infections

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Multivitamins-Multiples of RDA|Dietary Supplement: Multivitamins-Single RDA

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00197678

Study 68:

Title: A Trial of Vitamins and HAART in HIV Disease Progression

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: HIV Infections

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Multivitamins (including B, C and E)|Dietary Supplement: Multivitamins B, C and E

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00383669

Study 69:

Title: Trial of Vitamins Among Children of HIV-infected Women

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: HIV Infections|Pregnancy Complications

Interventions: Drug: Multivitamins – vitamins B complex, C and E|Drug: Placebo

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00197730

Study 70:

Title: Trial of Vitamins in HIV Progression and Transmission

Recruitment: Completed

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: HIV Infections|Disease Transmission, Vertical

Interventions: Dietary Supplement: Vitamin A + Beta Carotene|Dietary Supplement: Multivitamins|Other: Placebo

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00197743

Study 71:

Title: A Study in Patients With Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS)

Recruitment: Active, not recruiting

Study Results: No Results Available

Conditions: Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS)

Interventions: Drug: E0302 (mecobalamin)|Drug: E0302 (mecobalamin)|Drug: Placebo

URL: http://ClinicalTrials.gov/show/NCT00444613

Read Full Post »

Reversal of Cardiac mitochondrial dysfunction

Curator: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP

This article is the FOURTH in a four-article Series covering the topic of the Roles of the Mitochondria in Cardiovascular Diseases. They include the following;

  • Mitochondria and Cardiovascular Disease: A Tribute to Richard Bing, Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/14/chapter-5-mitochondria-and-cardiovascular-disease/

  • Mitochondrial Metabolism and Cardiac Function, Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/14/mitochondrial-metabolism-and-cardiac-function/

  • Mitochondrial Dysfunction and Cardiac Disorders, Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/14/mitochondrial-dysfunction-and-cardiac-disorders/

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/14/reversal-of-cardiac-mitochondrial-dysfunction/

 

Mitochondrial metabolism and cardiac function

There is sufficient evidence to suggest that, even with optimal therapy, there is an

  • attenuation or loss of effectiveness of neurohormonal antagonism as heart failure worsens.

The production of oxygen radicals is increased in the failing heart, whereas

  • normal antioxidant enzyme activities are preserved.

Mitochondrial electron transport is an enzymatic source of oxygen radical generation and

  • can be a therapeutic target against oxidant-induced damage in the failing myocardium.

Therefore, future therapeutic targets

  • must address the cellular and molecular mechanisms that contribute to heart failure.

Furthermore, since  fundamental characteristics of the failing heart are 

  • defective mitochondrial energetics and
  • abnormal substrate metabolism

we might expect that substantial benefit may be derived from the development of therapies aimed at

  • preserving cardiac mitochondrial function and
  • optimizing substrate metabolism.

Nutrition and physiological function

Blockade of electron transport in isolated, perfused guinea pig hearts –
before ischaemia with the reversible complex I inhibitor amobarbital
  • decreased superoxide production and
  • preserved oxidative phosphorylation in cardiac mitochondria,
  • decreased myocardial damage.
But when ascorbic acid was administered orally to chronic heart failure patients, there were improvements
  • in endothelial function but
  • no improvement in skeletal muscle energy metabolism.
Angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors with trandolapril treatment  in models of heart failure
  • appear to preserve mitochondrial function
  • improving cardiac energy metabolism and
  • function in rats with chronic heart failure.
Similarly perindopril treatment   – in rat skeletal muscle after myocardial infarction -restored :
  • levels of the mitochondrial biogenesis transcription factors PPARg coactivator-1a and
  • nuclear respiratory factor-2a, and
  • prevented mitochondrial dysfunction
Tissue effects of ACE inhibition, such as
might activate intracellular signalling cascades that
  • stimulate mitochondrial biogenesis and
  • improve energy metabolism.
Clearly, the mechanisms of metabolic regulation by
  • existing cardioprotective agents require further investigation.

Substrate metabolism in the failing heart

Increased sympathetic drive in heart failure patients causes adipose tissue lipolysis, thus
  • elevating plasma FFA concentrations.
Myocardial FFA uptake rates are largely determined by circulating FFA concentrations.
In addition to being a major fuel in heart,
  • fatty acids are ligands for the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs),
    •  members of the nuclear hormone receptor (NHR) family.
One PPAR subtype, PPARa, is highly expressed in heart and skeletal muscle. PPARs regulate gene expression by
binding to response elements in the promoter region of target genes that control fatty acid metabolism, including
It has been known for many years that high plasma FFA concentrations are detrimental to the heart,
  • increasing oxygen consumption for any given workload.
Decreased myocardial oxygen efficiency could result, in part,
  • from the inherent stoichiometric inefficiency of fatty acid oxidation,
  • which accounts for the consumption of 12% more oxygen per ATP synthesized than glucose oxidation.

High levels of plasma FFAs have been associated with increased cardiac UCP3 levels in patients undergoing CABG(Fig) and

  • are believed to activate the uncoupling action of UCP3.

http://htmlimg1.scribdassets.com/8o5pfgywg0lyerj/images/4-244729cb6a.jpg

Fig .  Metabolic modulation of the failing heart can be achieved by inhibiting mitochondrial beta-oxidation with trimetazidine, or
  • free fatty acid (FFA) uptake via the carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT) system with perhexiline,
    • giving rise to more oxygen-efficient glucose oxidation.
Alternatively, CPT is inhibited by malonyl-coenzyme A (CoA),
  • synthesized from cytosolic acetyl-CoA by acetyl-CoA  carboxylase.
Pharmacological inhibition, or mutation, of
  • malonyl-CoA decarboxylase, which normally converts malonyl-CoA back to acetyl-CoA,
  • elevates malonyl-CoA levels, inhibiting mitochondrial FFA uptake and thus protects the failing heart.

Nutritional Support for the Mitochondria

Human Studies                                       Animal or In Vitro Studies

Alpha lipoic acid                                                    Resveratrol
Co-Enzyme Q10                                                      EgCG
Acetyl-L-Carnitine                                                Curcumin

Lipoic Acid & Acetyl-L-Carnitine

Alpha lipoic acid is known to be a mitochondrial antioxidant that preserves or improves mitochondrial function.

  •  lipoic acid can prevent arterial calcification, and
  • arterial calcification may be related to mitochondrial dysfunction
  • methods are under study to increase lipoic acid synthase production, the enzyme responsible for making lipoic acid in the body.

Co-Enzyme Q10

It is well known that statin drugs taken for high cholesterol severely reduce CoQ10 levels, and causes other negative cardiovascular side effects.
A  study on CAD patients has shown that over 8 weeks of supplementing with 300mg of CoQ10 reversed

  • mitochondrial dysfunction (as measured by a reduced lactate:pyruvate ratio) and
  • improved endothelial function (as measured by increased flow-mediated dilation)

Other Mitochondrial Antioxidants

Other natural compounds that have been shown to have antioxidant effects in the mitochondria include

  • resveratrol, found in wine and grapes,
  • curcumin from turmeric and
  • EGCG, found abundantly in green tea extract.

But no studies have been conducted for these compounds in CVD.

Metabolic syndrome and serum carotenoids: findings of a cross-sectional study
in Queensland, Australia

Metabolic syndrome and serum carotenoids.

T Coyne, TI Ibiebele, PD Baade, CS McClintock and JE Shaw.
Viertel Center for Research in Cancer Control, Cancer Council Queensland, and School of Public Health,
Queensland University of Technology and University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia
Several components of the metabolic syndrome are known to be oxidative stress-related conditions
  1. diabetes and
  2. cardiovascular disease,
Carotenoids are compounds derived primarily from plants and several have been shown to be potent antioxidant nutrients.
Both diabetes and cardiovascular disease are known to be oxidative stress-related conditions such that
  • antioxidant nutrients may play a protective role in these conditions.
Several cross–sectional surveys have found lower levels of serum carotenoids among those with impaired glucose metabolism or type 2 diabetes.
Carotenoids are compounds derived primarily from plants, several of which are known to be potent antioxidants.
Epidemiological evidence indicates that some serum carotenoids may play a protective role against the development of chronic diseases such as
  1. atherosclerosis,
  2. stroke,
  3. hypertension,
  4. certain cancers,
  5. inflammatory diseases and
  6. diabetic retinopathy.

The primary carotenoids found in human serum are

  1. α-carotene
  2. β-carotene
  3. β-cryptoxanthin
  4. lutein/zeaxanthin
  5. lycopene.
The aim of this study was to examine the associations between metabolic syndrome status and major serum carotenoids in adult Australians.
Data on the presence of the metabolic syndrome, based on International Diabetes Federation 2005 criteria, were collected from 1523 adults
aged 25 years and over in six randomly selected urban centers in Queensland, Australia, using a cross sectional study design.
The following were determined:
  1. Weight
  2. height
  3. BMI
  4. waist circumference
  5. blood pressure
  6. fasting and 2-34 hour blood glucose
  7. lipids
  8. five serum carotenoids.
Criteria used to assess the number of metabolic syndrome components present in a 171 participant using the
2005 International Diabetes Federation definition are as follows:
Components = 0 -none of the metabolic syndrome components (i.e. abdominal obesity, raised triglyceride,
reduced HDL-cholesterol, raised blood pressure, and impaired fasting plasma glucose) are present;
  1. Components = any 1 one of the five metabolic syndrome components is present ;
  2. Components = 2 – any two of the five components are present;
  3. Components = 3 any three of the components are present;
  4. Components = 4 – any four of the components are present;
  5. Components = 5 = all five metabolic syndrome components are present.
This study investigated the relationships between these five primary serum carotenoids and the metabolic syndrome
in a cross-sectional population-based study in Queensland, Australia.  Distributions of serum carotenoids were skewed
and therefore natural logarithmically transformed to better approximate the normal distribution for regression analyses.
Association between log transformed serum carotenoids as dependent variables and metabolic syndrome status were
assessed using multiple linear regression analysis. Results are reported as back transformed geometric means.
Analysis was performed for each serum carotenoid separately, and the sum of the five carotenoids,
adjusting for the following potential confounders:
  1. age
  2. sex
  3. education
  4. BMI
  5. smoking
  6. alcohol intake
  7. physical activity
  8. vitamin use.
Mean serum alpha-carotene, beta-carotene and the sum of the five carotenoid concentrations were significantly lower (p<0.05)
in persons with the metabolic syndrome (after adjusting for age,sex, education, BMI status, alcohol intake, smoking, physical activity
status and vitamin/mineral use) than persons without the syndrome. Alpha, beta and total carotenoids also decreased significantly
(p<0.05) with increased number of components of the metabolic syndrome, after adjusting for these confounders. These differences
were significant among former smokers and non-smokers, but not in current smokers. Low concentrations of serum
  • alpha-carotene,
  • beta carotene and
  • the sum of five carotenoids
appear to be associated with metabolic syndrome status.
The overall prevalence of the syndrome was 24% and was significantly higher among males than females. As would be expected, significant
differences in prevalence of the syndrome were seen with
  • body mass index
  • waist circumference
  • systolic and diastolic blood pressure
  • blood lipids.
Significant differences were also evident by
  • age group, smoking status, educational status and income.
Income was marginally inversely associated. The prevalence increased with age, and was lower in those with post graduate education.
No significant differences were seen by alcohol intake, physical activity levels,  vitamin usage, or fruit intake. There was actually an
  • inverse relationship between vegetable intake (not fruit) and serum carotenoids.
Those who consumed 4 serves or more of vegetable were less likely to have the metabolic syndrome
  • compared to those who consumed 1 serve or less of vegetables.
The mean concentrations of serum alpha-carotene, beta-carotene and the sum of the five carotenoids were significantly lower for participants
  • with the metabolic syndrome present compared with those without the syndrome, after adjusting for potential confounding variables.
Concentrations of alpha-carotene, beta-carotene and the sum of the five carotenoids decreased significantly as
  • the number of components of the metabolic syndrome increased after adjusting for potential confounding variables.
Similarly there was an inverse association between quartiles of
  • individual and total serum carotenoids and metabolic syndrome status and each of its components.
This study was designed to investigate the association between several serum carotenoids and the metabolic syndrome.
The data from the present population study suggest that several serum carotenoids are inversely related to the metabolic syndrome.
The study showed significantly lower concentrations present among those with the metabolic syndrome of
  1. α-carotene,
  2. β-carotene and
  3. the sum of the five carotenoids
 compared to those without.We also found decreasing concentrations of all the carotenoids tested as

  • the number of the metabolic syndrome components increased.
This was significant for
  1. α-carotene,
  2. β-carotene,
  3. β-cryptoxanthin
  4. total carotenoids.
    (not lycopenes)
These findings are consistent with data reported from the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III).
In the NHANES III study, significantly lower concentrations of all the carotenoids, except lycopene, were found among persons
with the metabolic syndrome compared with those without, after adjusting for confounding factors similar to those in our study.

Carnitine: A novel health factor-An overview. 

CD Dayanand, N Krishnamurthy, S Ashakiran, KN Shashidhar
Int J Pharm Biomed Res 2011; 2(2): 79-89.  ISSN No: 0976-0350
Carnitine comprises L-carnitine, acetyl –L-carnitine and Propionyl –L-carnitine. Carnitine is
  • obtained in greater amount from animal dietary sources than from plant sources.
The endogenous synthesis of carnitine takes place in animal tissues like
  • liver
  • kidney
  • brain
using precursor amino acids lysine and methionine by a pathway
  • dependent on iron, vitamin C, niacin, pyridoxine .
This is the basis of vegans generally depending on carnitine in larger proportion
  • through in vivo synthesis than omnivorous subjects.
The concentration of tri-methyl lysine residues and the tissue specificity of  butyro-betaine dehydrogenase
  • plays a significant role in regulating the carnitine biosynthesis.
Carnitine transport from the site of synthesis to target tissue occurs via blood.
The measurement of plasma carnitine concentration represents –
  • the balance between the rate of synthesis and rate of excretion
    • through specific transporter proteins.
The cellular functional role of carnitine depends on the uptake into cells through
  1. carnitine transport proteins and
  2. transport into mitochondrial matrix.
The function of carnitine is to traverse Long-chain Fatty Acids across inner mitochondrial membrane
  • for β-oxidation, thereby, generating ATP.
Carnitine deficiency results in muscle disorders.  The deficiency states are primary and secondar.
The primary is of systemic or myopathic, characterized by a defect of high affinity organic cation transporter protein (CTP)
  • present on the plasma membrane of liver and kidney and
  • also due to dysfunction of carnitine reabsorbtion through
    • similar transport proteins in renal tubules.
Secondary carnitine deficiency is associated with
  1. mitochondrial disorders and also
  2. defective β-oxidation such as CPT-II and acyl CoA dehydrogenase.
In recent times, carnitine has been extensively studied in various research activities to explore the therapeutic benefit.
Thus, carnitine justifies as a novel health factor.

Propionyl-L-carnitine Corrects Metabolic and Cardiovascular Alterations in
Diet-Induced Obese Mice and Improves Liver Respiratory Chain Activity

C Mingorance,  L Duluc, M Chalopin, G Simard, et al.
PLC improved the insulin-resistant state and reversed the increased total cholesterol
but not the increase in free fatty acid, triglyceride and HDL/LDL ratio induced by high-fat diet.
Vehicle-HF exhibited a reduced

  • cardiac output/body weight ratio,
  • endothelial dysfunction and
  • tissue decrease of NO production,

all of them being improved by PLC treatment.
The decrease of hepatic mitochondrial activity by high-fat diet was reversed by PLC.

Oral administration of PLC improves the insulin-resistant state developed by obese animals and
decreases the cardiovascular risk associated with the metabolically impaired mitochondrial function.

Omega-3 Fatty Acid and cardioprotection

The Benefits of Flaxseed    

By Elaine Magee, MPH, RD    WebMD Expert Column
Some call it one of the most powerful plant foods on the planet. There’s some evidence it may help reduce your risk of

  • heart disease, cancer, stroke, and diabetes.

That’s quite a tall order for a tiny seed that’s been around for centuries.

Flaxseed was cultivated in Babylon as early as 3000 BC. In the 8th century, King Charlemagne believed so strongly in the
health benefits of flaxseed that he passed laws requiring his subjects to consume it. Now, thirteen centuries later, some
experts say we have preliminary research to back up what Charlemagne suspected.

http://img.webmd.com/dtmcms/live/webmd/consumer_assets/site_images/article_
thumbnails/features/benefits_of_flaxseed_features/375x321_benefits_of_flaxseed_features.jpg

Not only has consumer demand for flaxseed grown, agricultural use has also increased.
Flaxseed is what’s used to feed all those chickens that are laying eggs with higher levels of omega-3 fatty acids.
Although flaxseed contains all sorts of healthy components, it owes its primary healthy reputation to three of them:

  1. Omega-3 essential fatty acids, have been shown to have heart-healthy effects.  1.8 grams of plant omega-3s/tablespoon ground.
  2. Lignans, which have both plant estrogen and antioxidant qualities.  75 to 800 times more lignans than other plant foods.
  3. Fiber. Flaxseed contains both the soluble and insoluble types.

Omega-3 Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids and Cardiovascular Diseases

CJ Lavie, RV Milani, MR Mehra, and HO Ventura.
J. Am. Coll. Cardiol. 2009;54;585-594.   http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jacc.2009.02.084
Fish oil is obtained in the human diet by eating oily fish, such as
  • herring, mackerel, salmon, albacore tuna, and sardines, or
  • by consuming fish oil supplements or cod liver oil.
Fish do not naturally produce these oils, but obtain them through the ocean food chain from the marine microorganisms
  • that are the original source of the omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (ω-3 PUFA) found in fish oils.
Numerous prospective and retrospective trials from many countries, including the U.S., have shown that moderate
  • fish oil consumption decreases the risk of major cardiovascular (CV) events, such as
  1. myocardial infarction (MI),
  2. sudden cardiac death (SCD),
  3. coronary heart disease (CHD),
  4. atrial fibrillation (AF), and most recently,
  5. death in patients with heart failure (HF).
Most of the evidence for benefits of the ω-3 PUFA has been obtained for
  • eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), the long-chain fatty acids in this family.
There is support for a benefit from alpha-linolenic acid (ALA),
  • the plant-based precursor of EPA.
The American Heart Association (AHA) has currently endorsed the use of ω-3 PUFA in patients with documented CHD

  • at a dose of approximately 1 g/day of combined DHA and EPA, either in the form of fatty fish or fish oil supplements
The health benefits of these long chain fatty acids are numerous and remain an active area of research.
Omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid (ω-3 PUFA) therapy continues to show great promise in primary and,
  • particularly in secondary prevention of cardiovascular (CV) diseases.
This portion of discussion summarizes the current scientific data on the effects of the long chain ω-3 PUFA
  • in the primary and secondary prevention of various CV disorders.
The most compelling evidence for CV benefits of ω-3 PUFA comes from 4 controlled trials
  • of nearly 40,000 participants randomized to receive eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA)
  • with or without docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) in studies of patients
    • in primary prevention,
    • after myocardial infarction, and
    • with heart failure (HF).
The evidence from retrospective epidemiologic studies and from large randomized controlled trials
show the benefits of ω-3 PUFA, specifically EPA and DHA, in primary and secondary CV prevention
and provide insight into potential mechanisms of these observed benefits.

Background Epidemiologic Evidence

During the past 3 decades, numerous epidemiologic and observational studies have been published on the CV benefits of ω-3 PUFA.
As early as 1944, Sinclair described the rarity of CHD in Greenland Eskimos, who consumed a diet high in whale, seal, and fish.
More than 30 years ago, Bang and Dyberg reported that despite a diet low in fruit, vegetables, and complex carbohydrates but
high in saturated fat and cholesterol, serum cholesterol and triglycerides were lower in Greenland Inuit than in age-matched residents
of Denmark, and the risk of MI was markedly lower in the Greenland population compared with the Danes. These initial observations raised
speculation on the potential benefits of ω-3 PUFA (particularly EPA and DHA) as the protective “Eskimo factor”.
Potential EPA and DHA Effects   
  1. Antiarrhythmic effects
  2. Improvements in autonomic function
  3. Decreased platelet aggregation
  4. Vasodilation
  5. Decreased blood pressure
  6. Anti-inflammatory effects
  7. Improvements in endothelial function
  8. Plaque stabilization
  9. Reduced atherosclerosis
  10. Reduced free fatty acids and triglycerides
  11. Up-regulated adiponectin synthesis
  12. Reduced collagen deposition
The target EPA + DHA consumption should be at least 500 mg/day for individuals without underlying overt CV disease
  • and at least 800 to 1,000 mg/day for individuals with known coronary heart disease and HF.
Further studies are needed to determine optimal dosing and the relative ratio of DHA and EPA ω-3 PUFA that
  • provides maximal cardioprotection in those at risk of CV disease
  • as well in the treatment of atherosclerotic, arrhythmic, and primary myocardial disorders.
Lavie et al.  Omega-3 PUFA and CV Diseases  J Am Coll Cardiol 2009; 54(7): 585–94

Assessing Appropriateness of Lipid Management Among Patients With Diabetes Mellitus

Moving From Target to Treatment.   AJ Beard, TP Hofer, JR Downs, et al. and Diabetes Clinical Action Measures Workgroup
Performance measures that emphasize only a treat-to-target approach may motivate ove-rtreatment with high-dose statins,
  • potentially leading to adverse events and unnecessary costs.
We developed a clinical action performance measure for lipid management in patients with diabetes mellitus that is designed
  • to encourage appropriate treatment with moderate-dose statins while minimizing over-treatment.
We examined data from July 2010 to June 2011 for 964 818 active Veterans Affairs primary care patients ≥18 years of age with diabetes mellitus.
We defined 3 conditions as successfully meeting the clinical action measure for patients 50 to 75 years old:
  1.  having a low-density lipoprotein (LDL) <100 mg/dL,
  2. taking a moderate-dose statin regardless of LDL level or measurement, or
  3. receiving appropriate clinical action (starting, switching, or intensifying statin therapy) if LDL is ≥100 mg/dL.
We examined possible over-treatment for patients ≥18 years of age by examining the proportion of patients
  • without ischemic heart disease who were on a high-dose statin.
We then examined variability in measure attainment across 881 facilities using 2-level hierarchical multivariable logistic models.
Of 668 209 patients with diabetes mellitus who were 50 to 75 years of age, 84.6% passed the clinical action measure:
  1. 67.2% with LDL <100 mg/dL,
  2. 13.0% with LDL ≥100 mg/dL and either on a moderate-dose statin (7.5%) or with appropriate clinical action (5.5%), and
  3. 4.4% with no index LDL on at least a moderate-dose statin. Of the entire cohort ≥18 years of age, 13.7% were potentially over-treated.
Use of a performance measure that credits appropriate clinical action indicates that almost 85% of diabetic veterans 50 to 75 years of age
  • are receiving appropriate dyslipidemia management.

Exercise training and mitochondria in heart failure

The beneficial effects of exercise in the rehabilitation of patients with heart failure are well established,
with improvements observed in
  • exercise capacity,
  • quality of life,
  • hospitalization rates and
  • morbidity/mortality.
There is no evidence of training-induced
improvements in cardiac energy metabolism or
  • mitochondrial function, and
  • no modification of myocardial oxidative capacity,
  • oxidative enzymes, or
  • energy transfer enzymes
in exercising rats with experimental heart failure, but there is  evidence of
There are also improvements in
  • skeletal muscle oxidative capacity with
  • increased mitochondrial density
following endurance training in heart failure patients associated with alleviation of symptoms such as
  • exercise intolerance and
  • chronic fatigue.
The mechanism underlying improvements in mitochondrial function may perhaps be a result of
  • more effective peripheral oxygen delivery following training,
  • alleviating tissue hypoxia and oxidative stress.

Treating Type 2 diabetes, and lowering cardiovascular disease risk

Treating Diabetes and Obesity with an FGF21-Mimetic Antibody
Activating the βKlotho/FGFR1c Receptor Complex

IN Foltz, S Hu, C King, Xinle Wu, et al.  Amgen and Texas A&M HSC, Houston, TX.
Sci Transl Med  Nov 2012; 4(162), p. 162ra153
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/scitranslmed.3004690

Fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21) is a distinctive member of the FGF family with potent beneficial effects on

  1. lipid
  2. body weight
  3. glucose metabolism

A monoclonal antibody, mimAb1, binds to βKlotho with high affinity and specifically

  • activates signaling from the βKlotho/FGFR1c (FGF receptor 1c) receptor complex.

Injection of mimAb1 into obese cynomolgus monkeys led to FGF21-like metabolic effects:

  1. decreases in body weight,
  2. plasma insulin,
  3. triglycerides, and
  4. glucose during tolerance testing.

Mice with adipose-selective FGFR1 knockout were refractory to FGF21-induced improvements

  • in glucose metabolism and body weight.

mimAb1 depends on βKlotho to activate FGFR1c, but

  • it is not expected to induce side effects caused by activating FGFR1c alone.

The results in obese monkeys (with mimAb1) and in FGFR1 knockout mice (with FGF21) demonstrated

  • the essential role of FGFR1c in FGF21 function and
  • suggest fat as a critical target tissue for the cytokine and antibody.

This antibody activates FGF21-like signaling through cell surface receptors, and  provided

  • preclinical validation for an innovative therapeutic approach to diabetes and obesity.

Influencing Factors on Cardiac Structure and Function Beyond Glycemic Control
in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM)

R Ichikawa, M Daimon, T Miyazaki, T Kawata, et al.     Cardiovasc Diabetol. 2013;12(38)

We studied 148 asymptomatic patients with T2DM without overt heart disease.
Early (E) and late (A) diastolic mitral flow velocity and early diastolic mitral annular velocity (e’)

  • were measured for assessing left ventricular (LV) diastolic function.

In addition

  • insulin resistance,
  • non-esterified fatty acid,
  • high-sensitive CRP,
  • estimated glomerular filtration rate,
  • waist/hip ratio,
  • abdominal visceral adipose tissue (VAT),
  • subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT)

In T2DM (compared to controls),

  • E/A and e’ were significantly lower, and
  • E/e’, left atrial volume and LV mass were significantly greater

VAT  and age were independent determinants of

  • left atrial volume (β =0.203, p=0.011),
  • E/A (β =−0.208, p=0.002), e’ (β =−0.354, p<0.001) and
  • E/e’ (β=0.220, p=0.003).

Independent determinants of LV mass were

  • systolic blood pressure,
  • waist-hip ratio (β=0.173, p=0.024)
  • VAT/SAT ratio (β=0.162, p=0.049)

Excessive visceral fat accompanied by adipocyte dysfunction may play a greater role than

  • glycemic control in the development of diastolic dysfunction and LV hypertrophy in T2DM

Inhibition of oxidative stress and mtDNA damage

Novel pharmacological agents are needed that

  • optimize substrate metabolism and
  • maintain mitochondrial integrity,
  • improve oxidative capacity in heart and skeletal muscle, and
  • alleviate many of the clinical symptoms associated with heart failure.

The evidence for the attenuation or loss of effectiveness of neurohormonal antagonism as heart failure worsens

  • indicates future therapeutic targets must address the cellular and molecular mechanisms that contribute to heart failure.

Pharmacological Targets of oxidative stress and mitochondrial damage

Defective mitochondrial energetics and abnormal substrate metabolism are fundamental characteristics of CHF.

A significant benefit may be derived from developing therapies aimed at

  • preserving cardiac mitochondrial function and
  • optimizing substrate metabolism.
Oxidative stress is enhanced in myocardial remodelling and failure. The increased production of oxygen radicals in the failing heart
  • with preserved antioxidant enzyme activities suggests
  • mitochondrial electron transport as a source of oxygen radical generation
  • can be a therapeutic target against oxidant-induced damage in the failing myocardium.
Chronic increases in oxygen radical production in the mitochondria
  • leads to mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) damage,
  • functional decline,
  • further oxygen radical generation, and
  • cellular injury.
MtDNA defects may thus play an important role in the
  • development and progression of myocardial remodelling and failure.
Reactive oxygen species induce
  1. myocyte hypertrophy,
  2. apoptosis, and
  3. interstitial fibrosis
  4. by activating matrix metallo-proteinases,
  5. promoting the development and
  6. progression of maladaptive myocardial remodelling and failure.
Oxidative stress has direct effects on cellular structure and function and
  • may activate integral signalling molecules in myocardial remodelling and failure (Figure).
ROS result in a phenotype characterized by
  • hypertrophy and apoptosis in isolated cardiac myocytes.
Therefore, oxidative stress and mtDNA damage are good therapeutic targets.
Overexpression of the genes for
  • peroxiredoxin-3 (Prx-3), a mitochondrial antioxidant, or
  • mitochondrial transcription factor A (TFAM),
    • could ameliorate the decline in mtDNA copy number in failing hearts.
Consistent with alterations in mtDNA, the
  • decrease in mitochondrial function was prevented,
  • proving that the activation of Prx-3 or TFAM gene expression
  • could ameliorate the pathophysiological processes seen
  1. in mitochondrial dysfunction and
  2. myocardial remodelling.
Inhibition of oxidative stress and mtDNA damage
  • could be novel and effective treatment strategies for heart failure.
Proposed mechanisms through which overexpression of the
  • mitochondrial transcription factor A (TFAM) gene prevents
  • mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) damage,
  • oxidative stress, and
  • myocardial remodelling and failure.
In wild-type mice, mitochondrial transcription factor A
  • directly interacts with mitochondrial DNA to form nucleoids.
Stress such as ischaemia causes mitochondrial DNA damage, which
  1. increases the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS)
  2. leading to a catastrophic cycle of mitochondrial electron transport impairment,
  3. further reactive oxygen species generation, and mitochondrial dysfunction.
TFAM overexpression may protect mitochondrial DNA from damage by
  1. directly binding and stabilizing mitochondrial DNA and
  2. increasing the steady-state levels of mitochondrial DNA
ameliorating mitochondrial dysfunction and thus the development and progression of heart failure.

Conclusion

Heart failure is a multifactorial syndrome that is characterized by
  • abnormal energetics and substrate metabolism in heart and skeletal muscle.
Although existing therapies have been beneficial, there is a clear need for new approaches to treatment.
Pharmacological targeting of the cellular stresses underlying mitochondrial dysfunction, such as
  • elevated fatty acid levels,
  • tissue hypoxia and oxidative stress and
  • metabolic modulation of heart and skeletal muscle mitochondria,
    • appears to offer a promising therapeutic strategy for tackling heart failure.
Murray AJ, Anderson RE, Watson GC, et al. Uncoupling proteins in human heart. Lancet 2004; 364:1786.
Delarue J, Magnan C. Free fatty acids and insulin resistance. Curr Opin ClinNutr Metab Care 2007; 10:142
Lee L, Campbell R, Scheuermann-Freestone M, et al. Metabolic modulation with perhexiline in chronic heart failure: a randomized, controlled trialof short-term use of a novel treatment. Circulation 2005; 112:3280
Tsutsui H, Kinugawa S, Matsushima S. Mitochondrial oxidative stress and dysfunction in myocardial remodelling. Cardiovasc Res. 2009;81(3):449-56. http://dxdoi.org/10.1093/cvr/cvn280.
C Maack, M Böhm. Targeting Mitochondrial Oxidative Stress in Heart Failure. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2011;58(1):83-86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jacc.2011.01.032

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Mitochondrial dynamics and cardiovascular diseases    Ritu Saxena
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/14/mitochondrial-dynamics-and-cardiovascular-diseases/

Mitochondrial Damage and Repair under Oxidative Stress   larryhbern
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/28/mitochondrial-damage-and-repair-under-oxidative-stress/

Mitochondria: Origin from oxygen free environment, role in aerobic glycolysis, metabolic adaptation   larryhbern
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/26/mitochondria-origin-from-oxygen-free-environment-role-in-aerobic-glycolysis-metabolic-adaptation/

Ca2+ signaling: transcriptional control     larryhbern
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/06/ca2-signaling-transcriptional-control/

MIT Scientists on Proteomics: All the Proteins in the Mitochondrial Matrix identified  Aviva Lev-Ari
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/02/03/mit-scientists-on-proteomics-all-the-proteins-in-the-mitochondrial-matrix-identified/

Nitric Oxide has a ubiquitous role in the regulation of glycolysis -with a concomitant influence on mitochondrial function    larryhbern
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/16/nitric-oxide-has-a-ubiquitous-role-in-the-regulation-of-glycolysis-with-a-concomitant-influence-on-mitochondrial-function/

Ubiquinin-Proteosome pathway, autophagy, the mitochondrion, proteolysis and cell apoptosis  larryhbern
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/02/14/ubiquinin-proteosome-pathway-autophagy-the-mitochondrion-proteolysis-and-cell-apoptosis-reconsidered/

Low Bioavailability of Nitric Oxide due to Misbalance in Cell Free Hemoglobin in Sickle Cell Disease – A Computational Model   Anamika Sarkar
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/09/low-bioavailability-of-nitric-oxide-due-to-misbalance-in-cell-free-hemoglobin-in-sickle-cell-disease-a-computational-model/

The rationale and use of inhaled NO in Pulmonary Artery Hypertension and Right Sided Heart Failure    larryhbern
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/20/the-rationale-and-use-of-inhaled-no-in-pulmonary-artery-hypertension-and-right-sided-heart-failure/

Mitochondria and Cardiovascular Disease: A Tribute to Richard Bing, Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP
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Mitochondrial Metabolism and Cardiac Function, Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP
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Mitochondrial Dysfunction and Cardiac Disorders, Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP
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Reversal of Cardiac mitochondrial dysfunction, Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP
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Clinical Trials Results for Endothelin System: Pathophysiological role in Chronic Heart Failure, Acute Coronary Syndromes and MI – Marker of Disease Severity or Genetic Determination? Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 10/19/2012
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Endothelin Receptors in Cardiovascular Diseases: The Role of eNOS Stimulation, Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 10/4/2012
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Inhibition of ET-1, ETA and ETA-ETB, Induction of NO production, stimulation of eNOS and Treatment Regime with PPAR-gamma agonists (TZD): cEPCs Endogenous Augmentation for Cardiovascular Risk Reduction – A Bibliography, Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 10/4/2012
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Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) and the Role of agent alternatives in endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase (eNOS) Activation and Nitric Oxide Production, Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 7/19/2012 http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/19/cardiovascular-disease-cvd-and-the-role-of-agent-alternatives-in-endothelial-nitric-oxide-synthase-enos-activation-and-nitric-oxide-production/

Cardiovascular Risk Inflammatory Marker: Risk Assessment for Coronary Heart Disease and Ischemic Stroke – Atherosclerosis. Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 10/30/2012
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Cholesteryl Ester Transfer Protein (CETP) Inhibitor: Potential of Anacetrapib to treat Atherosclerosis and CAD.     Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 4/7/2013
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Hypertriglyceridemia concurrent Hyperlipidemia: Vertical Density Gradient Ultracentrifugation a Better Test to Prevent Undertreatment of High-Risk Cardiac Patients, Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN  4/4/2013  http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/04/hypertriglyceridemia-concurrent-hyperlipidemia-vertical-density-gradient-ultracentrifugation-a-better-test-to-prevent-undertreatment-of-high-risk-cardiac-patients/

Fight against Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease: A Biologics not a Small Molecule – Recombinant Human lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase (rhLCAT) attracted AstraZeneca to acquire AlphaCore.
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High-Density Lipoprotein (HDL): An Independent Predictor of Endothelial Function & Atherosclerosis, A Modulator, An Agonist, A Biomarker for Cardiovascular Risk.   Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 3/31/2013
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/31/high-density-lipoprotein-hdl-an-independent-predictor-of-endothelial-function-artherosclerosis-a-modulator-an-agonist-a-biomarker-for-cardiovascular-risk/

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Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 11/13/2012
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Sulfur-Deficiciency and Hyperhomocysteinemia, L H Bernstein, MD, FACP
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Structure of the human mitochondrial genome.

Structure of the human mitochondrial genome. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

English: Treatment Guidelines for Chronic Hear...

English: Treatment Guidelines for Chronic Heart Failure (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

English: Oxidative stress process Italiano: Pr...

English: Oxidative stress process Italiano: Processo dello stress ossidativo (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Diagram taken from the paper "Dissection ...

Diagram taken from the paper “Dissection of mitochondrial superhaplogroup H using coding region SNPs” (Photo credit: Asparagirl)

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Mitochondrial Metabolism and Cardiac Function

Curator: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP

This article is the SECOND in a four-article Series covering the topic of the Roles of the Mitochondria in Cardiovascular Diseases. They include the following;

The mitochondrion serves a critical role as a platform for
  • energy transduction,
  • signaling, and
  • cell death pathways
relevant to common diseases of the myocardium such as heart failure. This review focuses on the molecular regulatory events involved in mitochondrial energy metabolism.
This is followed by the derangements known to occur in the development of heart failure.

 Cardiac Energy Metabolism

All cellular processes are driven by ATP-dependent pathways. The heart has perpetually high energy demands related to
  • the maintenance of specialized cellular processes, including
    • ion transport,
    • sarcomeric function, and
    • intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis.
Myocardial workload (energy demand) and energy substrate availability (supply) are in continual flux. Thus, ATP-generating pathways must

  • respond proportionately to dynamic fluctuations in physiological demands and fuel delivery.
In order to support contractile activity, the human heart requires
  • a daily synthesis of approximately 30kg of ATP, via
    • oxidative phosphorylation at
    • the inner mitochondrial membrane.
These metabolic  processes are regulated, involving
  • allosteric control of enzyme activity,
  • signal transduction events, and
  • the activity of genes encoding
    • rate-limiting enzymes and proteins.
Catabolism of exogenous substrates ,such as
  • fatty acids,
  • glucose,
  • pyruvate,
  • lactate and
  • ketone bodies,
generates most of the reduced compounds,
  • NADH (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, reduced) and
  • FADH2 (flavin adenine dinucleotide, reduced),
which are necessary for mitochondrial electron transport (Fig. 1).
Fig 1  Fatty acid beta-oxidation and the Krebs cycle produce
  1. nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, reduced (NADH) and
  2. flavin adenine dinucleotide, reduced(FADH2),
which are oxidized by complexes I and II, respectively, of
Electrons are transferred through the chain to the final acceptor, namely oxygen(O2).
The free energy from electron transfer
  1. is used to pump hydrogen out of the mitochondria and
  2. generate an electrochemical gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane.
This gradient is the driving force for ATP synthesis via the ATP synthase. Alternatively,
H can enter the mitochondria by a mechanism not coupled to ATP synthesis, via
  • the uncoupling proteins(UCPs), which results in the dissipation of energy.

[ANT, adenine nucleotide translocase; CoA, coenzymeA; FAT, fatty acid transporter; GLUT, glucose transporter;

NAD, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide; TCA, tricarboxylic acid].

Cardiac Energy Metabolic Pathways

 Oxidation of free fatty acids (FFAs) and glucose in mitochondria
  • accounts for the vast majority of ATP generation in the healthy adult heart.
FFAs are the preferred substrate in the adult myocardium,
  • supplying 70-90% of total ATP.
FAs derived from circulating triglyceride-rich lipoproteins and albumin bound nonesterified FAs
  • are oxidized in the mitochondrial matrix by the process of beta-oxidation (FAO), whereas
pyruvate derived from glucose and lactate
  • is oxidized by the pyruvate-dehydrogenase (PDH) complex,
    • localized within the inner mitochondrial membrane.
Acetyl-CoA, derived from both pathways,
  • enters the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle.
Reduced flavin adenine dinucleotide (FADH2) and NADH are generated, respectively, via
  • substrate flux through the
The reducing equivalents enter the electron transport (ET) chain,
  • producing an electrochemical gradient across the mitochondrial membrane
  • that drives ATP synthesis in the presence of molecular oxygen (oxidative phosphorylation).
The relative contributions of each of these substrates are determined
  • by their availability
  • cardiac workload and
  • hormonal status
In the healthy, normal heart, the ATP requirement is largely met in the actively metabolic mitochondria by
  • the catabolism of free fatty acids (FFAs) via beta-oxidation,
  • the tricarboxylic acid cycle and
  • oxidative phosphorylation
giving rise to a greater ATP yield per C2 unit than with glucose.
The relative contribution of glucose to the mitochondrial acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA) pool increases
  • during the postprandial period,
    • when the heart is insulin stimulated, and
  • during exercise
  • hypoxia, or
  • ischemia
when glucose is favored as a more oxygen-efficient substrate than
  • FFAs (greater ATP yield per oxygen molecule consumed).
Substrate switching in the heart can also be achieved by
  • acute alterations in transcriptional regulation of key metabolic enzymes
  • in response to alterations in substrate levels and oxygen availability, or
  • indeed by the intracellular circadian clock.
This continual process of fine adjustment in fuel selection
  • allows cardiac mitochondria to function
  • under a range of metabolic conditions to meet the high energy demands of the heart.
Mitochondrial enzymes are encoded by both nuclear and mitochondrial genes.
All of the enzymes of
  1. beta-oxidation and the TCA cycle, and
  2. most of the subunits of Electron Transfer/Oxidative Phosphorylation,
    • are encoded by nuclear genes.
The mitochondrial genome is comprised of
  • 1 circular double-stranded chromosome that encodes
  • 13 ET chain subunits within complexes I, III, and IV.
Since mitochondrial number and function require both nuclear and mitochondrial-encoded genes,
  • coordinated mechanisms exist to regulate the 2 genomes and
  • determine overall cardiac oxidative capacity.
In addition, distinct pathways exist to coordinately regulate
  • nuclear genes encoding component mitochondrial pathways.

Early Postnatal Low-protein Nutrition, Metabolic Programming and
the Autonomic Nervous System in Adult Life.

JC de Oliveira, S Grassiolli, C Gravena, PCF de Mathias  Nutr Metab. 2012;9(80)

The developmental origins of health and disease (DOHaD) hypothesis stipulates that adult metabolic disease

  • may be programmed during the perinatal stage.

A large amount of evidence suggests that the etiology of obesity is not only related to food abundance

  • but also to food restriction during early life.

Protein restriction during lactation has been used as a rat model of metabolic programming

  • to study the impact of perinatal malnutrition on adult metabolism.

In contrast to protein restriction during fetal life, protein restriction during lactation did not appear to cause

  • either obesity or the hallmarks of metabolic syndrome, such as hyperinsulinemia, when individuals reached adulthood.

Protein restriction provokes body underweight and hypoinsulinemia.
Hypoinsulinemia programs adult rats to maintain normoglycemia,

  • pancreatic β-cells are less sensitive to secretion stimuli:
  1.  glucose and
  2. cholinergic agents.

These pancreatic dysfunctions are attributed to an imbalance of ANS activity

  • recorded in adult rats that experienced maternal protein restriction

Several studies have reported that the ANS activity is altered in under- or malnourished organisms. After weaning,

  • rats fed a chronically protein-deficient diet exhibited low activity of the vagus nerve,
  • whereas high sympathetic activity was recorded

These data were in agreement with a low insulin response to glucose.
Pancreatic islets isolated from protein-restricted rats showed

  • weak glucose and cholinergic insulin tropic responses
  • suggesting that pancreatic β-cell dysfunction may be attributed to altered ANS activity

Food abundance or restriction with regard to body weight control involves changes in

  • metabolic homeostasis and ANS balance activity.

Although the secretion of insulin by the pancreatic β-cells is increased in people who were overweight,

  • it is diminished in people who were underweight.

Changes in the ANS activity may constitute the mechanisms underlying the β-cell dysfunction:

  • the high PNS tonus observed in obese individuals constantly potentiates insulin secretion,
  • whereas the low activity reported in underweight individuals is associated with a weak cholinergic insulin tropic effect.

Under Nutrition Early in Life and Epigenetic Modifications, Association With Metabolic Diseases Risk

relevant to this issue is the role of epigenetic changes in the increased risk of developing metabolic diseases,

  • such as type 2 diabetes and obesity, later in life.

Epigenetic mechanisms, such as DNA methylation and/or nucleoprotein acetylation/methylation, are

  • crucial to the normal/physiological development of several tissues in mammals, and
  • they involve several mechanisms to guarantee fluctuations of enzymes and other proteins that regulate the metabolism.

The intrauterine phase of development is particularly important for the genomic processes related to genes associated with metabolic pathways.
This phase of life may be particularly important for nutritional disturbance. In humans who experienced the Dutch famine Winter in 1944–1945 and
in rats that were deprived of food in utero, epigenetic modifications were detected in

  • the insulin-like growth factor 2 (IGF2) and
  • pancreatic and duodenal home box 1 (Pdx1),

the major factors involved in pancreas development and pancreatic β-cell maturation.
The pancreas and the pancreatic β-cells develop during the embryonic phase, but the postnatal life is also crucial for

  • the maintenance processes that control the β-cell mass:
  1. proliferation,
  2. neogenesis
  3. apoptosis.

Nutritional Restriction to the Fetus: A Risk of Obesity Onset

If an abundant diet is offered to people who have been undernourished during the perinatal life,

  • this opportunity induces a metabolic shift toward the storage of energy and high fat tissue accumulation

The concept of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease extends to any type of stressful situations that may

  • predispose babies or pups to develop metabolic disorders when they reach adulthood.

Programmed Metabolism and Insulin Secretion-coupling Process

What are the mechanisms involved in the low glucose insulin tropic response observed in low protein-programmed lean rats?
The pancreatic β-cells secrete insulin when stimulated mostly by glucose. However, several nutrients, such as

  • amino acids,
  • fatty acids,
  • and their metabolites,

stimulate cellular metabolism and increase ATP production.

ATP-sensitive potassium channels (KATP) are inactivated by an increased ATP/ADP ratio. This provokes

  • membrane depolarization and
  • the activation of voltage-dependent calcium channels.

These ionic changes increase the intracellular calcium concentration, which is involved in

  • the export of insulin to the bloodstream.

Glucose may also stimulate insulin secretion by alternative pathways involving KATP channels.

Programmed Metabolism and Insulin Tropic Effects of Neurotransmitters

Insulin release is modulated by non-nutrient secretagogues, such as neurotransmitters, which

  • enhance or inhibit glucose-stimulated insulin secretion.

Pancreatic β-cells contain several receptors for neurotransmitters and Neuropeptide, such as

  • adrenoceptors and cholinergic muscarinic receptors (mAChRs).

These receptors are stimulated by efferent signals from the central nervous system, including the ANS,

  • throughout their neural ends for pancreatic β-cells.

During blood glucose level oscillations, the β-cells receive inputs from

  • the parasympathetic and sympathetic systems to participate in glycemic regulation.

Overall, acetylcholine promotes the potentiation of glucose-induced insulin secretion,

  • whereas noradrenaline and adrenaline inhibit this response.

Functional studies of mAChR subtypes have revealed that M1 and particularly M3 are the receptors that are involved in

  • the insulin tropic effect of acetylcholine.

Interestingly, it was reported that M3mAChR gene knockout mice are

  • underweight,
  • hypophagic and
  • hypoinsulinemic,

as are adult rats that were protein-restricted during lactation.
The pancreatic islets from M3mAChR mice (-/-) showed a reduced secretory response to cholinergic agonists.
In studies using transgenic mice in which the pancreatic β-cell M3mAChRs are chronically stimulated,

  • an improvement of glycemic control has been observed

Adult male rat offspring from whose mothers were protein-restricted during lactation

  • exhibit a low PNS activity.

Evidence suggests that ANS changes may contribute to the impairment of glycemic homeostasis in metabolically programmed rats.

Pathways involved in cardiac energy metabolism.

FA and glucose oxidation are the main ATP-generating pathways in the adult mammalian heart.
Acetyl-CoA derived from FA and glucose oxidation is
  • further oxidized in the TCA cycle to generate NADH and FADH2, which
  • enter the ET/oxidative phosphorylation pathway and drive ATP synthesis.
Genes encoding enzymes involved at multiple steps of these metabolic pathways
  1. uptake,
  2. esterification,
  3. mitochondrial transport,
  4. and oxidation
are transcriptionally regulated by PGC-1a
  • with its nuclear receptor partners, including PPARs and ERRs .
Glucose uptake/oxidation and electron transport/oxidative phosphorylation pathways are also regulated by PGC-1a via
  • other transcription factors, such as MEF-2 and NRF-1.

[Cyt c, cytochrome c]

 Fetal metabolism of carbohydrate utilization

This reviewer poses the question of whether the fetal cardiac metabolism, which is characterized by a (facultative) anaerobic glycolysis,
  • results in lactate production that is not redirected into the TCA cycle.
An unexamined, but related question is whether there is an associated change in the ratio of
  • mitochondrial to cytoplasmic malate dehydrogenase isoenzyme activity (m-MDH:c-MDH).
The fetal heart operates without oxygenation from a functioning lung, bathed in amniotic fluid.
An enzymatic feature might be expressed in a facultative anaerobic cytplasmic glycolytic pathway characterized by
  • a decrease in the h-type lactate dehydrogenase (LD) isoenzyme(s) (LD1, LD2) with a predominance of
  • the m-type LD isoenzymes (LD3, LD4, LD5).
The observation here is that the heart muscle is a syncytium, and it functions at a highly regulated rate,
  • not with the spurts of activity seen in skeletal muscle.
In another article in this series, there are morphological changes that occur in the heart mitochondria, and
  • there are three locations, as if the organelle itself were an organ.
The normal functioning myocardium can utilize lactic acid accumulated in the bloodstream during extreme exercise as fuel.
This is a virtue of mitochondrial function.  There is a significant functional difference between the roles of the h- and m-type LD isoenzymes.
The h-type is a regulatory enzyme that forms a complex as NADH is converted to NAD+ between the
  • LD (H4, H3M; LD1, LD2),
  • oxidized pyridine nucleotide coenzyme, and
  • pyruvate
The complex forms in 200 msec as observed in the Aminco-Morrow stop-flow analyzer.  This is not the case for the m-type isoenzyme.
I presume that it is not a factor in embryonic heart.  It would become a factor after birth with the expansion of the lungs.
This would also bring to the discussion the effect of severe restrictive lung disease on cardiac metabolism.

Related References:

LH Bernstein,  patents: Malate dehydrogenase method,  The lactate dehydrogenase method
LH Bernstein, J Everse. Determination of the isoenzyme levels of lactate dehydrogenase. Methods Enzymol 1975; 41 47-52    ICID: 825516
LH Bernstein, J Everse, N Shioura, PJ Russell. Detection of cardiac damage using a steady state assay for lactate dehydrogenase isoenzymes in serum.   J Mol Cell Cardiol 1974; 6(4):297-315  ICID: 825597
LH Bernstein, MB Grisham, KD Cole, J Everse . Substrate inhibition of the mitochondrial and cytoplasmic malate dehydrogenases. J Biol Chem 1978; 253(24):8697-8701. ICID: 825513
R Belding, L Bernstein, G Reynoso. An evaluation of the immunochemical LD1 method in routine clinical practice. Clin Chem 1981; 27(10):1027-1028.   ICID: 844981
J Adan, L H Bernstein, J Babb. Lactate dehydrogenase isoenzyme-1/total ratio: accurate for determining the existence of myocardial infarction. Clin Chem 1986; 32(4):624-628.  ICID: 825540
MB Grisham, LH Bernstein, J Everse. The cytoplasmic malate dehydrogenase in neoplastic tissues; presence of a novel isoenzyme? Br J Cancer 1983; 47(5):727-731. ICID: 825551
LH Bernstein, P Scinto. Two methods compared for measuring LD-1/total LD activity in serum. Clin Chem 1986; 32(5):792-796.   ICID: 825581

PGC-1a: an inducible integrator of transcriptional circuits

 The PPAR³ coactivator-1 (PGC-1) family of transcriptional coactivators is involved in regulating mitochondrial metabolism and biogenesis.
PGC-1a was the first member discovered through its functional interaction with the nuclear receptor PPAR³ in brown adipose tissue (BAT).
There are two PGC-1a related coactivators,
  1. PGC-1² (also called PERC) and
  2. PGC-1–related coactivator (PRC).
PRC coactivates transcription in mitochondrial biogenesis, with PGC-1a and PGC-1² . Both are expressed in tissues with high oxidative capacity, such as
  1. heart
  2. slow-twitch skeletal muscle, and
  3. BAT
They serve critical roles in the regulation of mitochondrial functional capacity. PGC-1a  also regulates
  • hepatic gluconeogenesis and
  • skeletal muscle glucose uptake.
PGC-1² appears to be important in regulating energy metabolism in the heart, but
  • PGC-1a is distinct from other PGC-1 family members, indeed from most coactivators, in its broad responsiveness to
  1. developmental alterations in energy metabolism and
  2. physiological and pathological cues at the level of expression and transactivation.
In the heart, PGC-1a expression increases at birth coincident with an increase in cardiac oxidative capacity and
  • a perinatal shift from reliance on glucose metabolism to the oxidation of fats for energy.
PGC-1a is induced by physiological stimuli that increase ATP demand and
  • stimulate mitochondrial oxidation, including
  1. cold exposure,
  2. fasting, and
  3. exercise.
Activation of this regulatory cascade increases cardiac mitochondrial oxidative capacity in the heart. In cardiac myocytes in culture, it
  1. increases mitochondrial number,
  2. upregulates expression of mitochondrial enzymes, and
  3. increases rates of FA oxidation and coupled respiration.
Thus, PGC-1a is an inducible coactivator that coordinately regulates
  • cardiac fuel selection and
  • mitochondrial ATP-producing capacity.
 PGC-1a activates expression of nuclear respiratory factor-1 (NRF-1) and NRF-2 and
  • directly coactivates NRF-1 on its target gene promoters.
NRF-1 and NRF-2 regulate expression of mitochondrial transcription factor A (Tfam),
  • a nuclear-encoded transcription factor that binds regulatory sites on mitochondrial DNA and is essential for
  1. replication,
  2. maintenance, and
  3. transcription of the mitochondrial genome.
Furthermore, NRF-1 and NRF-2 regulate the expression of nuclear genes encoding
  • respiratory chain subunits and other proteins required for mitochondrial function.
PGC-1a  also
  • coactivates the PPAR and ERR nuclear receptors, critical regulators of myocardial FFA utilization.
  • regulates genes involved in the cellular uptake and mitochondrial oxidation of FFAs.
  • is an integrator of the transcriptional network regulating mitochondrial biogenesis and function.
Numerous signaling pathways, by increasing either PGC-1a expression or activity, such as –
  • Ca2+-dependent,
  • NO,
  • MAPK, and
  • beta-adrenergic pathways (beta3/cAMP),
    • activate the PGC-1a directly
Additionally, the p38_MAPK pathway
  • selectively activates PPARa, which may bring about synergistic activation in the presence of PGC-1a,
  • whereas ERK-MAPK has the opposite effect.
These signaling pathways transduce physiological stimuli to the PGC-1a pathway:
  1. stress
  2. fasting
  3. exercise
PGC-1a, in turn, coactivates transcriptional partners,which regulate mitochondrial biogenesis and FA-oxidation pathways:
  • NRF-1 and -2,
  • ERRa, and
  • PPARa,
 Insights into the physiological responsiveness of the PGC-1a pathway come from
  • identification of signal transduction pathways that modulate the activity of PGC-1a and its downstream partners.
PGC-1a is upregulated in response to beta-adrenergic signaling, consistent with the involvement of this pathway in thermogenesis.
The stress-activated  p38_MAPK activates PGC-1a by increasing PGC-1a protein stability and promoting dissociation of a repressor.
p38 increases mitochondrial FAO through selective activation of the PGC-1a partner, PPARa. Conversely, the ERK-MAPK pathway
  • inactivates the PPARa/RXRa complex via direct phosphorylation.
Therefore, distinct limbs of the MAPK pathway exert
  • opposing regulatory influences on the PGC-1a cascade.
Recently, NO has emerged as a novel signaling molecule proposed to integrate pathways involved in
  • regulating mitochondrial biogenesis by inducing mitochondrial proliferation.

 A Paradox

Mitochondria are like little cells within our cells. They are the energy producing organelles of the body. The more energy a certain tissue requires
  • such as the brain and the heart
    • the more mitochondria those cells contain.
Conventional transmission electron microscopy of mammalian cardiac tissue reveals mitochondria to be
  1. elliptical individual organelles situated either in clusters beneath the sarcolemma (subsarcolemmal mitochondria, SSM) or
  2. in parallel, longitudinal rows ensconced within the contractile apparatus (interfibrillar mitochondria, IFM).
The two mitochondrial populations differ in their cristae morphology, with
  1. a lamelliform orientation in SSM, whereas
  2. the cristae orientation in IFM is tubular.
The morphology of mitochondria is responsive to changes in cardiomyocytes.
 Mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation relies
  • not only on the activities of individual complexes, but also on
  • the coordinated action of supramolecular assemblies (respirasomes) of the electron transport chain (ETC) complexes
in both normal and failing heart.
Mitochondria have their own set of DNA and
  • the more energy they generate,
  • the more DNA-damaging free radicals they produce.
Mitochondrial DNA damage is incurred by generation of energy in ATP production, so that
  • the process that sustains life also is the source of toxic damage that causes the dysfunction and mitogeny in the cell.
In human mtDNA mutant cybrids with impaired mitochondrial respiration, the recovery of mitochondrial function
  • correlates with the formation of respirasomes suggesting that
  • respirasomes represent regulatory units of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation
    • by facilitating the electron transfer between the catalytic sites of the ETC.
We recently reported a decrease in mitochondrial respirasomes in CHF that fits in the category of a new mitochondrial cytopathy.
 ATP utilized by the heart is synthesized mainly by means of oxidative phosphorylation in the inner mitochondrial membrane,
  • a process that involves the coupling of electron transfer and oxygen consumption with phosphorylation of ADP to ATP.
The catabolism of exogenous substrates (FAs, glucose, pyruvate, lactate, and ketone bodies) provides the reduced intermediates,
  1. NADH (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, reduced) and
  2. FADH2 (flavin adenine dinucleotide, reduced),
as donors for mitochondrial electron transport.
The contribution of glucose to the acetyl CoA pool in the heart is
  • increased by insulin during the postprandial period and during exercise.
 All cells and tissues require
  • adenine,
  • pyridine, and
  • flavin nucleotides for energy
by way of Krebs cycle metabolism of fatty acids and carbohydrate substrates.
If DNA holds the blueprint for the proper function of a cell, then any change in the blueprint will change how the cell functions.
If the mitochondria do not function properly, then they cannot fulfill their role in producing energy:
  •  the cell will lose its ability to function adequately.

 Related articles

 References

Mitochondrial dynamics and cardiovascular diseases    Ritu Saxena
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/14/mitochondrial-dynamics-and-cardiovascular-diseases/
Mitochondrial Damage and Repair under Oxidative Stress   larryhbern
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/28/mitochondrial-damage-and-repair-under-oxidative-stress/
Mitochondria: Origin from oxygen free environment, role in aerobic glycolysis, metabolic adaptation   larryhbern
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/26/mitochondria-origin-from-oxygen-free-environment-role-in-aerobic-glycolysis-metabolic-adaptation/ Ca2+ signaling: transcriptional control     larryhbern
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/06/ca2-signaling-transcriptional-control/ MIT Scientists on Proteomics: All the Proteins in the Mitochondrial Matrix identified  Aviva Lev-Ari
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/02/03/mit-scientists-on-proteomics-all-the-proteins-in-the-mitochondrial-matrix-identified/
Nitric Oxide has a ubiquitous role in the regulation of glycolysis -with a concomitant influence on mitochondrial function    larryhbern
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/16/nitric-oxide-has-a-ubiquitous-role-in-the-regulation-of-glycolysis-with-a-concomitant-influence-on-mitochondrial-function/
Ubiquinin-Proteosome pathway, autophagy, the mitochondrion, proteolysis and cell apoptosis  larryhbern
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/02/14/ubiquinin-proteosome-pathway-autophagy-the-mitochondrion-proteolysis-and-cell-apoptosis-reconsidered/
Low Bioavailability of Nitric Oxide due to Misbalance in Cell Free Hemoglobin in Sickle Cell Disease – A Computational Model   Anamika Sarkar
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/09/low-bioavailability-of-nitric-oxide-due-to-misbalance-in-cell-free-hemoglobin-in-sickle-cell-disease-a-computational-model/
The rationale and use of inhaled NO in Pulmonary Artery Hypertension and Right Sided Heart Failure    larryhbern
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/20/the-rationale-and-use-of-inhaled-no-in-pulmonary-artery-hypertension-and-right-sided-heart-failure/
Mitochondria and Cardiovascular Disease: A Tribute to Richard Bing, Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/14/chapter-5-mitochondria-and-cardiovascular-disease/
Mitochondrial Metabolism and Cardiac Function, Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/14/mitochondrial-metabolism-and-cardiac-function/
Mitochondrial Dysfunction and Cardiac Disorders, Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/14/mitochondrial-dysfunction-and-cardiac-disorders/
Reversal of Cardiac mitochondrial dysfunction, Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/14/reversal-of-cardiac-mitochondrial-dysfunction/
Clinical Trials Results for Endothelin System: Pathophysiological role in Chronic Heart Failure, Acute Coronary Syndromes and MI – Marker of Disease Severity or Genetic Determination? Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 10/19/2012
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/19/clinical-trials-results-for-endothelin-system-pathophysiological-role-in-chronic-heart-failure-acute-coronary-syndromes-and-mi-marker-of-disease-severity-or-genetic-determination/
Endothelin Receptors in Cardiovascular Diseases: The Role of eNOS Stimulation, Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 10/4/2012
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/04/endothelin-receptors-in-cardiovascular-diseases-the-role-of-enos-stimulation/
Inhibition of ET-1, ETA and ETA-ETB, Induction of NO production, stimulation of eNOS and Treatment Regime with PPAR-gamma agonists (TZD): cEPCs Endogenous Augmentation for Cardiovascular Risk Reduction – A Bibliography, Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 10/4/2012
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/04/inhibition-of-et-1-eta-and-eta-etb-induction-of-no-production-and-stimulation-of-enos-and-treatment-regime-with-ppar-gamma-agonists-tzd-cepcs-endogenous-augmentation-for-cardiovascular-risk-reduc/
Genomics & Genetics of Cardiovascular Disease Diagnoses: A Literature Survey of AHA’s Circulation Cardiovascular Genetics, 3/2010 – 3/2013, L H Bernstein, MD, FACP and Aviva Lev-Ari,PhD, RN  3/7/2013
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/07/genomics-genetics-of-cardiovascular-disease-diagnoses-a-literature-survey-of-ahas-circulation-cardiovascular-genetics-32010-32013/
Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) and the Role of agent alternatives in endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase (eNOS) Activation and Nitric Oxide Production, Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 7/19/2012
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/19/cardiovascular-disease-cvd-and-the-role-of-agent-alternatives-in-endothelial-nitric-oxide-synthase-enos-activation-and-nitric-oxide-production/
Cardiovascular Risk Inflammatory Marker: Risk Assessment for Coronary Heart Disease and Ischemic Stroke – Atherosclerosis. Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 10/30/2012
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/30/cardiovascular-risk-inflammatory-marker-risk-assessment-for-coronary-heart-disease-and-ischemic-stroke-atherosclerosis/
Cholesteryl Ester Transfer Protein (CETP) Inhibitor: Potential of Anacetrapib to treat Atherosclerosis and CAD, Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 4/7/2013
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/07/cholesteryl-ester-transfer-protein-cetp-inhibitor-potential-of-anacetrapib-to-treat-atherosclerosis-and-cad/
Hypertriglyceridemia concurrent Hyperlipidemia: Vertical Density Gradient Ultracentrifugation a Better Test to Prevent Undertreatment of High-Risk Cardiac Patients, Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN  4/4/2013 http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/04/hypertriglyceridemia-concurrent-hyperlipidemia-vertical-density-gradient-ultracentrifugation-a-better-test-to-prevent-undertreatment-of-high-risk-cardiac-patients/
Fight against Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease: A Biologics not a Small Molecule – Recombinant Human lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase (rhLCAT) attracted AstraZeneca to acquire AlphaCore, Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 4/3/2013
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/03/fight-against-atherosclerotic-cardiovascular-disease-a-biologics-not-a-small-molecule-recombinant-human-lecithin-cholesterol-acyltransferase-rhlcat-attracted-astrazeneca-to-acquire-alphacore/
High-Density Lipoprotein (HDL): An Independent Predictor of Endothelial Function & Atherosclerosis, A Modulator, An Agonist, A Biomarker for Cardiovascular Risk, Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 3/31/2013 

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/31/high-density-lipoprotein-hdl-an-independent-predictor-of-endothelial-function-artherosclerosis-a-modulator-an-agonist-a-biomarker-for-cardiovascular-risk/
Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR-gamma) Receptors Activation: PPARγ transrepression for Angiogenesis in Cardiovascular Disease and PPARγ transactivation for Treatment of Diabetes, Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 11/13/2012
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/13/peroxisome-proliferator-activated-receptor-ppar-gamma-receptors-activation-pparγ-transrepression-for-angiogenesis-in-cardiovascular-disease-and-pparγ-transactivation-for-treatment-of-dia/
Sulfur-Deficiciency and Hyperhomocysteinemia, L H Bernstein, MD, FACP
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/04/sulfur-deficiency-and-hyperhomocusteinemia/

 

 

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Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Ca Prevention: Calcium May Protect Colon

Reviewed by Robert Jasmer, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco

WASHINGTON — Increasing calcium intake may lower the risk of colorectal adenomas in people who are at increased risk of the precancerous lesions due to variations in two genes, researchers reported here.

In a two-phase, case-control study of nearly 6,000 subjects, high calcium intake was associated with a significantly reduced risk of adenoma among those who carried variants in the KCNJ and SLC12A1 genes.

High calcium intake was not associated with a reduced risk of colorectal adenoma among those with no variants in KCNJ and SLC12A1, both of which are essential to calcium reabsorption in the kidney, reported Xiangzhu Zhu, MD, of Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center at the American Association for Cancer Research meeting here.

The two-phase study was undertaken to explore whether 14 genes involved in calcium homeostasis are associated with the risk for colorectal adenoma. The researchers also wanted to determine whether intake of calcium and magnesium modified any such risks.

To do so, they utilized data from 1,818 cases and 3,992 controls enrolled in the Tennessee Colorectal Polyp Study. Of the 14 genes,KCNJ and SLC12A1 were found to modify the risk between calcium intake and adenomas.

Among the findings:

  • 52% of participants had a variant allele in one of the two genes, and 13% carried variant alleles in both genes.
  • In people with both gene variants, those the top tertile of calcium intake – consuming 1,300 mg a day or more – had a 69% lower risk of adenoma than people in the lowest tertile, who consumed less than 1,000 mg a day (for trend=0.039).
  • In patients who had one gene variant, there was a 39% reduction in adenomas for those in the highest tertile compared with those in the lowest tertile (for trend=0.046).

The risk for advanced or multiple adenomas were reduced by 89% among those with variants in both genes (for trend=.01).

If confirmed, the findings suggest that patients who carry one or both variants should increase their calcium intake to at least 1,300 mg per day, either through diet or supplementation, Zhu said.

The findings may also “provide one possible explanation for the inconsistency in previous studies on calcium intake and colorectal abnormalities,” she said.

Further study will be needed to confirm the findings, commented Susan T. Mayne, PhD, of Yale University School of Public Health.

Mayne said the study emphasizes that “one size does not always fit all” when it comes to optimal nutrient intakes.

James R. Marshall, PhD, senior vice president of cancer prevention and population sciences at Roswell Park Cancer Institute in Buffalo, N.Y., agreed, pointing out that studies like this are needed to find biomarkers that can pinpoint those patients most likely to benefit from prevention strategies.

“Case-control studies raise possibilities that help to define which patients to include in future trials,” Marshall said.

Kathleen Struck, MedPage Today Senior Editor, contributed to this article.

The possibility that a supplement such as calcium may prove to be a useful chemoprevention agent is intriguing, but a single study is just a single study — worthy of more investigation. Share your thoughts and read what your colleagues are saying about calcium and colon cancer by clicking the Add Your Knowledge link at the bottom of this article. — Sanjay Gupta, MD

The authors reported no relevant financial disclosures.

Mayne and Marshall reported no relevant financial disclosures.

Primary source: American Association for Cancer Research

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Protein Malnutrition

Reporter and Curator: Dr. Sudipta Saha, Ph.D.

A large part of  the world’s population is undernourished by the standards of Western Europe and North America. Scientists and nonscientists alike recognize as one of the major challenges of our time the problem of how to ensure that the production and distribution of food keep pace with the increasing number of mouths to be fed. In the world as a whole the most widespread and serious dietary deficiency is that of protein. This fact emerges clearly from the reports of the expert committees of WHO and FAO (World Health Organization, 1951, 1953). Nevertheless, many protein chemists, even those associated with medical research, may not realize the extent and severity of protein malnutrition, because it occurs chiefly in the technically underdeveloped countries far from where they work.

Dietary histories and response to treatment point to deficiency of total protein as the primary cause of the clinical syndrome kwashiorkor. The level of calorie intake has an important influence on the pattern of the disease. Deficiency of one or more specific amino acids, or amino acid imbalances in the diet, may perhaps be responsible for some of the symptoms and signs, particularly those whose incidence varies from one part of the world to another. All these variations on a theme are covered by the general term protein malnutrition. The onset is often precipitated by the added burden of diarrhea, infection, and parasitic infestation. The nutritional state influences the resistance to infection, and conversely the presence of an infection affects the state of nutrition. A further contributory factor may be the psychological upheaval in the child when the next baby in the family is born. At the root of all these causes lie poverty, ignorance, and disruption of the family life.

The planning of preventive measures cannot be effective unless it is based on some knowledge of the magnitude of the problem to be tackled. At a very rough estimate, in some countries perhaps 10% of the children suffer from severe protein malnutrition at some age between birth and 4 years. The marginal deficiency states must be much more common, Clinical signs and biochemical changes are of little value in diagnosing the early case; a deficit in body weight still seems to be the best criterion. Prevention ideally would be by greater production and consumption of animal protein, and by the increased use of skim milk and of surplus fish at present often wasted. However, animal protein is likely to remain scarce and expensive. Plant sources are being investigated with a view to encouraging not only domestic production, but also the production on an industrial scale of cheap foodstuffs rich in protein. A preventive program that is nutritionally sound may fail if account is not taken of local food habits, traditions, and customs. Protein requirements are affected by the quality of protein, the intake of calories, and by the state of the body (growth, the presence of disease, etc.). The maintenance requirement and the amount required for growth in children can be estimated, but the requirement for health is still unknown. For the time being, the allowances of protein recommended for people in the world as a whole are based empirically on the known physiological requirement with an arbitrarily added wide margin of safety.

The absorption of nitrogen is remarkably efficient even in severely malnourished infants. In general the nitrogen of plant proteins is less well absorbed than that of milk. When a baby receives a diet in which the protein is derived entirely from vegetabIe sources, incomplete absorption of nitrogen may play a significant part in the production of protein malnutrition. The malnourished baby who responds to treatment is able to retain and utilize nitrogen very efficiently; there is no evidence of any impairment in the mechanisms of protein synthesis. It is possible, however, that these mechanisms may be irreversibly damaged in babies who die, and that this may be the cause of death. The level of calorie intake has an important influence on the efficiency of utilization of nitrogen. An adequate calorie intake promotes conservation of nitrogen in the body as a whole when supplies of protein are short, but this protective effect may not be exerted equally in all organs. In this way the level of calorie intake may modify the pattern of protein depletion. A greater than normal calorie intake is needed for the restoration of depleted protein stores.

The discussion of protein metabolism in protein malnutrition has been purposely limited to a narrow field-to studies made on man, and to the few animal experiments that have a direct bearing on those studies. For technical reasons most of the work discussed relates to plasma proteins. There is a conflict of evidence between results obtained in man and animals about the effect of protein depletion or a low protein diet on the rate of catabolism of plasma albumin. It is of great importance to settle this point. A priori there seems no reason why the rate of protein catabolism should be affected by nutritional state. Preliminary studies with radioactive methionine in infants suggest, as working hypotheses, that in protein malnutrition there may be an increase in the reutilization of amino acids liberated by tissue catabolism, and an apparent concentration of protein synthesis in the more essential organs at the expense of the less essential. There is some experimental support for both these ideas, but further work is badly needed. The concept of protein stores or reserve protein is based entirely on dynamic and not on chemical considerations. It is suggested that the essential difference between a “labile” and a “fixed” protein is a difference in turnover rate. An attempt is made to show that the changes produced by protein depletion in the protein content of organs such as liver and muscle are a necessary consequence of the metabolic characteristics of proteins in those organs. There may be no need to invoke the help of homeostatic or compensatory regulations to explain the changes found in protein depletion.

Aging and growth are processes during which some metabolic adjustments must take place. It is believed that it may be better to regard the changes which are found in protein malnutrition in a similar light: as evidence of an alteration in functional pattern, rather than of damage or disease. Protein malnutrition in man has two aspects-a practical and a theoretical one. From the practical point of view it is an extremely common disease with a high mortality, and there is every reason to believe that it will become more common unless urgent preventive measures are taken. Theoretically it raises many questions that are of interest in relation to other branches of medicine and biochemistry. It is believed that the two aspects are linked, and that progress towards prevention is still impeded by our lack of basic knowledge as well as by our failure to apply what is already known. In protein malnutrition there is no sharp line between health and disease. The simple concept of specific deficiency diseases that grew from the discovery of vitamins is not applicable. We have to go back instead to the ideas of an earlier era, when nutrition was regarded as a branch of physiology, concerned with the functions, fate, and metabolic interrelationships of the major nutrients.

It is a characteristic of protein metabolism that nitrogen balance can be maintained at many different levels of protein intake. These different steady states are achieved by adjustments of the amount and distribution of proteins in the body as a whole, in organs, and in cells. It is believed that these changes in amount and distribution of proteins must result in alterations of metabolic pattern, with a gradation of change from an optimum, which cannot be defined, to a state of irreversible breakdown incompatible with life. In the intermediate stages function is modified and efficiency perhaps impaired. It seems possible that variations in diet, and particularly in the amount and quality of the protein, may underlie many of the differences in incidence and symptomatology of disease which are gradually being uncovered in different parts of the world.

Source References:

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0065323308603095#

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