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(Hypertension. 2005;46:454.)
© 2005 American Heart Association, Inc.
Brief Reviews |
From the Laboratory of Cardiovascular Science (S.S.N., A.S., E.G.L.), National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health, Baltimore, Md; and U.O. Geriatria (A.S.), Instituto Nazionale Ricovero e Cura per Anziani (INRCA), Rome, Italy.
Correspondence to Edward G. Lakatta, MD, Laboratory of Cardiovascular Science, National Institute on Aging, NIH, 5600 Nathan Shock Dr, Baltimore, MD 21224. E-mail LakattaE{at}mail.nih.gov
| Abstract |
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Key Words: aging arteries arteriosclerosis risk factors angiotensin II cardiovascular diseases
| Introduction |
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Epidemiological studies have unequivocally shown that age is the dominant risk factor for cardiovascular diseases. Indeed, the incidence and prevalence of hypertension, coronary heart disease, congestive heart failure, and stroke all steeply increase with advancing age. However, most of the research efforts have focused on developing interventions that target "traditional" risk factors for coronary heart disease (eg, hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, etc.) or identifying newer ones, whereas little attention has been devoted to aging. This is because age has usually been viewed as a chronological and unmodifiable, hence unpreventable or untreatable, risk factor. Instead, the risky components of aging have been attributed, in part, to an increased time of exposure to other established cardiovascular risk factors, which, in turn, may vary in number and severity with increasing age.
These arguments expose our major shortcoming in understanding why age is such a potent risk factor for cardiovascular diseases, namely our poor insight into the specific elements that constitute the risky components of aging vis a vis the cardiovascular system. In other words, although we have always intuitively accepted age as being a risk factor and have taken this to be a "truism," we did not have, until recently, good mechanistic or molecular explanations as to why this would be the case.1
In this article, we briefly review the evidence implicating arterial aging as a cardiovascular risk factor, summarize selected recent advances in vascular biology that provide insights into the mechanisms that may underlie the increased risks conferred by arterial aging, and discuss existing interventions to prevent or retard accelerated arterial aging, as well as potential new ones worthy of investigation.
| Arterial Aging in Apparently Healthy Humans |
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The age-associated increase in thickness of the central arterial wall is accompanied by an increase in stiffness (Figure 1C).5 This has been attributed to the repeated cycles of distensions and elastic recoils of the arterial wall, which are thought to accelerate the fragmentation and depletion of elastin, as well as the deposition of collagen.6 Stiffness can be further amplified in the presence of specific gene polymorphisms.7 The age-associated increase in central arterial stiffness, in turn, contributes to shifting the return of reflected waves to an earlier time during systole, which leads to an increase in central pressure augmentation (Figure 1D).8 Thus, although peripheral systolic blood pressure and pulse pressure increase with age,9 for a given brachial blood pressure, central blood pressure is higher in older persons.10
Endothelial cells play a pivotal role in regulating several arterial properties, including vascular tone, vascular permeability, angiogenesis, and the response to inflammation. Endothelial-derived substances (eg, NO, endothelin-1) are determinants of large arterial compliance,11 suggesting that endothelial cells may also modulate central arterial stiffness. However, endothelial function in central arteries has not been directly assessed in humans. In the brachial artery, endothelial function, as assessed by agonist- or flow-mediated vasoreactivity, has been shown to decline with advancing age.12,13 However, in contrast to central arteries, the stiffness of muscular arteries does not increase with advancing age.14 Thus, the manifestations of arterial aging may vary among the different vascular beds, reflecting differences in the structural compositions of the arteries and, perhaps, differences in the age-associated signaling cascades that modulate the arterial properties (see below), or differences in the response to these signals across the arterial tree.
There is growing recognition that telomere length may be construed as a tissue-specific marker of biological, as opposed to chronological, age. Telomeres are specialized structures located at the end of chromosomes, which shorten with each replication, unless they are rescued by the enzyme telomerase reverse transcriptase. When telomere length reaches a critical size, reflecting numerous cycles of attrition, no further cellular replication is possible and the cell becomes senescent. Telomere length has been shown to be inversely associated with chronological age in endothelial cells from human abdominal aorta, iliac arteries, and iliac veins.15,16 The impact of telomere-induced vascular senescence may be accentuated in older individuals, in whom recent studies indicate that the number17 and activity18 of endothelial progenitor cells is reduced, suggesting an age-associated diminution in regenerative capacity, which may contribute to the age-associated impairment in angiogenesis.19
| Arterial Aging in Cardiovascular Diseases |
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Patients with hypertension exhibit greater carotid wall thickness,20 central arterial stiffness,21 and central pressure augmentation22 than normotensive subjects, even after adjusting for age. They are thought to have higher central arterial diameters,23 although this is presently debated.6,24 Hypertensive individuals exhibit endothelial dysfunction,25 and the mechanisms underlying their endothelial dysfunction are similar to the ones that occur with normotensive aging, albeit they appear at an earlier age.26 The normotensive offspring of hypertensives also exhibit endothelial dysfunction,27 suggesting that endothelial dysfunction may precede the development of clinical hypertension. Among hypertensive men, shorter telomere length of circulating white blood cells is associated with greater arterial stiffness.28
The metabolic syndrome, which is quite prevalent among older individuals,29 is associated with elevated carotid arterial thickness and stiffness.30 Diabetics also exhibit higher carotid IMT than nondiabetics,31 and they have accelerated progression of their IMT.32 Although their central arterial stiffness is increased,21 this is not accompanied by an increase in the central pressure augmentation.33 Diabetics also exhibit endothelial dysfunction,34 which can be found in their first-degree relatives who have insulin resistance.35 The circulating white blood cells of insulin-dependent diabetics have shorter telomere lengths than those from normoglycemic controls or noninsulin-dependent diabetics.36
Patients with atherosclerosis have increased thickness,3,37 and stiffness38 of their central arterial walls, greater central pressure augmentation,39 and shorter telomere lengths on their circulating white blood cells.40,41 They also exhibit endothelial dysfunction,42 which has been implicated in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis43 and is one of its earliest pathologic manifestations.44
| Accelerated Arterial Aging Is Risky |
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| Age-Associated Arterial Remodeling Under the Microscope |
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| Aging of the Arterial Intima |
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The expression and activity of transforming growth factor-ß1 (TGF-ß1), a multifunctional growth factor that regulates cell replication, synthesis of extracellular matrix components, and the response to injury,57 are also increased in the aged intima.58 Furthermore, the bioavailability of NO is decreased with aging, whereas the activity of NAD(P)H oxidase and the production of reactive oxygen species are increased,59,60 which can lead to peroxidation of lipids and oxidative modifications of proteins.
Thus, increased intimal thickening should not be construed as "subclinical atherosclerosis" but as a marker of arterial aging. However, the 2 are linked because the biochemical, enzymatic, metabolic, inflammatory, and cellular changes within the diffusely thickened intima that accompanies advancing age are the very same ones that are implicated in the pathogenesis and pathophysiology of arterial diseases such as atherosclerosis. Indeed, in mice, rabbits, and nonhuman primates, experimental atherogenesis is more severe in older versus younger animals, even when the intensity or duration of the exposure to risk factors (eg, elevated plasma lipids) is equivalent54,61 (Figure 3C).
| Aging of Endothelial Cells |
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Endothelial cells exhibit shorter telomere lengths with aging15 and suppressed activity of telomerase reverse transcriptase.63 Senescence-like phenotypic changes in endothelial cells can also be induced in the absence of telomere length changes through glycation of collagen 1.64 Advanced glycation end products, which accumulate with aging, increase the production of superoxide anion through the activation of NAD(P)H/oxidase. The coupling of advanced glycation end products to their receptors on endothelial cells also triggers inflammatory cell recruitment and activation and enhances thrombogenesis by stimulating platelet aggregation.65
| Aging of the Arterial Media |
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Aortic medial VSMCs from older rats are larger in size and fewer in number than those in the aorta from young adult rats.68 Some of these cells appear to have undergone an age-associated phenotypic modulation toward a dedifferentiated and synthetic state. VSMC migration from the medial to the intimal compartment is a plausible mechanism for the increased number of VSMC within the diffusely thickened intima of central arteries as they age. Furthermore, after arterial injury, they underlie, in part, the muscle cell growth that accompanies the exaggerated neointimal formation in older versus younger rats69 and the accelerated remodeling response in older versus adult rats.70 This exaggerated response is attributable to factors intrinsic to the vessel wall because the excessive intimal hyperplasia is still observed when aortae from old animals are transplanted into younger ones.69
The aged media are also characterized by alterations in the content and integrity of the structural matrix proteins that are implicated in arterial stiffening, namely elastin and collagen, as well as their linkages to other matrix constituents or each other. Elastin content decreases with advancing age because of a deficiency in the synthesis of elastin, which is attributed, in part, to repression of elastin gene expression by B-Myb, a process that could be experimentally rescued by expression of cyclin A,71 and to degradation of elastin fibers, a process that is accelerated by age-associated enzymatic processes, such as MMP-2, the levels and activity of which in the aortic wall are increased with advancing age.66 The elastin fragments that are generated, far from being inert, interact with the elastinlaminin receptor that is present on the surface of a variety of cells, including endothelial cells and VSMCs, and induce their motility and proliferation, as well as the release of proteolytic enzymes.72 In contrast to the reduction in elastin content, there is excessive synthesis and deposition of collagen types I and III in the media from old animals.58 With advancing age, adjacent collagen fibrils undergo nonenzymatic glycation and oxidation of free amino groups to form advanced glycation end products,73 which further increase the stiffness of the collagen network. The stiffness of the arterial wall is also modulated by interactions between VSMCs and extracellular matrix constituents, which are themselves altered with aging.7
| Ang II Signaling |
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Thus, Ang II signaling appears to play a critical role in modulating many of the stimuli and signals that govern arterial aging and regulate its structural and functional response and adaptation (Figure 4). Importantly, many of the same metabolic, enzymatic and cellular factors that are activated or suppressed by Ang II signaling and by other signaling cascades (eg, NO, bradykinin, endothelin, norepinephrine, prostaglandins, etc.) are increasingly recognized as critical factors in the pathogenesis and promotion of arterial diseases such as hypertension and atherosclerosis. Thus, it is likely that the imbalance among the various growth factor signaling cascades in the aged arterial wall not only accounts for age-associated arterial remodeling but also provides a mechanistic link between arterial aging and arterial diseases and provides insight into why accelerated vascular aging is a risk factor for these diseases.
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| Interventions to Retard or Prevent Accelerated Arterial Aging |
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A detailed discussion of pharmacological interventions that can modulate the elements of arterial aging is beyond the scope of this article. It is worth noting that inhibiting angiotensin receptor signaling beginning at an early age markedly delays the age-associated increase in collagen content and intimal medial thickening in rodents,81,82 and that breaking nonenzymatic collagen cross-links with a novel thiazolium agent reduces arterial stiffness in nonhuman primates73 and in humans,83 although its blood pressurelowering effects have been less impressive.84
The aforementioned insights from animal models and human studies indicate that the components of arterial aging are modifiable, so the traditional view of arterial aging, which attributes the age-associated changes solely to passive sequelae of wear and tear from repetitive cycles of distension and recoil of central arteries,6 is no longer tenable. These insights also provide us with a growing list of putative factors that could be targeted by specific interventions aimed at retarding or preventing accelerated arterial aging. For example, strategies to attenuate the effects of molecules or signaling cascades involved in accelerated intimal thickening (eg, TGF-ß), stiffening (eg, NO bioavailability, deficits in elastin synthesis), protein degradation (eg, MMP-2), arterial wall inflammation (eg, MCP-1), fibrosis (eg, Ang II), or injury (eg, reactive oxygen species) are deserving of further investigation.
| Summary and Perspectives |
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An important corollary of this is that age should no longer be viewed as an immutable cardiovascular risk factor. It is our hope that a greater appreciation of the link between arterial aging and cardiovascular diseases will stimulate further investigation into strategies aimed at preventing or retarding arterial aging, with the hopes that this would attenuate the appearance or the severity of cardiovascular diseases. As a first step, there is a critical need to improve and standardize the methodologies used in the noninvasive measurement of the elements of arterial aging in humans, to develop age- and sex-specific normative values, and to devise guidelines for the appropriate timing and interpretation of these tests. This, in turn, will require the recruitment of, and intercollaboration among, a consortium of vascular biologists, translational researchers, and clinicians to catalyze a significant maturation in the field of arterial aging and bring it to the bedside.
| Acknowledgments |
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Received March 3, 2005; first decision March 29, 2005; accepted June 30, 2005.
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