Karolinska Institute: Statins protect against cardiovascular disease in more
ways than previously thought. In a study, researchers from Karolinska
Institutet are able to show the immunological effects of statins, and
present a new hypothesis
on why satins are effective at preventing heart attacks. The study is published in
The Journal of the American Heart Association
. Atherosclerosis can lead to a number
of serious medical conditions, such as heart attack, stroke and
intermittent claudication. These and other cardiovascular diseases are
on the increase around the world, and are the leading causes of death in
the west. Johan Frostegård, professor at KI’s Institute of
Environmental Medicine, has had a long-standing interest in
atherosclerosis and the possible underlying causes of this chronic
inflammation. Atherosclerosis is visible on the blood vessel walls as
plaque consisting of accumulated dead cells and oxidised (rancid) LDL
cholesterol (the so-called “bad” cholesterol) and two types of immune
cell, T cells and dendritic cells, which are the key players in this
chronic inflammation.
Statins are a common class of drug often used to prevent cardiac
arrest and other such conditions. Even though it has long been known
that statins are anti-inflammatory, it is unclear whether the immune
system is more specifically affected, the assumption having been that
statins are so effective because they reduce levels of cholesterol in
the blood.
“We can show how statins can protect against cardiovascular
disease through a new, specific immunological mechanism, and I believe
that this can explain much of their beneficial effect,” says Johan
Frostegård, professor of medicine at Karolinska Institutet’s Institute
of Environmental Medicine and consultant at Karolinska University
Hospital’s Emergency Clinic. “For the first time, we’re able to show
that an immunological treatment for atherosclerosis can actually work.”
The researchers studied the interaction between the two most
important immune cells in this context, T cells and dendritic cells. By
looking at a
therosclerotic plaque
sourced direct from operations on human patients, they
found that oxidised LDL-cholesterol activates inflammatory T cells from
plaque via the dendritic cells. The statins block the T cells and
stimulate the production of anti-inflammatory T cells (T regulatory
cells). The dendritic cells are also affected in a way that renders them
anti-inflammatory.
When the side-effects of statins are discussed, their possible
carcinogenic properties are sometimes addressed. While large-scale
metastudies have shown that there is a reduction in most kinds of
tumour, in this study it was discovered that statins repress gene
activators (microRNA), including a certain kind called let7c, which
normally helps to inhibit tumour growth. In this study, let7c was
involved in oxidized LDL-induced T cell activation.
“Statins severely repressed let7c,” says Professor Frostegård. “If a
patient has a tumour in which let7c plays an important part, the statin
effect could be adverse. At the same time, statins reduce inflammation
and that can lower the risk of cancer, and large metastudies show no
general increase in cancer risk.”
The research was financed by grants from several bodies,
including the Heart and Lung Foundation, the Swedish Research Council,
Stockholm County Council (ALF), the King Gustaf V 80-year Foundation,
the Swedish Rheumatism Association, Vinnova (The Swedish governmental
agency for innovation systems), AFA insurance and the Torsten Söderberg
Foundation.
Publication
“
Oxidized Low-Density Lipoprotein (OxLDL) – Treated
Dendritic Cells Promote Activation of T Cells in Human Atherosclerotic
Plaque and Blood, Which Is Repressed by Statins: microRNA let-7c Is
Integral to the Effect
”,
Johan Frostegård, Yong Zhang, Jitong Sun, Keqiang Yan, Anquan Liu
,
Journal of the American Heart Association
, online 20 September 2016,
doi: 10.1161/JAHA.116.003976
For information about the study, please contact
Johan Frostegård
, professor
Institute of Environmental Medicine
Karolinska Institutet
Phone: +46 (0) 8 524 871 41, +46 (0)
707 352382
E-mail:
johan.frostegard@ki.se