Stress-sensitivity gene linked to heart attacks, death
Date: Dec-19-2013New research finds that a gene change already linked to stress is also tied
to a 38% higher risk of heart attack or death in people with heart disease.
Researchers from the Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, suggest the finding explains
the biology behind why some people may be more susceptible to cardiovascular disease and death.
They report their findings in the online journal PLOS ONE.
The team hopes this means there is a good chance the discovery will lead to drugs and behavior
change treatments that reduce disability and deaths from heart attack.
Senior author Redford B. Williams Jr., professor of medicine and director of the Behavioral
Medicine Research Center at Duke, says:
"We've heard a lot about personalized medicine in cancer, but in cardiovascular disease we are
not nearly as far along in finding the genetic variants that identify people at higher risk. Here
we have a paradigm for the move toward personalized medicine in cardiovascular disease."
Gene variant causes extreme reaction to stress
A genetic variant is a piece of DNA that varies from person to person, like different spellings
of the same word or phrase. A single change in a DNA sequence, known as a single nucleotide
polymorphism (SNP), is where one letter in the genetic code is swapped for another. This is enough
to change how the gene functions, with big or small results.
The new study builds on previous work that found a variation in a DNA sequence in the gene that
makes a serotonin receptor - and causes an extreme reaction to stress. The gene is called
5HTR2C.
In the earlier research, the investigators found that under stress, men with this single SNP
change in their serotonin receptor gene had twice as much of the "stress hormone" cortisol in
their bloodstream than men without the genetic variant.
Cortisol is a hormone secreted in the adrenal gland that helps the body produce a biological
response to situations that trigger negative emotions, for example fear. Among other things, it
increases blood sugar, changes immune response and suppresses systems that are not immediately
required to deal with the perceived stressful event, such as those that deal with digestion,
reproduction and growth.
Lead author Beverly H. Brummett, associate professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at
Duke, also explains:
"It has been shown that high cortisol levels are predictive of increased heart disease risk. So
we wanted to examine this more closely."
Carriers at higher risk of heart attack and death
For the study, the team analyzed data gathered from more than 6,100 white heart patients followed
for 6 years, one-third of whom were women. About 13% of the patients had the gene variant that
produced an extreme stress response.
They found that the highest rates of heart attacks and deaths over the follow-up occurred in
patients who carried the gene variant.
Even after they corrected for other possible influencing factors like age, overweight, smoking,
other diseases and heart disease severity, the analysis showed that being a carrier of the gene
variant was linked to a 38% higher risk of heart attack and death.
Dr. Peter Kaufmann is deputy branch chief of the Clinical Applications and Prevention Branch at
the body that funded the study, the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), which is
part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). He says:
"This research may one day help to identify patients who should be candidates for more intensive
disease prevention and treatment strategies."
He says further studies should now corroborate the findings in a more diverse population.
Speculating on how the gene variant causes the raised cardiovascular risk, the researchers say
it may be something to do with a blood compound called MMP9, an enzyme that rises in line with
cortisol levels.
They suggest MMP9 softens the hard plaques that build up in the linings of arteries, making them
more likely to burst and make clots that can lead to heart attack or death. The team plans to look
further into this.
But in the meantime, Prof. Williams says:
"...what this work suggests already is that we have a found genetic variant that can be easily
identified, so we can begin to develop and test early interventions for those heart patients who
are at high risk of dying or having a heart attack."
In 2011, scientists working on two large international studies, published in Nature
Genetics, discovered 17 new gene
variants tied to coronary heart disease, more than doubling the number of known genetic links
to the disease.
Written by Catharine Paddock PhD
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