Making old hearts younger - HSCI researchers find protein that reverses some effects of aging in mice
Two Harvard Stem Cell Institute (HSCI) researchers — a stem cell biologist and a practicing cardiologist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital — have identified a protein in the blood of mice and humans that may prove to be the first effective treatment for the form of age-related heart failure that affects millions of Americans. When the protein, called GDF-11, was injected into old mice, which develop thickened heart walls in a manner similar to aging humans, the hearts were reduced in size and thickness, resembling the healthy hearts of younger mice. Even more important than the implications for the treatment of diastolic heart failure, the finding by Richard T. Lee, a Harvard Medical School professor at the hospital, and Amy Wagers, a professor in Harvard’s Department of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology, ultimately may rewrite our understanding of aging. A report on Lee and Wagers’ findings was published today by the journal Cell. “The most common form of heart failure [in the elderly] is actually a form that’s not caused by heart attacks but is very much related to the heart aging,” said Lee, who, like Wagers, is a principal faculty member at HSCI. “In this study, we were able to show that a protein that circulates in the blood is related to this aging process, and if we gave older mice this protein, we could reverse the heart aging in a very short period of time,” Lee said. “We are very excited about it because it opens a new window on the most common form of heart failure.” He added, “This is the coolest thing I’ve ever been a part of.” Doug Melton, HSCI co-director and Harvard’s Xander University Professor, called the discovery “huge. It’s going to change the way we think about aging.” “I have 300 patients right now, and I think I have about 20 who are suffering from this type of heart failure, which we sometimes call diastolic heart failure,” said Lee. “They come into the hospital, have a lot of fluid taken off, then they’ll go home. Then they come back again. It’s really frustrating because we don’t have any drugs to treat this. We need to work as hard as we can to figure out if this discovery can be turned into a treatment for heart failure in our aging patients.” The Lee and Wagers labs now are focused on moving GDF-11 toward clinical trials — which Lee predicts could begin in four to five years — and learning what other tissue types the protein might affect. Wagers, who since her postdoctoral days at Stanford has been working with what is called the parabiotic mouse system — in which mice share a circulatory system — previously showed that factors in the blood of young animals, which until now had been unidentified, have a rejuvenating effect on various tissues in older animals, particularly in the spinal cord and musculature. “As we age, there are many changes that occur in different parts of the body,” Wagers said, “and those changes are often associated with a decline in the function of our bodies. One of the interests of my laboratory is in understanding why this happens and whether it is an inevitable consequence of aging, or if it might be reversible.