MicroRNAs, molecules that are found throughout the body’s tissues and fluids, such as blood, help regulate gene expression tied to health and disease. Because recent research has shown that microRNAs are key players in the regulation of inflammation and vascular health, researchers from the University of Colorado, Boulder, wanted to know whether obesity is associated with any changes in microRNA levels.
“Studying microRNAs circulating in the blood has the potential to increase our understanding of the higher risk for cardiovascular problems that are associated with obesity,” said study co-author Jaime Hijmans, a predoctoral research fellow in the Integrative Vascular Biology Laboratory at the University of Colorado, Boulder. “MicroRNAs might also prove to be useful as biomarkers of cardiovascular health in obese adults.”
For the study, the researchers examined levels of four microRNAs circulating in the blood of 15 normal weight and 15 obese people. The study participants were between the ages of 47 and 64 and were sedentary nonsmokers who were free of heart disease and had normal blood pressure.
The researchers found that the obese study participants had alterations in the levels of specific circulating microRNAs involved in regulating vascular inflammation, a key element of cardiovascular disease risk. These changes were seen in otherwise healthy obese adults, suggesting that obesity without other risk factors negatively affects the body’s mechanisms for regulating inflammation.
Hijmans will present “Obesity and circulating inflammation-related microRNAs” at a poster session on Friday, Aug. 26, from 12:45 to 2:45 p.m. in the Westminster IV room of the Westin Westminster Hotel.
NOTE TO JOURNALISTS: The second “Inflammation, Immunity and Cardiovascular Disease” conference will be held Aug. 24–27 in Westminster, Colo. To read the full abstract or schedule an interview with a member of the research team, please contact the APS Communications Office or 301-634-7209.