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1.
Iron and copper play major roles in biological systems, catalyzing free radical production and consequently causing damage. The relatively high levels of these metals, which are mobilized into the coronary flow following prolonged ischemia, have been incriminated as key players in reperfusion injury to the heart. In the present communication we investigated other roles of iron - providing protection to the ischemic heart via preconditioning (PC). PC was accomplished by subjecting isolated rat hearts to three episodes of 2 min ischemia separated by 3 min of reperfusion. Prolonged ischemia followed the PC phase. PC hearts (group I) were compared to hearts subjected to normal perfusion (group II, no ischemia) and to ischemia without PC (group III). Group I showed a marked improvement in the recovery of hemodynamic function vs. group III. Biochemical parameters further substantiated the PC protection provided to group I against prolonged ischemia. Correspondingly, group I presented markedly lower re-distribution and mobilization of iron and copper into the coronary flow, following prolonged ischemia, as evinced from the decrease in total levels, and in the 'free' fraction of iron and copper. During the PC phase no loss of cardiac function was observed. A small wave of re-distribution and mobilization of iron (typically less than 4-8% of the value of 35 min ischemia) was recorded. The cellular content of ferritin (Ft) measured in the heart was significantly higher in group I than in group III (0.90 and 0.54 microg/mg, respectively). Also, iron-saturation of Ft was significantly lower for PC hearts, compared to both groups II and III (0.22 vs. 0.32 and 0.31 microg/mg, for 35 min ischemia, respectively). These findings are in accord with the proposal that intracellular re-distribution and mobilization of small levels of iron, during PC, cause rapid accumulation of ferritin - the major iron-storage protein. It is proposed that iron play a dual role: (i) It serves as a signaling pathway for the accumulation of Ft following the PC phase. This iron is not involved in cardiac injury, but rather prepares the heart against future high levels of 'free' iron, thus reducing the degree of myocardial damage after prolonged ischemia. (ii) High levels of iron (and copper) are mobilized following prolonged ischemia and cause tissue damage.  相似文献   

2.
We tested the hypothesis that glycogen levels at the beginning of ischemia affect lactate production during ischemia and postischemic contractile function.Isolated working rat hearts were perfused at physiological workload with bicarbonate buffer containing glucose (10 mmol/L). Hearts were subjected to four different preconditioning protocols, and cardiac function was assessed on reperfusion. Ischemic preconditioning was induced by either one cycle of 5 min ischemia followed by 5, 10, or 20 min of reperfusion (PC5/5, PC5/10, PC5/20), or three cycles of 5 min ischemia followed by 5 min of reperfusion (PC3 × 5/5). All hearts were subjected to 15 min total, global ischemia, followed by 30 min of reperfusion. We measured lactate release, timed the return of aortic flow, compared postischemic to preischemic power, and determined tissue metabolites at selected time points.Compared with preischemic function, cardiac power during reperfusion improved in groups PC5/10 and PC5/20, but was not different from control in groups PC5/5 and PC3 × 5/5. There was no correlation between preischemic glycogen levels and recovery of function during reperfusion. There was also no correlation between glycogen breakdown (or resynthesis) and recovery of function. Lactate accumulation during ischemia was lowest in group PC5/20 and highest in the group with three cycles of preconditioning (PC3 × 5/5). Lactate release during reperfusion was significantly higher in the groups with low recovery of power than in the groups with high recovery of power.In glucose-perfused rat heart recovery of function is independent from both pre- and postischemic myocardial glycogen content over a wide range of glycogen levels. The ability to utilize lactate during reperfusion is an indicator for postischemic return of contractile function.  相似文献   

3.
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are believed to be involved in triggering cardiac ischemic preconditioning (IPC). Decreased formation of ROS on reperfusion after prolonged ischemia may in part underlie protection by IPC. In heart models, these contentions have been based either on the effect of ROS scavengers to abrogate IPC-induced preservation or on a measurement of oxidation products on reperfusion. Using spectrophotofluorometry at the left ventricular wall and the fluorescent probe dihydroethidium (DHE), we measured intracellular ROS superoxide (O(2)(-).) continuously in isolated guinea pig heart and tested the effect of IPC and the O(2)(-). scavenger manganese(III) tetrakis (4-benzoic acid) porphyrin chloride (MnTBAP) on O(2)(-). formation throughout the phases of preconditioning (PC), 30-min ischemia and 60-min reperfusion (I/R). IPC was evidenced by improved contractile function and reduced infarction; MnTBAP abrogated these effects. Brief PC pulses increased O(2)(-). during the ischemic but not the reperfusion phase. O(2)(-). increased by 35% within 1 min of ischemia, increased further to 95% after 20 min of ischemia, and decreased slowly on reperfusion. In the IPC group, O(2)(-). was not elevated over 35% during index ischemia and was not increased at all on reperfusion; these effects were abrogated by MnTBAP. Our results directly demonstrate how intracellular ROS increase in intact hearts during IPC and I/R and clarify the role of ROS in triggering and mediating IPC.  相似文献   

4.
It is well established that brief episodes of ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) [preconditioning (PC)] protect the myocardium from the damage induced by subsequent more prolonged I/R. However, the signaling pathways activated during PC or I/R are not well characterized. In this study, the role of Ras-GTPase, tyrosine kinases (TKs), epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and Ca2 +/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMK II) in mediating PC in a perfused rat heart model was investigated. A 40-min episode of global ischemia in perfused rat hearts produced significantly impaired cardiac function, measured as left ventricular developed pressure (Pmax) and left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (LVEDP), and impaired coronary hemodynamics, measured as coronary flow (CF) and coronary vascular resistance (CVR). PC significantly enhanced cardiac recovery after I/R. Combination of PC and FPT III (Ras-GTPase inhibitor FPT III; 232 ng/min for 6 days) treatment did not produce any additive benefits as compared to PC alone. In contrast, PC-induced improvements in cardiac function after I/R were significantly attenuated by pretreatment with genistein (1mg/kg/day for 6 days), a broad-spectrum inhibitor of TKs, or AG1478 (1mg/kg/day for 6 days), a specific inhibitor of EGFR tyrosine kinase or KN-93 (578 ng/min for 6 days), a CaMK II inhibitor, before PC. These observations suggest that PC and FPT III pretreatment may produce cardioprotection via similar mechanisms. Present results also indicate that activation of TKs and specifically activation of EGFR-mediated TKs and CaMK II-mediated regulation of calcium homeostasis are part of the PC mechanisms that improve recovery after I/R. (Mol Cell Biochem 268: 175–183, 2005)  相似文献   

5.
We have recently shown that the protective mechanism of ischemic preconditioning (PC) is impaired in the myocardium that survived infarction and underwent postinfarct ventricular remodeling. In this study, we examined the hypothesis that failure of PC to activate PKC- underlies the refractoriness of the remodeling heart to PC. Circumflex coronary arteries were ligated in rabbits to induce infarction and subsequent ventricular remodeling, and only sham operations were performed in controls. Hearts were isolated before (i.e. 4 days later) or after (i.e. 2 weeks later) remodeling of the left ventricle and used for isolated buffer-perfused heart experiments. Myocardial infarction was induced in isolated hearts by 30 min global ischemia/2 h reperfusion, and its size was measured by tetrazolium staining. Using separate groups of hearts, tissue biopsies were taken before and after PC, and PKC translocation was assessed by Western blotting. Areas infarcted in vivo by coronary ligation (CL) were excluded from subsequent infarct size/PKC analyses. In the hearts 4 days after CL, PC with 2 cycles of 5 min ischemia/5 min reperfusion induced PKC- translocation from cytosol to particulate fractions and limited infarct size to 40% of control value. In the hearts remodeled 2 weeks after CL, PC failed to induce PKC- translocation and infarct size limitation. In this group, PKC activity and hemodynamic responses to adenosine were similar to those in sham-operated controls. When remodeling after CL was prevented by valsartan infusion (10 mg/kg/day), an angiotensin II type 1 (AT1) receptor blocker, PC could induce both infarct limitation and PKC- translocation. The present results suggest that persistent activation of AT1 receptors during remodeling disturbed the PC signaling between G proteins and PKC-, which underlies the refractoriness of the remodeled myocardium to PC.  相似文献   

6.
Recent studies have reported that protection from ischemic preconditioning (PC) is blocked by the opioid receptor antagonist naloxone (NAL). We tested whether an opioid agonist could mimic PC in the rabbit heart, whether that protection involved protein kinase C (PKC) activation, and whether opioid receptors act in concert with other PKC-coupled receptors. Rabbit hearts were subjected to 30min coronary occlusions and were reperfused for either 3 (in situ) or 2 (in vitro) h. Infarct size was determined by staining with triphenyltetrazolium chloride. In untreated in situ hearts 38.5 ± 1.6% of the risk zone infarcted. PC with 5 min ischemia/10 min reperfusion significantly limited infarction to 12.7 ± 2.9% (p < 0.01). NAL infusion did not modify infarction (39.6 ± 1.6%) in non-PC hearts, but blocked the effect of one cycle of PC (34.4 ± 3.6% infarction). NAL, however, could not block cardioprotection when PC was amplified with 3 cycles of ischemia/reperfusion (9.9 ± 1.4% infarction, p < 0.01 vs. control). Morphine could also mimic ischemic preconditioning, but only at a dose much higher than would be used clinically (3 mg/kg). In isolated hearts pretreatment with morphine (0.3 M) significantly limited infarction to 9.3 ± 1.2% (p < 0.01 vs. 32.0 ± 3.1% in controls). This cardioprotective effect of morphine could be blocked by either the PKC inhibitor chelerythrine (30.4 ± 2.6% infarction) or NAL (34.0 ± 2.6% infarction). Neither chelerythrine nor NAL by itself modified infarction in non-PC hearts. NAL could not block protection from one cycle of PC in isolated hearts indicating that an intact innervation may be required for endogenous opioid production. Thus, opioid receptors, like other PKC-coupled receptors, participate in the triggering PC in the rabbit heart.  相似文献   

7.
We have previously described a PKC-epsilon interaction with cytochrome oxidase subunit IV (COIV) that correlates with enhanced CO activity and cardiac ischemic preconditioning (PC). We therefore investigated the effects of PC and ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury on CO subunit levels in an anesthetized rat coronary ligation model. Homogenates prepared from the left ventricular regions at risk (RAR) and not at risk (RNAR) for I/R injury were fractionated into cell-soluble (S), 600 g low-speed centrifugation (L), gradient-purified mitochondrial (M), and 100,000 g particulate (P) fractions. In RAR tissue, PC (2 cycles of 5-min ischemia and 5-min reperfusion) decreased the COI in the P fraction ( approximately 29% of total cellular COI), suggesting changes in interfibrillar mitochondria. After 30 min of ischemia and 120 min of reperfusion, total COI levels decreased in the RAR by 72%. Subunit Va was also downregulated by 42% following prolonged I/R in the RAR. PC administered before I/R reduced the loss of COI in the M and P fractions approximately 30% and prevented COVa losses completely. We observed no losses in subunits Vb and VIIa following I/R alone; however, significant losses occurred when PC was administered before prolonged I/R. Delivery of a cell-permeable PKC-epsilon translocation inhibitor (epsilonV1-2) to isolated rat hearts before prolonged I/R dramatically increased COI loss, suggesting that PKC-epsilon protects COI levels. We propose that additional measures to protect CO subunits when coadministered with PC may improve its cardioprotection against I/R injury.  相似文献   

8.
The hypothesis that oxygen-derived free radicals play an important role in myocardial ischemic and reperfusion injury has received a lot of support. In the presence of catalytic amounts of transition metals such as iron, superoxide anions, and hydrogen peroxide can be transformed into a highly reactive hydroxyl radical °OH (Haber-Weiss reaction). In view of this, we have undertaken this study to investigate whether iron is involved in the reperfusion syndrome and therefore could aggravate free radicals injury. Coronary effluent iron concentrations and cardiac cytosolic iron levels were evaluated in rat hearts subjected to an ischemia/reperfusion sequences. In the case of total ischemia, iron concentration in coronary effluents peaked immediately in the first sample collected upon reperfusion. However, in the case of partial ischemia, iron concentration in coronary effluents peaked rather exclusively during ischemia period. Cardiac cytosolic iron level augmented significantly after 30 min of total ischemia and non significantly in the other ischemia protocols compared to perfused control hearts. It also appears that the iron released is not protein-bound, and could therefore have a marked catalytic activity. The results of the present study suggest that in the oxygen paradox, iron plays an important role in inducing alterations during reoxygenation.  相似文献   

9.
It is well established that severe hypertrophy induces metabolic and structural changes in the heart which result in enhanced susceptibility to ischemic damage during cardioplegic arrest while much less is known about the effect of cardioplegic arrest on moderately hypertrophied hearts. The aim of this study was to elucidate the differences in myocardial high energy phosphate metabolism and in functional recovery after cardioplegic arrest and ischemia in mildly hypertrophied hearts, before any metabolic alterations could be shown under baseline conditions.Cardiac hypertrophy was induced in rats by constriction of the abdominal aorta resulting in 20% increase in heart weight/body weight ratio (hypertrophy group) while sham operated animals served as control. In both groups, isolated hearts were perfused under normoxic conditions for 40 min followed by infusion of St.Thomas' Hospital No. 1 cardioplegia and 90 min ischemia at 25øC with infusions of cardioplegia every 30 min. The changes in ATP, phosphocreatine (PCr) and inorganic phosphate (Pi) were followed by31 P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Systolic and diastolic function was assessed with an intraventricular balloon before and after ischemia.Baseline concentrations of PCr, ATP and Pi as well as coronary flow and cardiac function were not different between the two groups. However, after cardioplegic arrest PCr concentration increased to 61.8 ± 4.9 mol/g dry wt in the control group and to 46.3 ± 2.8 mol/g in hypertrophied hearts. Subsequently PCr, pH and ATP decreased gradually, concomitant with an accumulation of Pi in both groups. PCr was transiently restored during each infusion of cardioplegic solution while Pi decreased. PCr decreased faster after cardioplegic infusions in hypertrophied hearts. The most significant difference was observed during reperfusion: PCr recovered to its pre-ischemic levels within 2 min following restoration of coronary flow in the control group while similar recovery was observed after 4 min in the hypertrophied hearts. A greater deterioration of diastolic function was observed in hypertrophied hearts.Moderate hypertrophy, despite absence of metabolic changes under baseline conditions could lead to enhanced functional deterioration after cardioplegic arrest and ischemia. Impaired energy metabolism resulting in accelerated high energy phosphate depletion during ischemia and delayed recovery of energy equilibrium after cardioplegic arrest observed in hypertrophied hearts could be one of the underlying mechanisms.  相似文献   

10.
To determine whether prior acute Beta blockade protects the heart against the deleterious effects of normothermic low flow global ischemia on myocardial function, aortic pressure, developed pressure, dP/dtmax and end diastolic pressure were monitored in isolated perfused rabbit hearts prior to, during and following 30 and 60 min ischemia, during which either Krebs-Henseleit (control) or Beta blocking agents, Bevantolol (cardioselective) or Propranolol (non-selective) were perfused through the heart. Control hearts made ischemic for 30 min and then reperfused had significantly elevated end diastolic (p < .01) and aortic pressures (p < .01) and reduced developed pressure relative to baseline (p < .05). Hearts treated with Bevantolol or Propranolol (3 × 10-5 m/l) 5 min prior to and during 30 min ischemia recovered preischemic developed pressure and dP/dtmax (p > 0.05), while end diastolic pressure was elevated (p < .01, p < .05 respectively). Aortic pressure was unchanged relative to baseline (p > .05). Comparison of indices from hearts under Beta blockade with controls showed that following 30 min ischemia and recovery, the Bevantolol treated group had reduced aortic pressure (p < .01) and end diastolic pressure (p < .05) and increased percent developed pressure and percent dP/dtmax (p < .001) relative to control. In the propranolol treated group, end diastolic pressure was reduced and percent developed pressure (p < .01) and percent dP/dtmax (p < .001) were increased relative to unblocked hearts. Following 60 min ischemia and 30 min reperfusion, reduction in all functional indices occurred, however dP/dtmax was unchanged from baseline in the Propranolol and Bevantolol treated groups. Comparison between groups showed that the Bevantolol treated group had significantly better dP/dtmax and developed pressure (p < .05), whereas the Propranolol group shows no significant difference from baseline (p > .05) (K-H). We conclude that following short periods of ischemia, Beta blockade protects the heart from deleterious function effects of ischemia but that the protective effect is diminished in Bevantolol relative to Propranolol treatments following prolonged ischemia. The data indicates that the beneficial effects of Beta blockade in reducing ischemic induced damage occurs early during conditions of ischemia such as would be present in the setting of acute myocardial infarction.  相似文献   

11.
Exogenously administered adenosine agonist will protect myocardium against infarction during ischemia. However, long-term exposure to adenosine agonists is associated with loss of this protection. To determine why this protection is lost, isolated, perfused rabbit hearts were studied after administration of R(-)-N6-(2-phenylisopropyl)adenosine (PIA), 0.25 mg/h IP, for 3-4 days to intact animals. All hearts experienced 30 min of regional ischemia and 120 min of reperfusion. Control groups 1 and 2 were untreated. In group 1 this ischemia/reperfusion was the only intervention, whereas group 2 hearts were preconditioned with a cycle of 5 min global ischemia/10 min reperfusion preceding the 30 min regional ischemia. Groups 3-5 had been chronically exposed to PIA. Group 3 hearts had 1 preconditioning ischemia/reperfusion cycle before the prolonged ischemia. Group 4 received a 5 min infusion of 0.1 mol/L phenylephrine in lieu of global ischemia, whereas group 5 was instead treated with 1 mol/L carbachol. Infarct size averaged 32% of the risk zone in group 1, whereas ischemic preconditioning limited infarction to 8.2 in group 2. Prolonged exposure of group 3 hearts to PIA resulted in the inability of preconditioning with 5 min global ischemia to protect (28.7 ± 4.4% infarction). However, protection was restored by either phenylephrine, an agonist of 1-adrenergic receptors which couple to Gq and stimulate PKC, or carbachol, an agonist of M2-muscarinic receptors which couple instead to Gi as do adenosine A1 receptors (5.2 ± 1.7% and 9.2 ± 2.1% infarction, resp.). Therefore, cross tolerance to ischemic preconditioning develops after chronic PIA infusion. Since both the Gi and the PKC components of the preconditioning pathway were shown to be intact, tolerance must have been related to downregulation or desensitization of the A1 adenosine receptor.  相似文献   

12.
Lavanchy  N.  Grably  S.  Garnier  A.  Rossi  A. 《Molecular and cellular biochemistry》1996,160(1):273-282
The role played by glycogenolysis in the ischemic heart has been recently put into question because it is suspected that a slowing down of this process could be beneficial for the tolerance of the myocardium to ischemia. The role of the intracellular effectors that control the rate of glycogenolysis has therefore regained interest. We aimed to understand the role played by those intracellular effectors which are directly related to the energy balance of the heart. To this end, we review some of the previously published data on this subject and we present new data obtained from P-31 and C-13 NMR spectroscopic measurement on isolated rat heart. Two conditions of ischemia were studied: 15 min global no-flow and 25 min low-flow ischemia. The hearts were isolated either from control animals or from rats pre-treated with isoproterenol (5 mg.kg–1 b.w. i.p.) 1 h before the perfusion in order to C-13 label glycogen stores. Our main results are as follows: (1) the biochemically determined glycogenolysis rate during the early phase of ischemia (up to 10–15 min) was larger in no-flow ischemia than in low-flow conditions for both groups, (2) direct measurement of the glycogenolysis rate, as determined by C-13 NMR, after labelling of the glycogen pool in the hearts from isoproterenol-treated rats, confirms the estimations from the biochemical data, (3) glycogenolysis was slower in the hearts from pre-treated animals than in control hearts for both conditions of ischemia, (4) the total activity of glycogen phosphorylase (a + b) increased, by 50%, after 5 min no-flow ischemia, whereas it decreased by 42% after the same time of low-flow ischemia. However, the ratio phosphorylase a/a + b was not altered, whatever the conditions, (5) the concentration of inorganic phosphate (Pi) increased sharply during the first minutes of ischemia, to values above 8–10 mM, under all conditions studied. The rate of increase was larger during no-flow ischemia than during low-flow ischemia. The concentration of Pi was thereafter higher in controls than in the hearts from isoproterenol-treated animals.The calculated cytosolic concentration of free 5 AMP increased sharply at the onset of ischemia, reaching in a few minutes values above 30 M in controls and significantly lower values, around 15 M, in the hearts from isoproterenol-treated rats. (6) The hearts from isoproterenol-treated rats displayed a reduced intracellular acidosis, when compared to controls, under both conditions of ischemia.We conclude that the intracellular effectors, mainly free AMP, play an essential role in the control of glycogenolysis via allosteric control of phosphorylase b activity. The alteration in the concentration of free Pi, the substrate of both forms of phosphorylase, can also be considered as determinant in the control of the rate of glycogenolysis.The attenuation of ischemia-induced intracellular acidosis in the hearts from isoproterenol-treated rats could be a consequence of a reduced glycogenolytic rate and is likely to be related to a better resumption of the mechanical function on reperfusion.  相似文献   

13.
Hearts from rats fed low copper (1.3 mg copper/kg diet) or a copper-supplemented diet (243 mg copper/kg diet) were perfused for 90 min according to the Langendorff method. The perfusion protocol included 30 min normoxia, 30 min ischemia and 30 min reperfusion. After 90 min perfusion, hearts from the low copper group had gained more weight, had lower coronary perfusion pressure, developed less force of contraction and secreted less 6-keto PGF1 alpha into the perfusate than hearts from the copper-supplemented group. After perfusion, the major lipid change in the hearts from both groups was a 85-90% decrease in total triacylglycerol. In both groups, stearic acid and arachidonic acid (mg%) were increased in the triacylglycerol fraction after heart perfusion. The quantitative (mg/g) decrease in the triacylglycerol content of stearic acid and arachidonic acid was significantly less in the copper-supplemented group. After perfusion, dihomo-gamma-linolenic acid (mg/g) was lower in heart phospholipids from the low copper group. Dihomo-gamma-linolenic/arachidonic acid (microgram/mg) was significantly decreased after perfusion only in the hearts from the low copper group. Lipid and fatty acid changes in the hearts of the rats fed low dietary copper may contribute to abnormal heart function in this group.  相似文献   

14.
Although the mechanism by which ischemic preconditioning (PC) inhibits myocardial apoptosis during ischemia-reperfusion is unclear, evidence indicates a role for the secondary messenger ceramide. We investigated in vivo whether PC may affect ceramide and sn-1,2-diacylglycerol (DAG) production, and attenuate apoptosis during ischemia. Rabbits underwent 30 min of ischemia, followed by 4 h of reperfusion. Before this, they received either no intervention (control group) or one episode of 5 min of ischemia, followed by 5 min of reperfusion (PC group), or an intravenous administration of the sphingomyelinase inhibitor D609. Myocardial content of ceramide and DAG was measured using the DAG kinase assay at different time points of the experiment. Apoptosis was detected and quantified by a sandwich enzyme immunoassay. Both AR and infarct size were measured using blue dye injection and triphenyltetrazolium chloride staining. Control hearts exhibited a peak of ceramide production at 5 min of the prolonged ischemia, with a mean value averaging 64 +/- 5 ng/mg tissue (P < 0.05 vs. 48 +/- 4 ng/mg at baseline). In contrast, ischemic PC and D609 prevented ceramide increase during the prolonged ischemia. Myocardial DAG content was increased only in PC hearts at 30 min of ischemia. Preconditioned and D609 groups developed less apoptosis, as well as a limited infarct size, compared with the control group. These results suggest that the antiapoptotic effect of PC may be due to a reduced ceramide production during sustained ischemia in the rabbit heart.  相似文献   

15.
The aim of the present study was to assess whether the protective effects of ischemic preconditioning (PC) are associated with activation of the mitochondrial ATP-sensitive potassium channels (mitoKATP) and if there is any relationship between the activity of these channels and the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (MPTP) opening in ischemic-reperfused rat hearts under different nutritional conditions. Langendorff-perfused hearts of fed and 24-h fasted rats were exposed to 25 min of no-flow global ischemia plus 30 min of reperfusion. Fasting accelerated functional recovery and attenuated MPTP opening. The mitoKATP blocker, 5-hydroxydecanoic (HD), did not influence functional recovery and MPTP opening induced by ischemia–reperfusion in the fed hearts but partially reversed the beneficial effects of fasting. PC and the mitoKATP opener, diazoxide (DZ), improved functional recovery, preserved cell viability, and inhibited MPTP opening in both fed and fasted hearts. The protection elicited by PC and DZ on contractile recovery and MPTP opening was reversed by HD, which did not affect cell viability. Altogether, these results argue for a role of mitoKATP and its impact on preservation mitochondrial inner membrane permeability as a relevant factor in the improvement of contractile function in the ischemic-reperfused rat heart. They also suggest that the functional protection elicited by PC may be related to this mechanism.  相似文献   

16.

Introduction

The effects of exercise on the heart and its resistance to disease are well-documented. Recent studies have identified that exercise-induced resistance to arrhythmia is due to the preservation of mitochondrial membrane potential.

Objectives

To identify novel metabolic changes that occur parallel to these mitochondrial alterations, we performed non-targeted metabolomics analysis on hearts from sedentary and exercise-trained rats challenged with isolated heart ischemia–reperfusion injury (I/R).

Methods

Eight-week old Sprague–Dawley rats were treadmill trained 5 days/week for 6 weeks (exercise duration and intensity progressively increased to 1 h at 30 m/min up a 10.5% incline, 75–80% VO2max). The recovery of pre-ischemic function for sedentary rat hearts was 28.8?±?5.4% (N?=?12) compared to exercise trained hearts, which recovered 51.9%?±?5.7 (N?=?14) (p?<?0.001).

Results

Non-targeted GC–MS metabolomics analysis of (1) sedentary rat hearts; (2) exercise-trained rat hearts; (3) sedentary rat hearts challenged with global ischemia–reperfusion (I/R) injury; and (4) exercise-trained rat hearts challenged with global I/R (10/group) revealed 15 statistically significant metabolites between groups by ANOVA using Metaboanalyst (p?<?0.001). Enrichment analysis of these metabolites for pathway-associated metabolic sets indicated a?>?10-fold enrichment for ammonia recycling and protein biosynthesis. Subsequent comparison of the sedentary hearts post-I/R and exercise-trained hearts post-I/R further identified significant differences in three metabolites (oleic acid, pantothenic acid, and campesterol) related to pantothenate and CoA biosynthesis (p?≤?1.24E?05, FDR?≤?5.07E?4).

Conclusions

These studies shed light on novel mechanisms in which exercise-induced cardioprotection occurs in I/R that complement both the mitochondrial stabilization and antioxidant mechanisms recently described. These findings also link protein synthesis and protein degradation (protein quality control mechanisms) with exercise-linked cardioprotection and mitochondrial susceptibility for the first time in cardiac I/R.
  相似文献   

17.
We have demonstrated that in vitro brief ischemia activates nuclear factor (NF)-kappaB in rat myocardium. We report in vivo ischemia-reperfusion (I/R)-induced NF-kappaB activation, IkappaB kinase -beta (IKKbeta) activity, and IkappaBalpha phosphorylation and degradation in rat myocardium. Rat hearts were subjected to occlusion of the coronary artery for up to 45 min or occlusion for 15 min followed by reperfusion for up to 3 h. Cytoplasmic and nuclear proteins were isolated from ischemic and nonischemic areas of each heart. NF-kappaB activation was increased in the ischemic area (680%) after 10 min of ischemia and in the nonischemic area (350%) after 15 min of ischemia and remained elevated during prolonged ischemia and reperfusion. IKKbeta activity was markedly increased in ischemic (1,800%) and nonischemic (860%) areas, and phosphorylated IkappaBalpha levels were significantly elevated in ischemic (180%) and nonischemic (280%) areas at 5 min of ischemia and further increased after reperfusion. IkappaBalpha levels were decreased in the ischemic (45%) and nonischemic (36%) areas after 10 min of ischemia and remained low in the ischemic area during prolonged ischemia and reperfusion. The results suggest that in vivo I/R rapidly induces IKKbeta activity and increases IkappaBalpha phosphorylation and degradation, resulting in NF-kappaB activation in the myocardium.  相似文献   

18.
Although the transient receptor potential vanilloid type 1 (TRPV1)-containing afferent nerve fibers are widely distributed in the heart, the relationship between TRPV1 function and cardiac ischemic preconditioning (PC) has not been well defined. Using TRPV1 knockout mice (TRPV1(-/-)), we studied the role of TRPV1 in PC-induced myocardial protection. Hearts of gene-targeted TRPV1-null mutant (TRPV1(-/-)) or wild-type (WT) mice were Langendorffly perfused in the presence or absence of CGRP(8-37), a selective calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) receptor antagonist; or RP-67580, a selective neurokinin-1 receptor antagonist when hearts were subjected to three 5-min periods of ischemia PC followed by 30 min of global ischemia and 40 min of reperfusion (I/R). PC before I/R decreased left ventricular (LV) end-diastolic pressure and increased LV developed pressure, coronary flow (CF), peak-positive maximum rate of rise of LV pressure in WT mice (PC-WT) compared with PC-TRPV1(-/-), TRPV1(-/-), or WT hearts (P < 0.05), and PC also decreased LV end-diastolic pressure in PC-TRPV1(-/-) compared with TRPV1(-/-). CGRP(8-37) or RP-67580 abolished PC-induced protection in WT but not TRPV1(-/-) hearts (P < 0.05). Moreover, PC decreased lactate dehydrogenase release and infarct size in PC-WT compared with PC-TRPV1(-/-), TRPV1(-/-), or WT hearts, and it also lowered these parameters in PC-TRPV1(-/-) compared with TRPV1(-/-) hearts (P < 0.05). Radioimmunoassay showed that the release of substance P and CGRP after PC was higher in WT hearts than in TRPV1(-/-) hearts (P < 0.05), which was attenuated by capsazepine in WT but not TRPV1(-/-) hearts. Thus PC-induced protection of the heart was impaired in TRPV1(-/-) hearts, indicating that TRPV1 contributes to the beneficial effects of preconditioning against I/R injury through release substance P and CGRP.  相似文献   

19.
This report demonstrates that mice deficient in Flt-1 failed to establish ischemic preconditioning (PC)-mediated cardioprotection in isolated working buffer-perfused ischemic/reperfused (I/R) hearts compared to wild type (WT) subjected to the same PC protocol. WT and Flt-1+/- mice were divided into four groups: (1) WT I/R, (2) WT + PC, (3) Flt-1+/- I/R, and (4) Flt-1+/- + PC. Group 1 and 3 mice were subjected to 30 min of ischemia followed by 2 h of reperfusion and group 2 and 4 mice were subjected to four episodes of 4-min global ischemia followed by 6 min of reperfusion before ischemia/reperfusion. For both wild-type and Flt-1+/- mice, the postischemic functional recovery for the hearts was lower than the baseline, but the recovery for the knockout mice was less compared to the WT mice even in preconditioning. The myocardial infarction and apoptosis were higher in Flt-1+/- compared to wild-type I/R. Flt-1+/- KO mice demonstrated pronounced inhibition of the expression of iNOS, p-AKT & p-eNOS. Significant inhibition of STAT3 & CREB were also observed along with the inhibition of HO-1 mRNA. Results demonstrate that Flt-1+/- mouse hearts are more susceptible to ischemia/reperfusion injury and also document that preconditioning is not as effective as found in WT and therefore suggest the importance of VEGF/Flt-1 signaling in ischemic/reperfused myocardium.  相似文献   

20.
Ischemic preconditioning (PC) has been proposed as an endogenous form of protection against-ischemia reperfusion injury. We have shown that PC does not prevent postischemic dysfunction in the aging heart. This phenomenon could be due to the reduction of cardiac norepinephrine release, and it has also been previously demonstrated that age-related decrease of norepinephrine release from cardiac adrenergic nerves may be restored by caloric restriction. We investigated the effects on mechanical parameters of PC against 20 min of global ischemia followed by 40 min of reperfusion in isolated hearts from adult (6 mo) and "ad libitum"-fed and food-restricted senescent (24 mo) rats. Norepinephrine release in coronary effluent was determined by high-performance liquid chromatography. Final recovery of percent developed pressure was significantly improved after PC in adult hearts versus unconditioned controls (85.2 +/- 19% vs. 51.5 +/- 10%, P < 0.01). The effect of PC on developed pressure recovery was absent in ad libitum-fed rats, but it was restored in food-restricted senescent hearts (66.6 +/- 13% vs. 38.3 +/- 11%, P < 0.05). Accordingly, norepinephrine release significantly increased after PC in both adult and in food-restricted senescent hearts, and depletion of myocardial norepinephrine stores by reserpine abolished the PC effect in both adult and in food-restricted senescent hearts. We conclude that PC reduces postischemic dysfunction in the hearts from adult and food-restricted but not in ad libitum-fed senescent rats. Despite the possibility of multiple age-related mechanisms, the protection afforded by PC was correlated with increased norepinephrine release, and it was blocked by reserpine in both adult and food-restricted senescent hearts. Thus caloric restriction may restore PC in the aging heart probably via increased norepinephrine release.  相似文献   

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