Washington [US]: Clinicians have traditionally treated cardiovascular disease by focusing on diabetes and blood pressure control, as well as lowering cholesterol with drugs such as aspirin and statins. Despite these measures, heart disease remains the number one cause of death in the United States, with many patients having heart attacks even after their risk factors are controlled, says Salim Hayek, M.D., physician-scientist and medical director of the University of Michigan Health Frankel Cardiovascular Clinics.
But a study led by Michigan Medicine has uncovered a protein produced by the immune system that causes atherosclerosis - the hardening of arteries that affects over a billion people worldwide - which offers the promise of new treatments. "Targeting the immune component central to the development of atherosclerosis is the Holy Grail for the treatment of heart disease," said Hayek, senior author of the study "This is the first time that a component of the immune system is identified that meets all the requirements for being a promising treatment target for atherosclerosis."
This protein, called soluble urokinase Plasminogen Activator Receptor, or suPAR, is produced by the bone marrow. It acts as a regulator, essentially a thermostat for the activity of the immune system, or "immunostat". Past studies have shown suPAR to be a marker of cardiovascular disease. But this study, published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation, is the first evidence showing that the protein actually causes atherosclerosis when at high levels.
Three-pronged findings:First, the research team analyzed the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis, which consists of over 5,000 people without known cardiovascular disease and found that those who had higher suPAR levels were much more prone to develop atherosclerosis and experience cardiovascular events, regardless of their underlying risk factors.
Then, the investigators did a genetic study of 24,000 people to find whether certain genetic variations affected levels of suPAR in blood. They discovered a specific variant in the gene PLAUR that codes for suPAR, and people with that genetic variant tended to have higher suPAR levels. Most importantly, that genetic variant was linked to atherosclerosis in a Mendelian randomization analysis of 500,000 participants in the UK Biobank, which was replicated in two other large data sets.
"We also found that participants lacking a copy of the PLAUR gene have lower risk of heart disease," said first author and geneticist George Hindy, M.D., Ph.D., of Regeneron Genetics Center. "Altogether, the genetic data is truly compelling for high suPAR being a cause of atherosclerosis." Finally, in mouse models with high suPAR levels, researchers saw a dramatic increase in atherosclerotic plaques of mouse aortas compared to mice with normal suPAR levels.