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Drug can reverse
Overgrown Hearts to help prevent Heart
Failure
Newswise, May 31, 2011 – A promising cancer
treatment drug can restore function of a
heart en route to failure from high blood
pressure, researchers at UT Southwestern
Medical Center have found.
The drug, a type of histone deacetylase (HDAC)
inhibitor being evaluated in numerous
ongoing clinical trials, has been shown to
reverse the harmful effects of autophagy in
heart muscle cells of mice. Autophagy is a
natural process by which cells eat their own
proteins to provide needed resources in
times of stress. The new study appears inProceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences.
“This opens the way for a new therapeutic
strategy in hypertensive heart disease, one
we can test for potential to promote
regression of heart disease,” said Dr.
Joseph Hill, chief of cardiology and
director of the Harry S. Moss Heart Center
at UT Southwestern.
Dr. Hill, senior author of the study, and
other researchers have shown previously that
all forms of heart disease involve either
too much or too little autophagy, normally
an adaptive process. For example, in the
presence of high blood pressure, the heart
enlarges, or hypertrophies, and autophagy is
turned on. Ultimately, the
hypertension-stressed heart can go into
failure.
Prior research from Dr. Hill’s laboratory
has shown that HDAC inhibitors blunt
disease-associated heart growth, so
researchers designed this study to determine
what impact a particular type of HDAC
inhibitor had on autophagy.
The researchers engineered mice with
overactive autophagy and induced hypertrophy
leading to heart failure. Scientists then
gave the mice an HDAC inhibitor known to
limit autophagy.
“The heart decreased back to near its normal
size, and heart function that had previously
been declining went back to normal,” Dr.
Hill said. “That is a powerful observation
where disease regression, not just disease
prevention, was seen.”
Dr. Hill noted that the research that led to
this finding started decades ago and
included studies led by Dr. Kern Wildenthal,
former president of UT Southwestern and now
president of Southwestern Medical
Foundation.
“This is one of those exciting, but rare,
examples where an important finding made
originally in yeast moved into mouse models
and is soon moving to humans,” Dr. Hill
said. “That’s the Holy Grail for a
physician-scientist – to translate those
sorts of fundamental molecular discoveries
through preclinical studies and ultimately
in humans.”
Other UT Southwestern researchers involved
in the study were Dr. Dian Cao, postdoctoral
trainee in internal medicine; Dr. Zhao Wang,
postdoctoral researcher in internal
medicine; Dr. Pavan Battiprolu, postdoctoral
researcher in internal medicine; Nan Jiang,
research associate in internal medicine;
Cyndi Morales, student research assistant in
internal medicine; Yongli Kong, research
scientist in internal medicine; and Drs.
Beverly Rothermel and Thomas Gillette, both
assistant professors of internal medicine.
The study was funded by the National
Institutes of Health, American Heart
Association, American Diabetes Association
and the AHA-Jon Holden DeHaan Foundation.
Visit http://www.utsouthwestern.edu/heartlungvascular to
learn more about UT Southwestern’s heart,
lung and vascular clinical services.
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