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Samuel
Tue, Jul-03-07, 11:16
http://www.latimes.com/features/health/la-hew-booster2jul02,1,3470250.story?coll=la-headlines-health&track=crosspromo

Even bacteria like a little fat (yours) in their diet
July 2, 2007

You may not think you need another reason to watch your cholesterol — but here's one anyway: If you don't watch your blood fats, you may be more susceptible to attack by hungry cholesterol vampires when you go out tramping through the forest. High blood cholesterol, according to new research, is deemed especially scrumptious by certain bacteria spread by ticks.

The bacterium in question — Anaplasma phagocytophilium — is spread by the same tick that causes Lyme disease. When the bug enters the body, it causes a sickness known as human granulocytic anaplasmosis (HGA), which is characterized by high fever, headaches, and liver damage. Anaplasma phagocytophilium, what's more, is a cholesterol addict. It can't make cholesterol from scratch but need lots for its cell membrane. Once inside the body, it steals the needed lipid from human cells.

Researchers in Yasuko Rikihisa's lab at Ohio State University in Columbus used mutant mice to study whether higher blood cholesterol levels can lead to higher rates of infection. The mice were engineered to lack a key cholesterol-processing gene (apolipoprotein E) and thus had lots of cholesterol free-floating in the blood.

The scientists studied four groups: healthy mice with a normal diet, healthy mice on a high cholesterol diet, mutant mice with a normal diet, and mutant mice with a high cholesterol diet. The mice were injected with cells infected with Anaplasma phagocytophilium, and were then monitored for levels of cholesterol and numbers of bacteria.

At the end of four weeks, the results were clear: Mutant mice who consumed high-cholesterol food had two to three times higher cholesterol levels and significantly higher bacterial counts than the other three groups. The study appears in the May 15 issue of the Journal of Infectious Diseases.

The moral of this story? People who are genetically prone to high cholesterol levels and who chow down on a cholesterol-promoting diet may be more susceptible to HGA, the scientists suggest. (The average age of HGA infection is 51, whereas for Lyme disease, it is 39. Since the same ticks carry both diseases, the new research may explain why older people, who tend to have higher cholesterol, are stricken with HGA.)

So if you're the kind who's apt to go out walking in the woods — maybe shun that burger and pick up a salad?

— Chelsea Martinez

Dodger
Tue, Jul-03-07, 11:19
Mice are not humans.

tom sawyer
Tue, Jul-03-07, 12:26
So now we know not to become mutants and eat an abnormal diet, lest we have a slightly increased risk of becoming infected with Lyme. What a relief, I was just thinking about doing that.

I guess it is interesting to note that older people are more likely to become infected, but I think it is a real stretch to conclude the reason(s) behind this on the basis of some funky mouse experiment. Typical of the terrible amount of myopia in research today.

Samuel
Tue, Jul-03-07, 13:10
Which is the better food for this type of bacteria, LDL or HDL? How about triglycerides?

ceberezin
Tue, Jul-03-07, 14:44
The conclusions are based on the assumption that mice and human beings produce cholesterol in the same way. We human beings do not get most of our cholesterol from food. Eighty percent is made in the liver, which also regulates the amount of cholesterol in the body. We have no idea whether it is the same with mice.

We also don't know what ingredients in their food made it higher in cholesterol. There might have been something else in that food that was promoting the bacteria.

If HGA is caused by the same tick that carries lyme disease, it stands to reason that the incidence of HGA would be similar to that of lyme disease. Is it? If not, why not?

Whoa182
Tue, Jul-03-07, 15:53
Interesting story, thanks for sharing!

Samuel
Tue, Jul-03-07, 16:14
I remember reading a CNN article early in 2003 about Dr Atkins who was interviewed by some student doctors. One student asked him "What do your bodies do with all the cholesterol in the food you eat?" Dr. Atkins answered "When you are on a low carb diet your blood chemistry becomes different. You consume the choleterol."

LarryAJ
Wed, Jul-04-07, 13:38
Chemically, the relation between cholesterol and fat is roughly similar to the relation between the USA and Japan, not like the relation between Virginia and West Virginia. Cholesterol has three six carbon and one five carbon rings in its’ structure (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cholesterol) while fats (fatty acids) are carbon chains that are in essentailly a line - as much as three or more carbon atoms can line up (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatty_acid).

Yet the media groups the two together as if they are the same thing with different names. They really are only just “traveling companions” because they are both hydrophobic and must be carried in the water biased blood by an
apolipoprotein. An apolipoprotein together with the fat/cholesterol it "carries" are then called HDL, IDL, LDL and VLDL, the particles that a blood lipid test measures.

Just thought the terms should be clarified.