Researchers at the Eli and Edythe Broad Centre of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research at UCLA have discovered how high glucose levels – whether caused by diabetes or other factors – keep heart cells from maturing normally.

Their findings help explain why babies born to women with diabetes are more likely to develop congenital heart disease.

The study, which was led by Atsushi ‘Austin’ Nakano, a UCLA Associate Professor of Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology, and member of the Broad Stem Cell Research Centre, was recently published in the journal, eLife.

When developing heart cells are exposed to high levels of glucose, the researchers found, the cells generate more building blocks of DNA than usual, which leads the cells to continue reproducing rather than mature.

‘High blood sugar levels are not only unhealthy for adults; they’re unhealthy for developing foetuses,’ Nakano said.

‘Understanding the mechanism by which high blood sugar levels cause disease in the fetus may eventually lead to new therapies.’

Although genetics plays a large role in the development of congenital heart disease, the leading non-genetic risk factor for the disease is a mother having diabetes during pregnancy. Babies born to women with high levels of glucose in their blood during pregnancy are two-to-five times more likely to develop the disorder than other babies. However, researchers have never been able to define the precise effect of glucose on the developing foetus.

Nakano and his colleagues used human embryonic stem cells to grow heart muscle cells, or cardiomyocytes, in the lab and then exposed them to varying levels of glucose. Cells that were exposed to small amounts of glucose matured normally. But cardiomyocytes that had been mixed with high levels of glucose matured late or failed to mature altogether, and instead generated more immature cells.

The researchers discovered that, when exposed to extra glucose, the cardiomyocytes over-activated the pentose phosphate pathway — a cellular process that, among other things, generates nucleotides, the building blocks of DNA. In cells with high glucose levels, the pentose phosphate pathway made more nucleotides than usual. The scientists showed that the excess of building blocks kept the cells from maturing.

‘More nutrition is generally thought to be better for cells, but here we see the exact opposite,’ Nakano said.

‘By depleting glucose at the right point in development, we can limit the proliferation of the cells, which coaxes them to mature and makes the heart muscle stronger.’

Nakano’s group observed the same thing at work in pregnant mice with diabetes: The heart cells of foetuses divided quickly but matured slowly.

Nakano said that the finding could lead to better methods of making cardiomyocytes from stem cells. Today, most protocols for generating cardiomyocytes in the lab lead to immature cells, but targeting the pentose phosphate pathway could help generate more mature cells for regenerating heart cells or for research purposes.