By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
ScienceabodeScienceabode
  • Home
  • News & Perspective
    News & PerspectiveShow More
    Microorganism that causes rare but severe eye infections detected in NSW coastal areas
    By Admin
    Scientists identify common cause of gastro in young children and adults over 50 years old
    By admin
    AI reveals hidden traits about our planet’s flora to help save species
    By admin
    Eye drops slow nearsightedness progression in kids, study finds
    By admin
    Using AI to create better, more potent medicines
    By admin
  • Latest News
    Latest NewsShow More
    Researchers develop new robot medics for places doctors are unable to be
    By Admin
    Even thinking about marriage gets young people to straighten up
    By admin
    Study: People tend to locate the self in the brain or the heart – and it affects their judgments and decisions
    By admin
    UCLA patient is first to receive successful heart transplant after using experimental 50cc Total Artificial Heart
    By admin
    Via Dying Cells, UVA Finds Potential Way to Control Cholesterol Levels
    By admin
  • Health
    Health
    The World Health Organization defines health as “a state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.”…
    Show More
    Top News
    Researchers design machine learning models to better predict adolescent suicide and self-harm risk
    September 11, 2023
    Scientists identify evolutionary gateway helping pneumonia bacteria become resistant to antibiotics   
    October 3, 2023
    New research indicates some people may be physically unable to use police breathalysers
    October 3, 2023
    Latest News
    Game-Changer in Emergency Medicine: New AI Test Flags Sepsis Hours Before Symptoms Worsen
    June 4, 2025
    Perfumes and lotions disrupt how body protects itself from indoor air pollutants
    June 3, 2025
    Medical Milestone: Surgeons Perform First-Ever Human Bladder Transplant
    May 20, 2025
    A Downside of Taurine: It Drives Leukemia Growth
    May 19, 2025
  • Environment
    EnvironmentShow More
    Perfumes and lotions disrupt how body protects itself from indoor air pollutants
    By Admin
    Arsenic exposure linked to faster onset of diabetes in south Texas population 
    By Admin
    Antarctica vulnerable to invasive species hitching rides on plastic and organic debris
    By Admin
    New substrate material for flexible electronics could help combat e-waste
    By Admin
    Bacteria ‘nanowires’ could help scientists develop green electronics
    By Admin
  • Infomation
    • Pricavy Policy
    • Terms of Service
  • Jobs
  • Application Submission
Notification Show More
Aa
ScienceabodeScienceabode
Aa
  • Home
  • Health
  • Anatomy
  • Jobs Portal
  • Application Submission
  • Categories
    • Health
    • Anatomy
    • Food & Diet
    • Beauty Lab
    • News & Perspective
    • Environment
  • More Foxiz
    • Blog Index
    • Sitemap
Follow US
Scienceabode > Blog > Latest News > High blood-sugar levels may harden heart valves
Latest News

High blood-sugar levels may harden heart valves

admin
Last updated: 2014/10/27 at 3:29 PM
By admin
Share
7 Min Read
SHARE


Assays created in a Rice University lab contain interstitial heart-valve cells, collagen and nutrients. These contain varying levels of glucose metabolized by the cells as they create the extracellular matrix that forms valves. The lab found that 2 grams per liter of glucose in the solution (center vertical row) worked best, but either more or less slowed the process. (Credit: Grande-Allen Lab/Rice University)

 

Rice University bioengineers have found new evidence of a possible link between diabetes and the hardening of heart valves.

- Advertisement -
MedBanner_Skyscraper_160x600_03/2018

 

A Rice lab, in collaboration with the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) Medical School, discovered that the interstitial cells that turn raw materials into heart valves need just the right amount of nutrients for proper metabolic function.

 

The surprise was that feeding them too much glucose, a sugar, slowed the cells down.

 

Diabetes is a metabolic disease characterized by high blood-sugar levels over a long period; a 2006 study of atherosclerosis by University of Washington researchers found a correlation between diabetes and aortic-valve calcification.

 

In the new work by the lab of Jane Grande-Allen of Rice’s bioengineering department, recently ranked No. 5 in the nation by U.S. News & World Report, researchers have directly seen the effect of high blood-sugar levels on heart-valve cell metabolism for the first time. The study appears this month in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface.

 

“The most significant result of the study is that high glucose concentration can actually be detrimental to the aortic-valve cells and their behavior in interacting with the extracellular matrix,” said lead author Peter Kamel, who carried out the experiments as a Rice undergraduate. He is in his third year at Baylor College of Medicine, where he is completing a dual-degree program offered by the neighboring Houston institutions.

 

“We’ve seen in a variety of other cell types, like cells in the kidney, the retina and nerves, that high glucose concentrations can directly damage those cells and their activities,” he said. “That results in patients with diabetes having problems with vision and with their nerves and kidneys as well.

 

“The results that high glucose concentration can also cause pathologic remodeling by the aortic-valve cells could suggest that diabetes is also directly a cause of aortic-valve disease,” he said.

 

Grande-Allen’s lab studies the biomechanics of heart valves, particularly their calcification, or hardening, a condition that lessens blood flow to the heart. In the new study the researchers took on the little-understood process of interstitial valve-cell metabolism.

 

“Hardly anything was known about the metabolism of heart valves, but metabolism underlies everything,” Grande-Allen said. “It’s one of the cell’s main orders of business.”

 

The idea for the study came about when she met with Heinrich Taegtmeyer, a cardiologist and professor at UTHealth. Kamel’s experiments combined Taegtmeyer’s ideas about cell metabolism and the Grande-Allen lab’s capabilities to explore ways to manipulate interstitial cells. Rice chemical engineer Deepak Nagrath also contributed key insights about how to examine the metabolism of these cells.

 

Kamel started with solutions of collagen, the most abundant protein in the body, and cells drawn from the aortic heart valves of pigs. Most solutions also included a nutrient — glucose, pyruvate, glutamine or a supplement mixture called F-12 — to stimulate the cells’ metabolism.

 

When the cells worked at peak, Grande-Allen said, they would contract the liquid into a gel as they absorbed and metabolized nutrients, and then turned raw collagen into connective tissue. “The cells pulled the collagen together and tightened it into packed structures,” she said.

 

“This test is extremely sensitive to how much glucose you give the cells,” she said. “When we didn’t give them any glucose, nothing happened. If we gave them just a little, we would wait and wait. Sometimes, after about two weeks, the cells would start contracting.

 

“Glucose helps cells do many things. It provides essential fuel for their function, and it helps them make carbohydrates that are part of glycoproteins and proteoglycans and glycolipids, but the cells have to work really hard to process all that,” Grande-Allen said. “Maybe that’s what’s happening to the collagen gel contraction when we give them more glucose.”

 

The researchers found solutions with 2 grams of glucose per liter were optimal for contraction. Because off-the-shelf solutions come in standard concentrations of 1 and 4.5 grams per liter, researchers who don’t mix their own solutions could easily miss the connection between glucose level and metabolism, Kamel said.

 

“It’s interesting that the standard concentrations weren’t the best,” Grande-Allen said.

 

“I also want to follow up on the effects of higher glucose concentrations,” she said. “We know that calcific aortic-valve disease is heavily associated with metabolic syndrome, which can lead to Type 2 diabetes. It’s not as common as the link between atherosclerosis and diabetes, but it’s definitely an appreciable, strong subset.”

 

To understand any heart valve-related disease, “we need to understand the mechanism of how the cells interact with excess lipids and sugars, and we’re just starting to scratch the surface,” she said. “So work like this is pretty fundamental.”

 

Source: Rice University

 

Published on  27th October  2014

admin October 27, 2014 October 27, 2014
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link Print

Fast Four Quiz: Precision Medicine in Cancer

How much do you know about precision medicine in cancer? Test your knowledge with this quick quiz.
Get Started
Even in Winter, Life Persists in Arctic Seas

(USCGC Healy breaking through the Bering Sea waves. Credit: Chantelle Rose/NSF)   Despite…

A Biodiversity Discovery That Was Waiting in the Wings–Wasp Wings, That Is

Wing size differences between two Nasonia wasp species are the result of…

Entertainement

Coming soon

Your one-stop resource for medical news and education.

Your one-stop resource for medical news and education.
Sign Up for Free

You Might Also Like

Latest News

Researchers develop new robot medics for places doctors are unable to be

By Admin
Latest News

Even thinking about marriage gets young people to straighten up

By admin
Latest News

Study: People tend to locate the self in the brain or the heart – and it affects their judgments and decisions

By admin
Latest News

UCLA patient is first to receive successful heart transplant after using experimental 50cc Total Artificial Heart

By admin
Facebook Twitter Youtube Instagram
Company
  • Privacy Policy
  • Editorial Policy
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Contact US
  • Feedback
  • Advertisement
More Info
  • Newsletter
  • Beauty Lab
  • News & Perspective
  • Food & Diet
  • Health
  • Environment
  • Anatomy

Sign Up For Free

Subscribe to our newsletter and don't miss out on our programs, webinars and trainings.

Copyright © 2023 ScienceAbode. All Rights Reserved. Designed and Developed by Spirelab Solutions (Pvt) Ltd

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?