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Leslie Leinwand ,
CU-Boulder: Burmese Python blood plasma may have implications for human
heart health
October 28, 2011
A surprising new University of Colorado Boulder study shows that huge
amounts of fatty acids circulating in the bloodstreams of feeding
pythons promote healthy heart growth, results that may have implications
for treating human heart disease.
Leslie
Leinwand, CU-Boulder
CU-Boulder Professor Leslie Leinwand and her research team found the
amount of triglycerides -- the main constituent of natural fats and oils
-- in the blood of Burmese pythons one day after eating increased by
more than fiftyfold. Despite the massive amount of fatty acids in the
python bloodstream there was no evidence of fat deposition in the heart,
and the researchers also saw an increase in the activity of a key enzyme
known to protect the heart from damage.
After identifying the chemical make-up of blood plasma in fed pythons,
the CU-Boulder researchers injected fasting pythons with either "fed
python" blood plasma or a reconstituted fatty acid mixture they
developed to mimic such plasma. In both cases, the pythons showed
increased heart growth and indicators of cardiac health. The team took
the experiments a step further by injecting mice with either fed python
plasma or the fatty acid mixture, with the same results.
"We found that a combination of fatty acids can induce beneficial heart
growth in living organisms," said CU-Boulder postdoctoral researcher
Cecilia Riquelme, first author on the Science paper. "Now we are trying
to understand the molecular mechanisms behind the process in hopes that
the results might lead to new therapies to improve heart disease
conditions in humans."
The paper is being published in the Oct. 28 issue of the journal
Science. In addition to Leinwand and Riquelme, the authors include CU
postdoctoral researcher Brooke Harrison, CU graduate student Jason
Magida, CU undergraduate Christopher Wall, Hiberna Corp. researcher
Thomas Marr and University of Alabama Tuscaloosa Professor Stephen Secor.
Previous studies have shown that the hearts of Burmese pythons can grow
in mass by 40 percent within 24 to 72 hours after a large meal, and that
metabolism immediately after swallowing prey can shoot up by fortyfold.
As big around as telephone poles, adult Burmese pythons can swallow prey
as large as deer, have been known to reach a length of 27 feet and are
able to fast for up to a year with few ill effects.
There are good and bad types of heart growth, said Leinwand, who is an
expert in genetic heart diseases including hypertrophic cardiomyopathy,
the leading cause of sudden death in young athletes. While cardiac
diseases can cause human heart muscle to thicken and decrease the size
of heart chambers and heart function because the organ is working harder
to pump blood, heart enlargement from exercise is beneficial.
"Well-conditioned athletes like Olympic swimmer Michael Phelps and
cyclist Lance Armstrong have huge hearts," said Leinwand, a professor in
the molecular, cellular and developmental biology department and chief
scientific officer of CU's Biofrontiers Institute. "But there are many
people who are unable to exercise because of existing heart disease, so
it would be nice to develop some kind of a treatment to promote the
beneficial growth of heart cells."
Riquelme said once the CU team confirmed that something in the blood
plasma of pythons was inducing positive cardiac growth, they began
looking for the right "signal" by analyzing proteins, lipids, nucleic
acids and peptides present in the fed plasma. The team used a technique
known as gas chromatography to analyze both fasted and fed python plasma
blood, eventually identifying a highly complex composition of
circulating fatty acids with distinct patterns of abundance over the
course of the digestive process.
In the mouse experiments led by Harrison, the animals were hooked up to
"mini-pumps" that delivered low doses of the fatty acid mixture over a
period of a week. Not only did the mouse hearts show significant growth
in the major part of the heart that pumps blood, the heart muscle cell
size increased, there was no increase in heart fibrosis -- which makes
the heart muscle more stiff and can be a sign of disease -- and there
were no alterations in the liver or in the skeletal muscles, he said.
"It was remarkable that the fatty acids identified in the plasma-fed
pythons could actually stimulate healthy heart growth in mice," said
Harrison. The team also tested the fed python plasma and the fatty acid
mixture on cultured rat heart cells, with the same positive results,
Harrison said.
The CU-led team also identified the activation of signaling pathways in
the cells of fed python plasma, which serve as traffic lights of sorts,
said Leinwand. "We are trying to understand how to make those signals
tell individual heart cells whether they are going down a road that has
pathological consequences, like disease, or beneficial consequences,
like exercise," she said.
The prey of Burmese pythons can be up to 100 percent of the constricting
snake's body mass, said Leinwand, who holds a Marsico Endowed Chair of
Excellence at CU-Boulder. "When a python eats, something extraordinary
happens. Its metabolism increases by more than fortyfold and the size of
its organs increase significantly in mass by building new tissue, which
is broken back down during the digestion process."
The three key fatty acids in the fed python plasma turned out to be
myristic acid, palmitic acid and palmitoleic acid. The enzyme that
showed increased activity in the python hearts during feeding episodes,
known as superoxide dismutase, is a well-known "cardio-protective"
enzyme in many organisms, including humans, said Leinwand.
The new Science study grew out of a project Leinwand began in 2006 when
she was named a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Professor and awarded a
four-year, $1 million undergraduate education grant from the Chevy
Chase, Md.-based institute. As part of the award Leinwand initiated the
Python Project, an undergraduate laboratory research program designed to
focus on the heart biology of constricting snakes like pythons thought
to have relevance to human disease.
Undergraduates contributed substantially to the underpinnings of the new
python study both by their genetic studies and by caring for the lab
pythons, said Leinwand. While scientists know a great deal about the
genomes of standard lab animal models like fruit flies, worms and mice,
relatively little was known about pythons. "We have had to do a lot of
difficult groundwork using molecular genetics tools in order to
undertake this research," said Leinwand.
CU-Boulder already had a laboratory snake facility in place, which
contributed to the success of the project, she said.
"The
fact that the python study involved faculty, postdoctoral researchers, a
graduate student and an undergraduate, Christopher Wall, shows the
project was a team effort," said Leinwand. "Chris is a good example of
how the University of Colorado provides an incredible educational
research environment for undergraduates." Wall is now a graduate student
at the University of California, San Diego.
Hiberna Corp., a Boulder-based company developing drugs based on natural
models of extreme metabolic regulation, signed an exclusive agreement
with CU's Technology Transfer Office in 2008, licensing technology
developed by Leinwand based on the natural ability of pythons to
dramatically increase their heart size and metabolism.
Directed by Nobel laureate and CU Distinguished Professor Tom Cech, the
Biofrontiers Institute was formed to advance human health and welfare by
exploring critical areas of biology and translating new knowledge into
practical applications. The institute is educating a new generation of
interdisciplinary scientists to work together on solutions to complex
biomedical challenges and to expand Colorado's leadership in
biotechnology. |