New ways to treat anemia could evolve from acetate supplement research

UT Southwestern Medical Center researchers seeking novel treatments for anemia found that giving acetate, the major component of household vinegar, to anemic mice stimulated the formation of new red blood cells.

Currently, the hormone erythropoietin is administered to treat anemia, but this treatment carries with it side effects such as hypertension and thrombosis (blood clotting). The new research, which was performed in mice, suggests that acetate supplements could eventually be a suitable supplement or possibly even an alternative to administration of erythropoietin.

"Using rational interventions based on the mechanistic insights gleaned from our current studies, we may be able to treat acutely or chronically anemic patients with acetate supplements and thereby reduce the need for blood transfusions or erythropoietin therapy," said Dr. Joseph Garcia, Associate Professor of Internal Medicine at UT Southwestern, staff physician-scientist at the VA North Texas Health Care System, and senior author of the study, published in Nature Medicine.

Anemia is the most common blood disorder, affecting some 3.5 million people, including children and women of child-bearing age, as well as many elderly persons. It can have a significant impact on quality of life, leading to fatigue, weakness, and decreased immune function. People who are anemic produce insufficient , which deliver oxygen to tissues throughout the body.

UT Southwestern researchers began their studies by identifying a critical pathway that controls the production of red blood cells in conditions of stress, such as low oxygen. Using genetically modified mice, researchers observed that low oxygen, a state known as hypoxia, stimulates the production of acetate.

Acetate, in turn, activates a molecular pathway that ultimately results in the production of red , or erythropoiesis, by triggering the production of the protein that stimulates this process, called .

"Our study shows that acetate functions as a biochemical 'flare,' linking changes in cell metabolism that occur during hypoxia with the activation of a selective stress signaling pathway," Dr. Garcia said.

More information: An acetate switch regulates stress erythropoiesis, Nature Medicine 20, 1018–1026 (2014) DOI: 10.1038/nm.3587

Journal information: Nature Medicine
Citation: New ways to treat anemia could evolve from acetate supplement research (2014, September 29) retrieved 23 April 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2014-09-ways-anemia-evolve-acetate-supplement.html
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