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Home > Health Information > E-Newsletters > Heart Health 

New Player in Heart Disease Found

The genetic picture of high blood pressure and heart disease just got more complicated with the discovery of a molecular variation on the theme of the angiotensin-converting enzyme.

Most people with high blood pressure have at least a passing knowledge of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) because many of them are taking ACE inhibitors to help keep the pressure down. ACE inhibitors, as their name implies, inhibit the activity of the ACE enzyme, which acts on a protein called angiotensinogen to produce angiotensin. That, in turn, tightens arteries and raises blood pressure.

ACE 2's Role in High Blood Pressure

Now, it turns out that more than one enzyme acts on angiotensinogen; with scientific brevity, it has been given the name ACE 2. Both ACEs act in the same way, clipping amino acids off the angiotensinogen enzyme. However, the original ACE clips off two amino acids, and ACE 2 clips off one. The result is a molecule with a strikingly different set of activities that are just beginning to be explored.

Researchers at the University of Toronto in Canada have been doing the exploration. They have created mice that lack the gene for ACE 2 and have done detailed studies of what happens to those mice, reporting the results in the journal Nature.

It turns out mice that carry the gene for ACE 1 but not ACE 2 develop impaired heart function. "They have a severe defect in heart function, the mechanism of which we don't know," says Michael A. Crackower, a postdoctoral fellow and a member of the research team.

A statement by Dr. Josef Penninger, a professor of biophysics at Toronto and leader of the research effort, says one logical explanation is the product of the ACE 2 gene protects against previously unidentified damaging side effects of the ACE 1 product. While ACE 1 does lower blood pressure, it also appears to generate molecules that attack the heart, he says.

"What I found interesting is that the hearts in our mice looked like human ones with coronary heart disease," Penninger says. "The transgenic mouse models created in these studies can now be used to develop new approaches to heart disease therapy and new approaches to genetic screening to determine if people are at risk for heart disease and heart failure."

ACE 2 also appears to play a role in high blood pressure, Crackower says. Previous studies have identified the location of a not-yet-identified gene closely involved in high blood pressure. The ACE 2 gene is in that region, which makes it "a strong candidate" for that role, Crackower says.

The Goal of ACE 2 Research

One immediate goal of ACE 2 research at Toronto is "to determine the mechanism that causes the heart defect," he says. The current theory is the trouble is caused by a reaction that deprives the endothelium, the delicate outer layer of heart muscle, of an adequate supply of oxygen.

What Does This Discovery Mean?

The discovery of ACE 2 "raises new questions that may lead to radically new insights," says Dr. Kenneth E. Bernstein, professor of pathology at Emory University and author of an accompanying editorial.

"Finding that an enzyme had an effect on the heart was very exciting," he says. "When you see something unexpected, it opens new ways of thinking."

There is a classic sequence in scientific discovery, Bernstein says; first, a major discovery, and then the longer work of understanding all the implications of that discovery. "This discovery clearly means that something is going on that we need to understand," he says. "When we understand it, we can start to manipulate it."

Is there a new kind of drug for high blood pressure on the horizon? One hint comes from Crackower's plans. He is about to start working for Amgen, the California-based biotechnology company that helped finance the research.

Always consult your physician for more information.

 

July 2002

ACE 2's Role in High Blood Pressure

The Goal of ACE 2 Research

What Does This Discovery Mean?

Online Resources


Risk Factors For High Blood Pressure

High blood pressure can occur in anyone, but is particularly prevalent in:

  • persons with diabetes mellitus, gout, or kidney disease.

  • African-Americans (particularly those who live in the southeastern United States).

  • persons in their early to middle adult years; men in this age group have higher blood pressure more often than women in this age group.

  • persons in their middle to later adult years; women in this age group have higher blood pressure more often than men in this age group (more women have high blood pressure after menopause than men of the same age).

  • middle-aged and elderly people - more than half of all Americans age 65 and older have high blood pressure.

  • persons whose parents or grandparents have/had high blood pressure.

  • obese people.

  • heavy drinkers of alcohol.

  • women who are taking oral contraceptives.

 Online Resources

American Heart Association

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)

National Institutes of Health (NIH)

 

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