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Cholesterol Drugs May Aid Brain
Health
By Rick Nauert, Ph.D.
Psych
Central- Scientists from the University of Rochester Medical
Center report cholesterol-lowering drugs known as statins may have a
profound effect on brain cells responsible for healthy aging.
The new findings shed light on a
long-debated potential role for statins in the area of dementia.
Neuroscientists found that statins, one of the most widely
prescribed classes of medication ever used, have an unexpected
effect on brain cells.
Researchers looked at the effects
of statins on glial progenitor cells, which help the brain stay
healthy by serving as a crucial reservoir of cells that the brain
can customize depending on its needs.
The team found that the compounds
spur the cells, which are very similar to stem cells, to shed their
flexibility and become one particular type of cell.
The new findings come at a time of
increasing awareness among neurologists and cardiologists of the
possible effects of statins on the brain. Several studies have set
out to show that statins provide some protection against dementia,
but the evidence has been inconclusive at best.
Meanwhile, there is some debate
among physicians about whether statins might actually boost the risk
of dementia. The new research published in the July issue of the
journal Glia by Steven Goldman, M.D., Ph.D., and first author Fraser
Sim, Ph.D., provides direct evidence for an effect of statins on
brain cells.
“There has been a great deal of
discussion about a link between statins and dementia, but evidence
either way has been scant,” said Goldman, a neurologist who led the
team. “This new data provides a basis for further exploration.
“These findings were made through
experiments done in cell culture using human brain cells and
exposing them to doses of statins used widely in patients. But this
research was not done in people. There are a great number of
questions that need to be explored further before anyone considers
changing the way statins are used,” Goldman added.
Goldman’s team is recognized as a
leader identifying and directing the molecular signals that direct
the development of stem cells and their daughter cells, known as
progenitor cells.
In this study, Sim ran a genomic
screen to see which genes are more active in these cells compared to
other brain cells. Sim and Goldman found several related to
cholesterol, including the enzyme HMG-CoA reductase, which is
central to making cholesterol and is the main target of statins.
“It was quite surprising that the
cholesterol-signaling pathways are so active in these cells,”
Goldman said. “Since such signaling is blocked with compounds used
literally by millions of patients every day, we decided to take a
closer look.”
The team measured the effects of
two widely used statins, simvastatin and pravastatin, on glial
progenitor cells, which can become either astrocytes or
oligodendrocytes. The team looked at progenitor cells from 16
patients who had brain tissue removed during surgery to treat
epilepsy, tumors, or vascular problems.
Scientists found that both
compounds, when used at doses that mimic those that patients take,
spur glial progenitor cells to develop into oligodendrocytes. For
example, in one experiment, they found about five times as many
oligodendrocytes in cultures of human progenitor cells exposed to
pravastatin compared to cultures not exposed to the substance.
Similarly, they found that the
number of progenitor cells was just about one-sixth the level in
cultures exposed to simvastatin compared to cultures not exposed to
the compound.
To understand the process, think of
a baseball team raising a group of great young prospects. They run
fast, they throw hard, they hit well. Most teams will tailor their
players to the positions the team needs – a few pitchers, for
instance, and several batters. Any team that suddenly found itself
with all pitchers or all hitters would be ill prepared to compete.
The Rochester team discovered that
statins essentially push most of the raw talent in one direction.
Scientists don’t really know the
long-term effects of such a shift. Physicians are looking at statins
as a possible treatment for multiple sclerosis, where the myelin
coating that covers nerve cells in the central nervous system is
damaged. Myelin is produced by oligodendrocytes – so spurring the
development of oligodendrocytes might provide one way to reduce or
repair the damage seen in M.S.
But the body maintains a pool of
uncommitted glial progenitor cells for a reason. The body normally
turns to that reservoir of cells when it needs to repair damage from
a variety of causes, such as an infection, hemorrhage, a serious
blow to the head, or inflammation within the brain, such as in
patients with multiple sclerosis. No one knows the consequences if
such cells weren’t available when needed, though increased cognitive
impairment might be one possibility.
“These are the cells ready to
respond if you have a region of the brain that is damaged due to
trauma, or lack of blood flow like a mini-stroke,” said Sim,
assistant professor of Neurology. “Researchers need to look very
carefully at what happens if these cells have been depleted
prematurely.”
Glial progenitor cells are
distributed throughout the brain and, according to Sim, make up
about 3 percent of our brain cells. While true stem cells that can
become any type of cell are very rare in the brain, their progeny,
progenitor cells, are much more plentiful. They are slightly more
specialized than stem cells but can still develop into different
cell types.
The work may be relevant to drugs
commonly used by diabetics as well. That’s because the team
discovered that a signaling molecule called PPAR gamma is central to
the effect of statins on glial progenitor cells.
When PPAR gamma was blocked, the
statins no longer had the effect. Since PPAR gamma is the main
target of diabetes medications such as Avandia and Actos, which
trigger the molecule, Goldman said it’s likely that those
medications have the same effect on progenitor cells. He also noted
that many patients are on both diabetes drugs and statins, which
could increase the effect.
“Our results suggest the need for
awareness of the possible toxicities accruing to long-term statin
use, and identify one such potential toxicity, the premature
differentiation and attendant long-term depletion of oligodendrocyte
progenitor cells of the adult brain,” conclude the authors in their
Glia paper. --
PsychCentral.com
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