How to trick your heart into thinking you exercise: Cardiotrophin improves heart health and repairs damage in lab models
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute News Aug 17, 2017
Researchers have discovered that a protein called cardiotrophin 1 (CT1) can trick the heart into growing in a healthy way and pumping more blood, just as it does in response to exercise and pregnancy. They show that this good kind of heart growth is very different from the harmful enlargement of the heart that occurs during heart failure. They also show that CT1 can repair heart damage and improve blood flow in animal models of heart failure.
The results were published in the journal Cell Research.
The research team is from The Ottawa Hospital, the University of Ottawa, the University of Ottawa Heart Institute and Carleton University.
ÂWhen part of the heart dies, the remaining muscles try to adapt by getting bigger, but this happens in a dysfunctional way and it doesnÂt actually help the heart pump more blood, said Dr. Lynn Megeney, senior author of the study and a senior scientist at The Ottawa Hospital and professor at the University of Ottawa. ÂWe found that CT1 causes heart muscles to grow in a more healthy way and it also stimulates blood vessel growth in the heart. This actually increases the heartÂs ability to pump blood, just like what you would see with exercise and pregnancy.Â
Dr. Megeney and his colleagues conducted a variety of studies in mice, rats and cells growing in the lab. In addition to CT–1, some of the studies involved a drug called phenylephrine (PE), which is known to cause the bad kind of heart growth. They found:
ÂAn intriguing aspect of this research was how human CT1 was able to promote a healthy growth response in multiple animal models, said co–author Dr. Patrick Burgon, scientist at the University of Ottawa Heart Institute and assistant professor at the University of Ottawa. ÂThis suggests the action of CT1 is universally conserved and puts us much closer to therapy.Â
The researchers also note that while exercise could theoretically have the same benefits as CT–1, people with heart failure are usually limited in their ability to exercise.
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The results were published in the journal Cell Research.
The research team is from The Ottawa Hospital, the University of Ottawa, the University of Ottawa Heart Institute and Carleton University.
ÂWhen part of the heart dies, the remaining muscles try to adapt by getting bigger, but this happens in a dysfunctional way and it doesnÂt actually help the heart pump more blood, said Dr. Lynn Megeney, senior author of the study and a senior scientist at The Ottawa Hospital and professor at the University of Ottawa. ÂWe found that CT1 causes heart muscles to grow in a more healthy way and it also stimulates blood vessel growth in the heart. This actually increases the heartÂs ability to pump blood, just like what you would see with exercise and pregnancy.Â
Dr. Megeney and his colleagues conducted a variety of studies in mice, rats and cells growing in the lab. In addition to CT–1, some of the studies involved a drug called phenylephrine (PE), which is known to cause the bad kind of heart growth. They found:
- Heart muscle cells treated with CT–1 become longer, healthier fibres, while those treated with PE just grow wider.
- CT–1 causes blood vessels to grow alongside the new heart muscle tissue and increases the heartÂs ability to pump blood, while PE does neither.
- When CT–1 treatment stops, the heart goes back to its original condition, just like it does when exercise or pregnancy end. However, the dysfunctional heart growth caused by PE is irreversible.
- CT–1 dramatically improves heart function in two animal models of heart failure – one caused by a heart attack and one caused by pulmonary hypertension.
- Both CT–1 and PE stimulate heart muscle growth through a molecular pathway that has traditionally been associated with promoting apoptosis, but CT–1 has a better ability to control this pathway.
ÂAn intriguing aspect of this research was how human CT1 was able to promote a healthy growth response in multiple animal models, said co–author Dr. Patrick Burgon, scientist at the University of Ottawa Heart Institute and assistant professor at the University of Ottawa. ÂThis suggests the action of CT1 is universally conserved and puts us much closer to therapy.Â
The researchers also note that while exercise could theoretically have the same benefits as CT–1, people with heart failure are usually limited in their ability to exercise.
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