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Drug Combo May Reduce Protease Inhibitor-Related Atherosclerosis
Didanosine, d4T reduce hardening of the arteries risk in mice
Bethesda,
MD (September 5, 2006) – Physiologists may have found a way to decrease the
risk of hardening of the arteries that accompanies the long-term use of
protease inhibitors, a class of drugs that has emerged as the most effective
treatment against HIV and AIDS.
Writing in the American Journal of Physiology–Cell
Physiology, researchers from the University of Kentucky found that when
mice were given a nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI) and a
protease inhibitor in combination, it prevented hardening of the arteries
often associated with long-term use of protease inhibitors alone. The mice
received ritonavir, a common protease inhibitor, in combination with d4T or
didanosine, which are common NRTIs.
“The combination prevented the negative cardiovascular
effect, hardening of the arteries, of the protease inhibitors without
reducing the effectiveness of the protease inhibitors on HIV,” said the
study’s senior author, Eric J. Smart. “To our knowledge, these are the first
data that indicate that nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors can
limit the atherogenic (tendency to form lipid deposits in the arteries)
effects of ritonavir,” the authors wrote.
The study also found:
-
Although protease inhibitors alone
caused cholesterol to build up in mouse arteries, the increased
cholesterol could not be detected in the blood. “This means that when
doctors test for cholesterol on human patients who are using protease
inhibitors, their cholesterol levels may look normal even when they are
not,” Smart said. “In other words, the accumulation of cholesterol
within the arteries is a silent problem.”
-
Although Vitamin E, an antioxidant, has been shown to
prevent the negative effects of protease inhibitors in vitro (in the
test tube), the vitamin provided no benefit to the mice in this study.
The study, entitled “Nucleoside reverse transcriptase
inhibitors prevent HIV protease inhibitor-induced atherosclerosis by
ubiquitination and degradation of protein kinase C,” was carried out by
Emily L. Bradshaw, Xian-An Li, Theresa Guerin, William V. Everson, Melinda
E. Wilson, Annadora J. Bruce-Keller, Richard N. Greenberg, Ling Guo, Stuart
A. Ross and Eric J. Smart. The researchers are from the University of
Kentucky and the Veterans Administration Medical Center in Lexington. The
American Physiological Society published the study.
Long-term side effects a
concern
Protease inhibitors have been effective in prolonging
the lives of people with AIDS, so much so that patients now survive long
enough to develop side effects that are years in the making. One such side
effect is atherosclerosis, the accumulation of cholesterol and foam cells in
the arteries, causing the vessels to narrow and harden.
Atherosclerosis is a problem in the general population,
but protease inhibitors accelerate the process by increasing production of
the protein CD36 within macrophages, which fight infections by consuming
unwanted materials. CD36 spurs macrophages to eat cholesterol: The more CD36
the body produces, the more cholesterol the macrophages consume.
The problem occurs when cholesterol-laden macrophages
get stuck in artery walls. Over time, they accumulate, block the arteries
and can result in heart attacks. Because protease inhibitors prompt the
CD36-rich macrophages to accumulate more cholesterol, the cholesterol and
foam cells build faster and thus lead the arteries to harden more quickly,
Smart explained.
Ritonavir produces greater
blockage
The researchers examined macrophages isolated from mice
receiving ritonavir, a protease inhibitor, and d4T and didanosine, both
NRTIs. “NRTIs completely prevented the upregulation of CD36 and the
development of atherosclerosis,” the authors wrote. Their results also
suggest that the NRTIs prevented the increase in CD36 by decreasing protein
kinase C, an enzyme that changes the function of proteins.
What’s more, NRTI reduced the negative effect of
macrophages and cholesterol without reducing the effectiveness that
ritonavir had against HIV. “So by giving both drugs at the same time, you
get the positive effects of the protease inhibitors without the negative
effect of hardening of the arteries,” Smart concluded.
The researchers are now beginning a short-term study
with healthy human volunteers to see if the protease inhibitor/NRTI drug
combination will help control the production of CD36 in humans as well,
Smart said.
“We’ll try to find out if the NRTI regimen can keep the
CD-36 protein in check in the non-infected volunteers,” Smart said. If the
drug combination works, the researchers will move to further clinical
trials.
Funding
The National Institutes of Health funded the study.
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