Fat cells link to heart disease
Fat cells around coronary arteries may play a key role
in heart disease, research suggests.
University of Iowa researchers found the cells release
chemicals which can trigger inflammation.
Under certain circumstances, they might also stimulate
potentially damaging growth of new blood vessels.
The findings, presented to the Experimental Biology 2006
conference in San Francisco, may help explain why
obesity increases heart disease risk.
Fat cells - adipocytes - were once thought to do nothing
other than simply store excess fat tissue.
However, they are now known to be highly active,
releasing many chemicals that influence biological
processes within the body.
Most large blood vessels in the body are enveloped in a
layer of fat cells.
Vessel deterioration
The Iowa team suspected that the chemicals pumped out by
the fat cells surrounding the coronary arteries might
play a role in triggering heart disease by contributing
to the deterioration of these vessels.
They isolated and cultured these cells, known as
epicardial adipocytes, and compared them with cells
taken from other fat tissue.
Tests showed that the epicardial adipocytes were prone
to release greater amounts of potentially harmful,
inflammation-producing cytokines in response to certain
stimuli.
Unlike fat cells from other tissue, they also stimulated
the cells lining the arteries to begin the process of
forming new vessels.
And when oxygen was in short supply, this process was
stepped up.
The fat tissue surrounding the coronary arteries gets
its blood supply directly from the vessel.
The Iowa team believe their work suggests that when this
blood supply is reduced, possibly by a blockage in the
blood vessel, the fat cells respond by releasing
cytokines, which trigger inflammation and make the
problem worse.
At the same time, the fat cells may also trigger
excessive formation of new blood vessels which could
raise the risk of cardiovascular disease by raising the
risk of fatty deposits haemorrhaging and causing a
dangerous blockage.
Regulation
Lead researcher Dr Lynn Stoll said: "The fat cells
surrounding coronary arteries may ultimately prove to be
an important link between obesity, type two diabetes,
and coronary artery disease, all of which are increasing
at epidemic rates.
"A better understanding of how epicardial adipocytes
sense and respond to inflammation and ischemia could
lead to new, rationally designed therapies for heart
disease."
Professor Jeremy Pearson, associate medical director of
the British Heart Foundation, said: "This is an
interesting piece of research.
"It has been recognised for several years that fat cells
stored up around the body secrete hormones that affect
blood vessel function, but this is the first time that
researchers have paid careful attention to fat cells
lying close to blood vessels in the heart.
"Dr Stoll's results strongly suggest that these cells
may be important regulators of blood vessel growth and
repair that have previously gone unrecognised.
"They should be investigated further in future to better
understand their role in the development of coronary
heart disease."