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Cholesterol Gene Linked to Longevity
Excerpt
by Lindsey Tanner,
AP
One reason some people live into their
90s and beyond may be a genetic variation that makes the cholesterol
particles in their blood really big.
"Supersize it" is not usually associated
with good health, but evidence increasingly is showing that bigger
is indeed better when it comes to the lipoprotein particles that
carry cholesterol through the bloodstream.
Smaller particles, it is believed,
can more easily embed themselves in the blood vessel walls, contributing
to the fatty buildups that lead to heart attacks and strokes.
A study in Wednesday's Journal
of the American Medical Association suggests that the tendency
to have large cholesterol particles can be inborn.
The study, led by Dr. Nir Barzilai,
director of the Institute for Aging Research at Albert Einstein
College of Medicine, found that people in their late 90s and beyond
are more likely to have a gene variation that causes large particles
of both HDL cholesterol the good variety and LDL
cholesterol, the bad kind.
"We basically think the size is
necessary for longevity," Barzilai said.
The results are intriguing and
support the notion that "exceptional longevity may depend, at
least in part, on inheriting `good' genes," said Anna McCormick
of the National Institute on Aging, which helped fund the study.
Nevertheless, while genes probably
determine particle size, recent research has suggested that exercise
can enlarge the particles.
Doctors do not routinely test for
HDL and LDL particle size, but a few companies offer such tests
commercially. If the findings are confirmed, they could lead to
wider testing. Moreover, research is already under way on a cholesterol-lowering
drug that also makes the particles bigger.
And Dr. Ronald M. Krauss, director
of atherosclerosis research at Children's Hospital Oakland Research
Institute, said the findings suggest that large HDL and LDL particles
may protect against all sorts of life-shortening ailments, not
just heart disease.
The study involved 213 people of
Ashkenazi, or Eastern European, Jewish descent, ages 95 to 107,
along with 216 of their children. The researchers also used a
comparison group made up of 258 of the children's spouses and
neighbors.
The gene variation was found in
nearly 25 percent of the old people but in just 8.6 percent of
the younger comparison group, a threefold difference. The related
children were twice as likely to have the mutation as the comparison
group.
The Ashkenazi group and their children
also had greater levels of HDL cholesterol in their blood and
substantially larger HDL and LDL particles than the comparison
subjects.
On the Net:
JAMA: http://jama.ama-assn.org
Reference
Source 102
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