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1.
Methods that increase cardiomyocyte survival upon exposure to ischemia, hypoxia and reoxygenation injuries are required to improve the efficacy of cardiac cell therapy and enhance the viability and function of engineered tissues. We investigated the effect of combined hypoxia/NaNO2 pretreatment on rat neonatal cardiomyocyte (CM), cardiac fibroblast, and human embryonic stem cell‐derived CM (hESC‐CM) survival upon exposure to hypoxia/reoxygenation (H/R) injury in vitro. Cells were pretreated with and without hypoxia and/or various concentrations of NaNO2 for 20 min, then incubated for 2 h under hypoxic conditions, followed by 2 h in normoxia. The control cells were maintained under normoxia for 4 h. Pretreatment with either hypoxia or NaNO2 significantly increased CM viability but had no effect on cardiac fibroblast viability. Combined hypoxia/NaNO2 pretreatment significantly increased CM viability but significantly decreased cardiac fibroblast viability. In rat neonatal CMs, cell death, as determined by lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activity, was significantly reduced with hypoxia/NaNO2 pretreatment; and in hESC‐CMs, hypoxia/NaNO2 pretreatment increased the BCL‐2/BAX gene expression ratio, suggesting that hypoxia/NaNO2 pretreatment promotes cell viability by downregulating apoptosis. Additionally, we found a correlation between the prosurvival effect of hypoxia/NaNO2 pretreatment and the myoglobin content of the cells by comparing neonatal rat ventricular and atrial CMs, which express high and low myoglobin respectively. Functionally, hypoxia/NaNO2 pretreatment significantly improved the excitation threshold upon H/R injury to the level observed for uninjured cells, whereas pretreatment did not affect the maximum capture rate. Hence, hypoxia/NaNO2 pretreatment may serve as a strategy to increase CM survival in cardiac regenerative therapy applications and tissue engineering. © 2015 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 31:482–492, 2015  相似文献   

2.
Growing studies have emerged on adipose‐derived stem cells (ADSCs), which hold the potential for cell‐based therapy in diseased injured hearts. Apart from their differentiation pluripotency, such benefits also result from the ability of paracrine. The results of this study showed that after a 24‐h hypoxia culture, ADSCs secreted amplified quantities of hepatocyte growth factor, interleukin‐1, vascular endothelial growth factor‐A, fibroblast growth factor‐2, and transforming growth factor‐β, all of which increased statistically compared with normoxia cultures. Resultantly, conditioned media (CM) from hypoxia‐treated ADSCs can promptly improve cardiac function in in vivo infarction model as well as ameliorate apoptosis of cardiomyocytes subjected to hypoxia/reoxygenation conditions, accompanied by changes of JNK signal activation. While SP600125, a specific JNK pathway inhibitor, partly decreased cardiac cytoprotection assessed by incremental caspase‐3 activation and subsequent TUNEL index, which led to no significantly different outcome between CM from ADSCs in normoxia culture and those in hypoxia culture. These data suggested that, in response to hypoxia, ADSCs could amplify expression of several protective soluble factors, which mediate direct cytoprotection. Furthermore, the improvement for impaired cardiomyocytes treated by hypoxia‐induced ADSCs‐CM was significant in part because of the involvement of the JNK signal pathway. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

3.
Growing studies have emerged on adipose-derived stem cells (ADSCs), which hold the potential for cell-based therapy in diseased injured hearts. Apart from their differentiation pluripotency, such benefits also result from the ability of paracrine. The results of this study showed that after a 24-h hypoxia culture, ADSCs secreted amplified quantities of hepatocyte growth factor, interleukin-1, vascular endothelial growth factor-A, fibroblast growth factor-2, and transforming growth factor-β, all of which increased statistically compared with normoxia cultures. Resultantly, conditioned media (CM) from hypoxia-treated ADSCs can promptly improve cardiac function in in vivo infarction model as well as ameliorate apoptosis of cardiomyocytes subjected to hypoxia/reoxygenation conditions, accompanied by changes of JNK signal activation. While SP600125, a specific JNK pathway inhibitor, partly decreased cardiac cytoprotection assessed by incremental caspase-3 activation and subsequent TUNEL index, which led to no significantly different outcome between CM from ADSCs in normoxia culture and those in hypoxia culture. These data suggested that, in response to hypoxia, ADSCs could amplify expression of several protective soluble factors, which mediate direct cytoprotection. Furthermore, the improvement for impaired cardiomyocytes treated by hypoxia-induced ADSCs-CM was significant in part because of the involvement of the JNK signal pathway. Copyright ? 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

4.
Ducks are well-known to be more tolerant to asphyxia than non-diving birds, but it is not known if their defences include enhanced neuronal hypoxia tolerance. To test this, we compared extracellular recordings of spontaneous activity in the Purkinje cell layer of 400 μm thick isolated cerebellar slices from eider ducks, chickens and rats, before, during and after 60 min hypoxia (95%N2–5%CO2) or chemical anoxia (hypoxia + 2 mM NaCN). Most slices rapidly lost activity in hypoxia, with or without recovery after rinse and return to normoxia (95%O2–5%CO2), but some maintained spontaneous activity throughout the insult. Proportions of ‘surviving’ (i.e. recovering or active) duck slices were significantly higher than for chickens in anoxia, and relative activity levels were higher for ducks than for chickens during hypoxia, anoxia and recovery. Survival of rat slices was significantly poorer than for birds under all conditions. Results suggest that (1) duck cerebellar neurons are intrinsically more hypoxia-tolerant than chicken neurons; (2) avian neurons are more hypoxia-tolerant than rat neurons, and (3) the enhanced hypoxic tolerance of duck neurons largely depended on efficient anaerobiosis since it mainly manifested itself in chemical anoxia. Mechanisms underlying the observed differences in neuronal hypoxic responses remain to be elucidated.  相似文献   

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Dong JW  Zhu HF  Zhu WZ  Ding HL  Ma TM  Zhou ZN 《Cell research》2003,13(5):385-391
Intermittent hypoxia has been shown to provide myocardial protection against ishemiaJreperfusion-induced injury.Cardiac myocyte loss through apoptosis has been reported in ischemia/reperfusion injury. Our aim was to investigate whether intermittent hypoxia could attenuate ischemia/reperfusion-induced apoptosis in cardiac myocytes and its potential mechanisms. Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed to hypoxia simulated 5000 m in a hypobaric chamber for 6 h/day, lasting 42 days. Normoxia group rats were kept under normoxic conditions. Isolated perfused hearts from both groups were subjected to 30 min of global ischemia followed by 60 min reperfusion.Incidence of apoptosis in cardiac myocytes was determined by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase mediated dUTP nick end labeling (TUNEL) and DNA agarose gel electrophoresis. Expressions of apoptosis related proteins,Bax and Bcl-2, in cytosolic and membrane fraction were detected by Western Blotting. After ischemia/reperfusion,enhanced recovery of cardiac function was observed in intermittent hypoxia hearts compared with normoxia group.Ischemia/reperfusion-induced apoptosis, as evidenced by TUNEL-positive nuclei and DNA fragmentation, was significantly reduced in intermittent hypoxia group compared with normoxia group. After ischemia/reperfusion,expression of Bax in both cytosolic and membrane fractions was decreased in intermittent hypoxia hearts comparedwith normoxia group. Although ischemia/reperfusion did not induce changes in the level of Bcl-2 expression in cytosolic fraction between intermittent hypoxia and normoxia groups, the expression of Bcl-2 in membrane fraction was upregulated in intermittent hypoxia group compared with normoxia group. These results indicated that the cardioprotection of intermittent hypoxia against ischemia/reperfusion injury appears to be in part due to reducemyocardial apoptosis. Intermittent hypoxia attenuated ischemia/reperfusion-induced apoptosis via increasing the ratio of Bcl-2/Bax, especially in membrane fraction.  相似文献   

7.
Studies have indicated that the definitive engraftment and transdifferentiation potential of stem cells do not seem crucial for its property of tissue repair. Our previous study showed that transplantation of adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells (ADMSCs) enhanced the healing of sutured gastric perforation. This study aimed to investigate the paracrine role of ADMSCs in the experimental gastric mucosal injury. Normoxia-conditioned medium (Nor CM) and hypoxia (HPO) CM were obtained after culturing ADMSCs in 20% O2 and 5% O2 for 48 h. Cell migration, proliferation, viability, and angiogenesis in vitro were significantly enhanced upon incubation with CM, especially the HPO CM. Experiments in vivo using a rodent model of gastric ulcer demonstrated that HPO CM treatment significantly accelerated wound healing by suppressing inflammation and promoting neovascularization and re-epithelization. Meanwhile, the infusion of HPO CM activated the COX2-PGE2 axis both in vitro and in vivo. And the upregulation of COX2 was further dependent on the activation of ErK1/2-MAPK pathway. In addition, vascular endothelial growth factor, tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases-1, and chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 20 (CCL-20) were analyzed as being highly abundant factors secreted by ADMSCs under hypoxic condition. Notably, the blockade of CCL-20 abrogated the HPO CM-induced COX2 signaling in the primary gastric mucosal epithelial cells, while incubation with recombinant CCL-20 increased the expression of COX2. In conclusion, the secretome from hypoxia-conditioned ADMSCs facilitates the repair of gastric mucosal injury through the enhancement of angiogenesis and re-epithelization, as well as the activation of COX2-PGE2 axis with a paracrine activity involving CCL-20 factor.  相似文献   

8.
Heat shock proteins (HSPs) may play a cardioprotective role during hypoxia or ischemia. We hypothesized that cardiac tissue from hypoxia-tolerant animals might have high levels of specific HSPs. We measured myocardial HSP60 and HSP72/73 in painted and softshell turtles during normoxia and anoxia (12 h) and after recovery (12 or 24 h). We also measured myocardial HSPs in normoxic rats and rabbits. During normoxia, hearts from the most highly anoxia-tolerant species, the painted turtle, expressed the highest levels of HSP60 (22.6+/-2.0 mg/g total protein) followed by softshells (11.5+/-0.8 mg/g), rabbits (6.8+/-0.9 mg/g), and rats (4.5+/-0.5 mg/g). HSP72/73 levels, however, were not significantly different. HSP60 levels in hearts from both painted and softshell turtles did not deviate significantly from control values after either 12 h of anoxia or 12 or 24 h of recovery. The pattern of changes observed in HSP72/73 was quite different in the two turtle species. In painted turtles anoxia induced a significant increase in myocardial HSP72/73 (from 2.8+/-0.1 mg/g normoxic to 3.9+/-0.2 mg/g anoxic, P<0.05). By 12 h of recovery, HSP72/73 had returned to control levels (2.7+/-0.1 mg/g) and remained there through 24 h (2.6+/-0.2 mg/g). In softshell turtles, HSP72/73 decreased significantly after 12 h of anoxia (from 2.4+/-0.4 mg/g normoxic to 1.3+/-0.2 mg/g anoxic, P<0.05). HSP72/73 levels were still slightly below control after 12 h of recovery (2.1+/-0.1 mg/g) and then rose to significantly above control after 24 h of recovery (4.1+/-0.7 mg/g, P<0.05). We also conclude that anoxia-tolerant and anoxia-sensitive turtles exhibit different patterns of myocardial HSP changes during anoxia and recovery. Whether these changes correlate with their relative degrees of anoxia tolerance remains to be determined.  相似文献   

9.
During hypoxia, oxyregulating water-breathers usually control O2 uptake by changing ventilatory convection. Using optical techniques we studied ventilation, circulation and respiratory control in small animals, a millimetre in size, which were more or less pronounced oxyregulators (Daphnia magna, Folsomia candida). In Daphnia we found no adaptive changes in the ventilatory water flow rate during hypoxia. Frequency and amplitude of the movements of the thoracic limbs remained constant during this environmental condition. During anoxia there was a reduction in both. In contrast to ventilatory convection, the circulatory blood flow rate adapted to hypoxia. At low oxygen partial pressures, the heart frequency strongly increased (compensatory tachycardia) in Daphnia, whereas the stroke volume remained constant. Accordingly, there was an increase in cardiac output during hypoxia. Folsomia also showed a marked increase of heart frequency during severe hypoxia. The adaptive changes in blood flow rate should help to maintain sufficient partial pressure differences between medium, blood and tissues and should help to avoid anoxic zones in the animal. During anoxia, the heart continued to beat in Daphnia (at a rate more or less similar to normoxia, but with a reduced stroke volume) for periods of many hours. The heart frequency showed typical courses during anoxia and subsequent normoxia, which are probably related to energy metabolism. Accepted: 28 February 1997  相似文献   

10.
Brief ischemia or hypoxia has been found to protect the heart against susbsequent long-lasting ischemia and to improve contractile dysfunction as well to reduce cell necrosis and the incidence of lethal arrhythmias. This phenomenon, termed preconditioning (PC) has been demonstrated in different species. However, little is known about PC in guinea pigs. Moreover, electrophysiological changes underlying protection have not been studied so far in conjuntion with force recovery in a setting of PC. The aim of the study was to study PC in a guinea pig papillary muscle, using recovery of contractility after long hypoxic challenge as the main end-point of protection, and to investigate concominant electrophysiological alterations. In guinea pig papillary muscle preparations contracting isometrically (paced at 2 Hz), transmembrane action potentials (AP) and developed force (DF) were recorded by conventional microelectrode technique and a force tranducer. In addition, effective refractory periods (ERP) were determined. Hypoxia was induced by superfusion with 100% N2 (pO2 < 5 kPa) and pacing at 3,3 Hz. In the control group, long hypoxia lasted for 45 min and was followed by 30 min reoxygenation. In the PC group, muscles were subjected to 5 min hypoxia followed by 10 min recovery prior to sustained hypoxia/reoxygenation. Results: Long hypoxia induced a similar depression of DF in both, PC and control groups. However, a loss of contractile activity occured earlier in the PC group. AP duration and ERP decreased faster and were significantly shorter after PC. Upon reoxygenation, preconditioned muscles showed significantly better recovery of function (DF 86% of prehypoxic value vs. 36% in controls; p < 0,05). AP and ERP were completely restored in both, PC and control groups. Guinea pig papillary muscle can be preconditioned with a brief hypoxic challenge against contractile dysfunction upon long-lasting hypoxia/reoxygenation. Shortening of AP and loss of contractility occured more quickly during hypoxia and may participate in the protective effect of preconditioning. Possible mechanisms might involve facilitated opening of KATP-dependent channels.  相似文献   

11.
White adipose tissue (WAT) regulates energy metabolism by secretion of proteins with endocrine and paracrine effects. Dysregulation of the secretome of obesity-associated enlarged WAT may lead to obesity-related disorders. This can be caused by hypoxia as a result of poorly vascularized WAT. The effect of hypoxia on the secretome of human (pre)adipocytes is largely unknown. Therefore, we investigated the effect of CoCl2, a hypoxia mimetic, on the secretome of human SGBS (pre)adipocytes by a proteomics approach combined with bioinformatic analysis. In addition, regulation of protein secretion was examined by protein turnover experiments. As such, secretome changes were particularly associated with protein down-regulation and extracellular matrix protein dysregulation. The observed up-regulation of collagens in adipocytes may be essential for cell survival while down-regulation of collagens in preadipocytes may indicate a disturbed differentiation process. These CoCl2-induced changes reflect WAT dysfunction that ultimately may lead to obesity-associated complications. In addition, 9 novel adipocyte secreted proteins were identified from which 6 were regulated by CoCl2. Mass spectrometry data have been deposited to the ProteomeXchange with identifier PXD000162.  相似文献   

12.
The hypothesis of the present study is that cardiomyocytes subjected to prolonged ischemia, may release survival factors that will protect new cardiac cells from ischemic stress. We exposed neonatal rat cardiomyocyte primary cultures to hypoxia, collected the supernatant, treated intact cardiac cells by this posthypoxic supernatant, and exposed them to hypoxia. The results show cardioprotection of the treated cells compared with the untreated ones. We named the collected posthypoxic supernatant "conditioned medium" (CM), which acts in a dose-dependent manner to protect new cardiac cells from hypoxia: 100 or 75% of CM diluted in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) protected cells as if they were not exposed to hypoxia (P < 0.001). When CM was removed from the cells before hypoxia, protection was not observed. CM also protected skeletal muscle cultures from hypoxia, but not cardiac cells against H(2)O(2)-induced cell damage. Finally, CM treatment protected the isolated heart in Langendorff set-up against ischemia. Smaller infarct size (9.9 ± 4.4% vs. 28.3 ± 8.5%, P < 0.05), better Rate Pressure Product (67 ± 11% vs. 48.6 ± 13.4%, P < 0.05) and better rate of contraction and relaxation were observed following ischemia and reperfusion (1341 ± 399 mmHg/s vs. 951 ± 349 mmHg/s, P < 0.05 and 1053 ± 347 mmHg/s vs. 736 ± 314 mmHg/s, P < 0.05). To conclude, there are factors that are released from the heart cells subjected to ischemia/hypoxia that protects cardiomyocytes from ischemic stress.  相似文献   

13.
The objective of this study was to determine the interaction between duration of myocardial hypoxia and presence of exogenous glutathione (GSH) on functional recovery upon subsequent reoxygenation. Isolated perfused rat hearts were subjected to 20, 30, 40, or 50 min hypoxia (HYP), which resulted in a progressive decline in the amount of contractile recovery (% of normoxic rate-pressure product (RPP) and developed pressure) during 30 min reoxygenation. Supplementation with 5 mM GSH throughout normoxia, hypoxia, and reoxygenation significantly improved contractile recovery during reoxygenation after 20 and 30 min hypoxia (p < 0.05), but had no effect after longer durations of hypoxia when contractile recovery was typically below 40% of RPP and significant areas of no-reflow were observed. ECG analysis revealed that GSH shifted the bell-shaped curve for reperfusion ventricular fibrillation to the right resulting in attenuated fibrillation after 20 and 30 min hypoxia then increased incidences after 40 min when Control hearts were slow to resume electrical activity. ECG conduction velocity was well preserved in all hearts after 20 and 30 min hypoxia, but GSH administration significantly attenuated the decline that occurred with longer durations. GSH supplementation did not attenuate the 35% decline in intracellular thiols during 30 min of hypoxia. When 5 mM GSH was added only during 40 min of hypoxia, RPP recovery after reoxygenation was improved compared to unsupplemented Controls (73% vs. 55% of pre-hypoxia value, p < 0.05). Administration of GSH only during reoxygenation following 40 min of hypoxia did not alter RPP recovery compared to Control hearts. We conclude that cardioprotection by exogenous GSH is dependent on the duration of hypoxia and the functional parameter being evaluated. It is not due to an enhancement of intracellular GSH suggesting that exogenous GSH acts extracellularly to protect sarcolemmal proteins against thiol oxidation during the phase of hypoxia when oxidative stress is a major contributor to cardiac dysfunction. Furthermore, if enough damage accrues during oxygen deprivation, supplementing with GSH during reoxygenation will not impact recovery.  相似文献   

14.
A recent study showed that ergometry increased circulating hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (CPC) numbers, but reduced hematopoietic colony forming capacity/functionality under normoxia and normobaric hypoxia. Herein we investigated whether an exercise-induced elevated plasma free/bound norepinephrine (NE) concentration could be responsible for directly influencing CPC functionality. Venous blood was taken from ten healthy male subjects (25.3+/−4.4 yrs) before and 4 times after ergometry under normoxia and normobaric hypoxia (FiO2<0.15). The circulating hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell numbers were correlated with free/bound NE, free/bound epinephrine (EPI), cortisol (Co) and interleukin-6 (IL-6). Additionally, the influence of exercise-induced NE and blood lactate (La) on CPC functionality was analyzed in a randomly selected group of subjects (n = 6) in vitro under normoxia by secondary colony-forming unit granulocyte macrophage assays. Concentrations of free NE, EPI, Co and IL-6 were significantly increased post-exercise under normoxia/hypoxia. Ergometry-induced free NE concentrations found in vivo showed a significant impairment of CPC functionality in vitro under normoxia. Thus, ergometry-induced free NE was thought to trigger CPC mobilization 10 minutes post-exercise, but as previously shown impairs CPC proliferative capacity/functionality at the same time. The obtained results suggest that an ergometry-induced free NE concentration has a direct negative effect on CPC functionality. Cortisol may further influence CPC dynamics and functionality.  相似文献   

15.
The objective of this study was to determine the interaction between duration of myocardial hypoxia and presence of exogenous glutathione (GSH) on functional recovery upon subsequent reoxygenation. Isolated perfused rat hearts were subjected to 20, 30, 40, or 50 min hypoxia (HYP), which resulted in a progressive decline in the amount of contractile recovery (% of normoxic rate-pressure product (RPP) and developed pressure) during 30 min reoxygenation. Supplementation with 5 mM GSH throughout normoxia, hypoxia, and reoxygenation significantly improved contractile recovery during reoxygenation after 20 and 30 min hypoxia (p < 0.05), but had no effect after longer durations of hypoxia when contractile recovery was typically below 40% of RPP and significant areas of no-reflow were observed. ECG analysis revealed that GSH shifted the bell-shaped curve for reperfusion ventricular fibrillation to the right resulting in attenuated fibrillation after 20 and 30 min hypoxia then increased incidences after 40 min when Control hearts were slow to resume electrical activity. ECG conduction velocity was well preserved in all hearts after 20 and 30 min hypoxia, but GSH administration significantly attenuated the decline that occurred with longer durations. GSH supplementation did not attenuate the 35% decline in intracellular thiols during 30 min of hypoxia. When 5 mM GSH was added only during 40 min of hypoxia, RPP recovery after reoxygenation was improved compared to unsupplemented Controls (73% vs. 55% of pre-hypoxia value, p < 0.05). Administration of GSH only during reoxygenation following 40 min of hypoxia did not alter RPP recovery compared to Control hearts. We conclude that cardioprotection by exogenous GSH is dependent on the duration of hypoxia and the functional parameter being evaluated. It is not due to an enhancement of intracellular GSH suggesting that exogenous GSH acts extracellularly to protect sarcolemmal proteins against thiol oxidation during the phase of hypoxia when oxidative stress is a major contributor to cardiac dysfunction. Furthermore, if enough damage accrues during oxygen deprivation, supplementing with GSH during reoxygenation will not impact recovery.  相似文献   

16.
All 20.000 different fish species vary greatly in their ability to tolerate and survive fluctuating oxygen concentrations in the water. Especially fish of the genus Carassius, e.g. the crucian carp and the goldfish, exhibit a remarkable tolerance to limited/absent oxygen concentrations. The metabolic changes of anoxia-tolerant crucian carp were recently studied and published. Contrary to crucian carp, the hypoxia-tolerant common carp cannot survive a complete lack of oxygen (anoxia). Therefore, we studied the 1H-NMR-based metabolomics of brain, heart, liver and white muscle extracts of common carp, subjected to anoxia (0 mg O2 l?1) and hypoxia (0.9 mg O2 l?1) at 5 °C. Specifically, fish were exposed to normoxia (i.e. 9 mg O2 l?1; controls 24 h, 1 week and 2 weeks), acute hypoxia (24 h), chronic hypoxia (1 week) and chronic hypoxia (1 week) with normoxic reoxygenation (1 week). Additionally, we also investigated the metabolic responses of fish to anoxia for 2 h. Both anoxia and hypoxia significantly changed the tissue levels of standard energy metabolites as lactate, glycogen, ATP/ADP and phosphocreatine. Remarkably, anoxia induced increased lactate levels in all tissues except for the heart whereas hypoxia resulted in decreased lactate concentrations in all tissues except for brains. Furthermore, hypoxia and anoxia influenced amino acids (alanine, valine/(iso)leucine) and neurotransmitters levels (GABA, glutamate). Lastly, we also detected ‘other’ i.e. previously not reported compounds to play a role in the present context. Scyllo-inositol levels changed significantly in heart, liver and muscle, providing novel insights into the anoxia/hypoxic responses of the common carp.  相似文献   

17.
Microcalorimetry is the only direct method for measuring moment-to-moment changes in whole-cell metabolism (as heat output) during anoxia. We have adapted this methodology, in conjunction with standard muscle isolation techniques, to monitor metabolic transitions in isolated frog (Rana temporaria) sartorius muscle during anoxia and recovery (reoxygenation). Anoxia (sustained 1 h, following 2 h progressive hypoxia) suppressed muscle heat output to 20% of the stable normoxic level. This effect was fully reversible upon reoxygenation. Metabolite profiles were consistent with other anoxia-tolerant vertebrates – most notably, adenosine triphosphate (ATP) content during anoxia and reoxygenation remained unchanged from normoxia (pre-anoxic control). In addition, the concentration of K+ ions ([K+]) in interstitial dialysates remained stable (2–3 mM) throughout anoxia and recovery. Interstitial [lactate] increased slightly, in accord with anaerobiosis supporting suppressed metabolic rates during anoxia. The degree of anoxic suppression of metabolism observed is similar to other vertebrate models of anoxia tolerance. Furthermore, stable ATP concentrations and interstitial [K+] in the isolated tissue suggests that intrinsic mechanisms suppress metabolism in a manner that coordinates ATP supply and demand and avoids the severe ion imbalances that are characteristic of hypoxia-sensitive systems. Accepted: 15 January 1998  相似文献   

18.
Although paracrine effects of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have been suggested previously, cardioprotection by human MSC secretions has never been demonstrated. Human MSC-conditioned medium (CM) was collected by following a clinically compliant protocol. In a porcine model of ischemia and reperfusion injury, intravenous and intracoronary MSC-CM treatment significantly reduced myocardial nuclear oxidative stress as determined by immunostaining for 8-hydroxy-2′-deoxyguanosine. In addition, expression levels of phospho-SMAD2 and active caspase 3 were diminished following CM treatment, suggesting that TGF-β signaling and apoptosis were reduced. This was associated with a 60% reduction in infarct size and marked improvement of systolic and diastolic cardiac performance as assessed with echocardiography and pressure volume loops. Fractionation studies revealed that only the fraction of the CM containing products > 1000 kDa (100–220 nm) provided cardioprotection in a mouse model of ischemia and reperfusion injury. This indicates that the responsible paracrine factor of human MSCs is likely a large complex rather than a single small molecule. These data identify human MSC-CM as a promising therapeutic option to reduce myocardial infarct size in patients with acute MI and suggest that the use of stem cell secretions could extend the applicability of stem cells for therapeutic purposes.  相似文献   

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