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CORDIS

MOVING FROM BIOMARKERS TO MECHANISM ORIENTED PREVENTION OF CARDIOMETABOLIC DISEASE

Description du projet

Des stratégies préventives contre les maladies cardiométaboliques

L’obésité et le diabète affectent la santé cardiovasculaire et contribuent au développement de maladies cardiométaboliques (CMD). Pour prévenir l’apparition des CMD, le projet PREVENT-2024, financé par l’UE, propose de développer des interventions pour les personnes présentant des anomalies endocriniennes établies. Celles-ci seront basées sur des molécules présentant une dérégulation dans l’obésité et le diabète, à savoir l’hormone neurotensine, la vasopressine et l’adrénomédulline. Les scientifiques évalueront les stratégies qui inhibent la régulation positive et contrôlent les niveaux de ces molécules dans des modèles animaux et des essais cliniques humains. Outre les données des études omiques, les résultats du projet aideront à prévoir et à prévenir la CMD.

Objectif

Increasing occurrence of obesity and diabetes is the major threat to cardiovascular health of our century. Whereas the field is saturated with “omics” strategies aimed at improving prediction of cardiometabolic disease (CMD), mechanism-orientated prevention strategies, which is what the population calls for, are lacking. We here propose three completely new and high-risk strategies to prevent CMD in large subsets of the population, who have elevated risk due to measurable endocrine abnormalities.
SUBPROJECT 1: We test if the increased CMD risk linked to high levels of the intestinal fat absorption and storage promoting hormone neurotensin (NTS), can be improved by: (A) blockade of NTS using monoclonal antibodies in mice and (B) inhibition of NTS secretion and intestinal fat uptake with the drug orlistat in humans.
SUBPROJECT 2: High plasma levels of vasopressin (VP) (present in 25% of the population) is a strong risk factor for later CMD and the dominating cause of high VP is low water intake. We therefore test if the elevated CMD risk in subjects with high VP can be reduced by increasing water intake in a large 12-month randomized trial of 1.5 L water supplementation vs control therapy.
SUBPROJECT 3: Aderenomedullin (ADM), whose endothelial secretion is enhanced in obesity, has beneficial effects on the intravascular wall but in the extravascular space, to which it diffuses freely, it may promote diabetes. We investigate how long-term increase and decrease of levels of bioactive ADM in the intra- and extravascular compartments, respectively, affect atherosclerosis and glucose metabolism in mice. In humans we test if a monoclonal antibody, which traps ADM in the circulation (while still allowing it to bind to its endothelial receptors) and drains it from the extravascular space, improves vascular function and glucose metabolism.
We provide completely novel, mechanism-orientated and near-future applicable strategies for primary prevention of CMD.

Régime de financement

ERC-ADG - Advanced Grant

Institution d’accueil

LUNDS UNIVERSITET
Contribution nette de l'UE
€ 2 500 000,00
Adresse
Paradisgatan 5c
22100 Lund
Suède

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Région
Södra Sverige Sydsverige Skåne län
Type d’activité
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Liens
Coût total
€ 2 500 000,00

Bénéficiaires (1)