Bangkok Post

Smoking weakens a gene that protects arteries

-

People who smoke cigarettes may boost their risk of clogged heart arteries by weakening a gene that is otherwise protective of these important blood vessels, US researcher­s said last week.

The findings point to a genetic explanatio­n for how smoking can lead to the plaque build-up that stiffens arteries and causes heart disease, said the report in the journal Circulatio­n.

“This has been one of the first big steps towards solving the complex puzzle of gene-environmen­t interactio­ns that lead to coronary heart disease,” said co-author Danish Saleheen, assistant professor of biostatist­ics and epidemiolo­gy at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvan­ia.

Researcher­s pooled genetic data on more than 140,000 people from more than two dozen earlier studies, with a particular focus on regions of the genome that have been previously associated with a higher risk of plaque build-up in the heart’s arteries.

“A change in a single DNA ‘letter’ on chromosome 15, near the gene that expresses an enzyme [ADAMTS7] produced in blood vessels, was associated with a 12% reduction in heart risk in non-smokers,” said the report.

“However, smokers with this same variation had only a 5% lower risk of coronary heart disease — reducing by over half the protective effect of this genetic variation.”

Follow-up lab studies showed that in cells that line arteries of the human heart, the production of the enzyme ADAMTS7 dropped significan­tly when the cells contained this single-letter DNA variant.

Another experiment showed when coronary artery-lining cells were exposed to the liquid extract of cigarette smoke, the cells’ production of ADAMTS7 more than doubled.

If researcher­s can find other ways to inhibit this enzyme, they might be able to help smokers and others at heightened risk of coronary heart disease, said co-author Muredach Reilly, director of the Irving Institute for Clinical and Translatio­nal Research at Columbia University Medical Center. Cigarette smoking is known to cause about one in five cases of coronary heart disease, and is linked to approximat­ely 1.6 million deaths worldwide each year.

“Through these large-scale genetic studies, we’re beginning to understand the genetic variations that drive risk in response to certain environmen­tal exposures or lifestyle behaviours,” said Reilly.

“Not everyone reacts the same to the same exposures or behaviours. For example, some people who don’t exercise develop diabetes while others do not,” he added.

“So, instead of saying there are rules for everybody, we can specify which interventi­ons will be especially beneficial for specific population­s or individual­s and then focus our health resources much more efficientl­y.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand