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The
missing link between Belly Fat and Heart
Disease
Newswise — By now, everyone knows that
overweight people have a higher risk of
heart attacks, strokes and other problems
that arise from clogged, hardened arteries.
And people who carry their extra weight
around their waist – giving them a “beer
belly” or an “apple” shape -- have the
highest risk of all.
But despite the impact on human health, the
reasons behind this connection between heart
disease and belly fat – also known as
visceral fat -- have eluded scientists.
Now, a new study in mice gives the first
direct evidence of why this link might exist
– and a tantalizing look at how it might be
broken.
In a paper that will be published online
today in the journal Circulation before
print publication in February, a team of
University of Michigan Cardiovascular Center
scientists reports direct evidence of a link
between inflammation around the cells of
visceral fat deposits, and the
artery-hardening process of atherosclerosis.
The researchers also show that a medication
often given to people with diabetes can be
used to calm that inflammation, and protect
against further artery damage.
Although the scientists caution that it’s
far too early to apply their findings to
humans with belly fat, they hope that
further research in animals and people will
reveal more about how this dangerous link
comes about, why it begins, how it can be
reversed, and perhaps how it can be
diagnosed at an early stage through blood
tests.
Until then, the best advice for overweight
people who want to reduce their chance of a
heart attack or stroke remains the same:
Work on losing your belly fat, and your
other excess body weight, through a
balanced, healthy diet and regular exercise.
The research team is led by Daniel Eitzman,
M.D., a cardiologist, laboratory scientist
and associate professor in the Division of
Cardiovascular Medicine at the U-M Medical
School and the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare
System.
The discovery came partly by chance. He and
his colleagues had been studying mice that
lack the gene for leptin, a hormone
generated by fat cells that plays a role in
appetite and metabolism as well as
reproduction.
In an effort to get these obese mice to
produce some leptin, the team developed a
technique to transplant clusters of fat
cells from normal mice of the same strain,
into the leptin-deficient mice.
The result surprised them. “In addition to
producing leptin and preventing obesity, the
fat transplants became inflamed, attracting
immune cells called macrophages,” Eitzman
explains.
“Since the mice were genetically identical
except for leptin, this shouldn’t have
happened. But the inflammation was there,
and it was chronic.”
The inflammation occurred around individual
fat cells, or adipocytes. Further tests
showed it was regulated by the same factors
that regulate the inflammation that other
researchers have seen in the naturally
occurring fat deposits of obese mice –
specifically a chemokine called MCP-1.
But because the fat was transplanted, the
inflammation could be attributed directly to
the fat, and not to overfeeding of the mice,
or the metabolic problems that overfeeding
and obesity bring, such as diabetes.
Armed with this discovery, the researchers
set out to see what was causing inflammation
to occur, and what implications it had.
The team included postdoctoral fellow Miina
Öhman, M.D., Ph.D., U-M professor Daniel
Lawrence, Ph.D., and members of the Eitzman
and Lawrence laboratory teams.
They were especially interested to see if
there might be any link between the
inflammation and atherosclerosis – the
formal name for the process by which blood
vessels become stiff, narrowed and lined
with plaque formations that can trigger the
development of blood clots.
This process, which occurs throughout the
body, sets the stage for most heart attacks
and strokes. Scientists and clinicians now
realize that it is based on inflammation –
the abnormal reaction of the body’s immune
system to its own tissue — and in the damage
that immune-system cells and molecules can
inflict.
Since normal mice don’t develop
atherosclerosis, the team had to turn to a
strain that had been developed to be
especially prone to high cholesterol and
hardened arteries.
These ApoE-negative mice, as they are
called, were divided into three groups: two
that received fat transplants from normal
mice, and one that did not, but that had the
same operation that would be used to implant
the fat in other mice.
Some of the fat-transplant ApoE-negative
mice received transplants of visceral fat,
which forms in the belly around the major
organs, while others received transplants of
subcutaneous fat – the type that’s found
just under the skin throughout the body.
Sure enough, the mice that received the
visceral fat transplants developed
atherosclerosis at a much-accelerated rate,
and experienced the same type of
inflammation as the leptin-deficient mice
had.
Meanwhile,
those that received subcutaneous fat did not
experience an increase in atherosclerosis
despite having increased inflammation. The
mice that had the “sham” operations
developed neither inflammation nor increased
atherosclerosis.
“There appeared to be an interaction between
the macrophages causing the inflammation in
the visceral fat, and the process of
atherosclerosis,” says Eitzman, who notes
that blood vessels far from the site of the
fat transplant developed increased
atherosclerosis.
Finally, the team attempted to calm the
inflammation and curb the atherosclerosis by
treating the mice with pioglitazone – a
member of the class of drugs called
thiazolidinediones or TZDs that are often
used to treat diabetes.
While TZD drugs have an impact on
metabolism, which makes them useful in
diabetes, they also have been discovered to
have an anti-inflammatory effect.
And in fact, the drug reduced both the
concentration of macrophages and MCP-1, and
atherosclerosis, in those mice that received
transplants of visceral fat. But the drug
had no effect in the other mice.
Now that they have demonstrated the linkage
between belly fat, inflammation and hardened
arteries, and a potential mechanism for
reversing the phenomenon, the team is
working on new pieces of the puzzle.
Specifically, they’re looking for the
factors that might trigger macrophages to
invade the area and bring on inflammation,
and for blood-borne molecules called
biomarkers that might be used as a way to
identify early warning signs of
atherosclerosis.
They’ll also look at other classes of drugs
to see if they might have a protective
effect, because TZD drugs act on many
systems and cause some side effects.
In addition to Eitzman, Öhman and Lawrence,
the team includes former research associate
Yuechen Shen, M.D., former U-M undergraduate
Chinyere Obimba, B.S., now a Harvard Medical
School student; former U-M undergraduate and
current U-M medical student Andrew P.
Wright, B.S.; and Mark Warnock, B.S. The
research was funded by the National Heart,
Lung and Blood Institute.