首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 453 毫秒
1.
It has been shown that cell-to-cell chemical coupling may persist during severe myocardial hypoxia or ischemia. We aimed to analyze the effects of different, chemically unrelated gap junction uncouplers on the progression of ischemic injury in hypoxic myocardium. First, we analyzed the effects of heptanol, 18alpha-glycyrrhetinic acid, and palmitoleic acid on intracellular Ca2+ concentration during simulated hypoxia (2 mM NaCN) in isolated cardiomyocytes. Next, we analyzed their effects on developed and diastolic tension and electrical impedance in 47 isolated rat hearts submitted to 40 min of hypoxia and reoxygenation. All treatments were applied only during the hypoxic period. Cell injury was determined by lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release. Heptanol, but not 18alpha-glycyrrhetinic acid nor palmitoleic acid, attenuated the increase in cytosolic Ca2+ concentration induced by simulated ischemia in cardiomyocytes and delayed rigor development (rigor onset at 7.31 +/- 0.71 min in controls vs. 14.76 +/- 1.44 in heptanol-treated hearts, P < 0.001) and the onset of the marked changes in electrical impedance (tissue resistivity: 4.02 +/- 0.29 vs. 7.75 +/- 1.84 min, P = 0.016) in hypoxic rat hearts. LDH release from hypoxic hearts was minimal and was not significantly modified by drugs. However, all gap junction uncouplers, given during hypoxia, attenuated LDH release during subsequent reoxygenation. Dose-response analysis showed that increasing heptanol concentration beyond the level associated with maximal effects on cell coupling resulted in further protection against hypoxic injury. In conclusion, gap junction uncoupling during hypoxia has a protective effect on cell death occurring upon subsequent reoxygenation, and heptanol has, in addition, a marked protective effect independent of its uncoupling actions.  相似文献   

2.
To characterize the effects of ischemia on cGMP synthesis in microvascular endothelium, cultured endothelial cells from adult rat hearts were exposed to hypoxia or normoxia at pH 6.4 or 7.4. Cellular cGMP and soluble (sGC) and membrane guanylyl cyclase (mGC) activities were measured after stimulation of sGC (S-nitroso-N-acetyl-penicillamine) or mGC (urodilatin) or after no stimulation. Cell death (lactate dehydrogenase release) was negligible in all experiments. Hypoxia at pH 6.4 induced a rapid approximately 90% decrease in cellular cGMP after sGC and mGC stimulation. This effect was reproduced by acidosis. Hypoxia at pH 7.4 elicited a less pronounced (approximately 50%) and slower reduction in cGMP synthesis. Reoxygenation after 2 h of hypoxia at either pH 6.4 or 7.4 normalized the response to mGC stimulation but further deteriorated the sGC response; normalization of pH rapidly reversed the effects of acidosis. At pH 7.4, the response to GC stimulation correlated well with cellular ATP. We conclude that simulated ischemia severely depresses cGMP synthesis in microvascular coronary endothelial cells through ATP depletion and acidosis without intrinsic protein alteration.  相似文献   

3.
We investigated the role of pH, reactive oxygen species (ROS), Ca2+, and the mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT) in pH-dependent ischemia-reperfusion injury to adult rat myocytes. Myocytes were incubated in anoxic Krebs-Ringer-HEPES buffer at pH 6.2 for 3 h to simulate ischemia. To simulate reperfusion, myocytes were reoxygenated at pH 6.2 or 7.4 for 2 h. Some myocytes were treated with MPT blockers (cyclosporin A and N-methyl-4-isoleucine cyclosporin) and antioxidants (desferal, diphenylphenylene diamine, and 2-mercaptopropionyl glycine). Mitochondrial membrane potential, inner membrane permeabilization, and ROS formation were imaged with tetramethylrhodamine methyl ester, calcein, and chloromethyldichlorofluorescein diacetate, respectively. For Ca2+ imaging, myocytes were coloaded with rhod-2 and fluo-4 to evaluate mitochondrial and cytosolic Ca2+, respectively. After 10 min of reperfusion at pH 7.4, calcein redistributed across the mitochondrial inner membrane, an event preceded by mitochondrial ROS formation and accompanied by hypercontracture, mitochondrial depolarization, and then cell death. Acidotic reperfusion, antioxidants, and MPT blockers each prevented the MPT, depolarization, hypercontraction, and cell killing. Antioxidants, but neither MPT blockers nor acidotic reperfusion, inhibited ROS formation after reperfusion. Furthermore, anoxic reperfusion at pH 7.4 prevented cell death. Both mitochondrial and cytosolic Ca2+ increased during ischemia but recovered in the first minutes of reperfusion. Mitochondrial and cytosolic Ca2+ overloading again occurred late after reperfusion. This late Ca2+ overloading was blocked by MPT inhibition. Intramitochondrial Ca2+ chelation by cold loading/warm incubation of BAPTA did not prevent cell death after reperfusion. In conclusion, mitochondrial ROS, together with normalization of pH, promote MPT onset and subsequent myocyte death after reperfusion. In contrast, Ca2+ overloading appears to be the consequence of bioenergetic failure after the MPT and is not a factor promoting MPT onset.  相似文献   

4.
The end-effectors of ischemic preconditioning (IPC) are not well known. It has been recently shown that transgenic mice underexpressing the gap junction protein connexin43 (Cx43) cannot be preconditioned. Because gap junctions allow spreading of cell death during ischemia-reperfusion in different tissues, including myocardium, we hypothesized that the protection afforded by IPC is mediated by effects on gap junction-mediated intercellular communication. To test this hypothesis, we analyzed the effect of IPC (5 min ischemia-5 min reperfusion x 2) on the changes in electrical impedance (four electrode probe) and impulse propagation velocity (transmembrane action potential) induced by ischemia (60 min) and reperfusion (60 min) in isolated rat hearts. IPC (n = 8) reduced reperfusion-induced lactate dehydrogenase release by 65.8% with respect to control hearts (n = 9) (P = 0.04) but had no effect on the time of onset of rigor contracture (increase in diastolic tension), electrical uncoupling (sharp changes in tissue resistivity and phase angle in impedance recordings), or block of impulse propagation during ischemia. Normalization of electrical impedance during reperfusion was also unaffected by IPC. The lack of effect of IPC on ischemic rigor contracture and on changes in tissue impedance during ischemia-reperfusion were validated under in vivo conditions in pigs submitted to 48 min of coronary occlusion and 120 min of reperfusion. IPC (n = 12) reduced infarct size (triphenyltetrazolium) by 64.9% (P = 0.01) with respect to controls (n = 17). We conclude that the protection afforded by IPC is not mediated by effects on electrical coupling. This result is consistent with recent findings suggesting that Cx43 could have effects on cell survival independent on changes in cell-to-cell communication.  相似文献   

5.
The mechanism by which inhibition of Na+/H+ exchanger (NHE) reduces cell death in ischemic-reperfused myocardium remains controversial. This study investigated whether cariporide could inhibit mitochondrial NHE during ischemia, delaying H+ gradient dissipation and ATP exhaustion. Mouse cardiac myocytes (HL-1) were submitted to 1 h of simulated ischemia (SI) with NaCN/deoxyglucose (pH 6.4), with or without 7 microM cariporide, and mitochondrial concentration of Ca2+ (Rhod-2), 2', 7'-bis(2-carboxyethyl)-5(6)-carboxyfluorescein (BCECF) and the charge difference across the mitochondrial membrane potential (Deltapsim, JC-1) were assessed. ATP content was measured by bioluminescence and mitochondrial swelling by spectrophotometry in isolated mitochondria. Cariporide significantly attenuated the acidification of the mitochondrial matrix induced by SI without modifying Deltapsim decay, and this effect was associated to a delayed ATP exhaustion and increased mitochondrial Ca2+ load. These effects were reproduced in sarcolemma-permeabilized cells exposed to SI. In these cells, cariporide markedly attenuated the fall in mitochondrial pH induced by removal of Na+ from the medium. In isolated mitochondria, cariporide significantly reduced the rate and magnitude of passive matrix swelling induced by Na+ acetate. In isolated rat hearts submitted to 40-min ischemia at different temperatures (35.5 degrees, 37 degrees, or 38.5 degrees C) pretreatment with cariporide limited ATP depletion during the first 10 min of ischemia and cell death (lactate dehydrogenase release) during reperfusion. These effects were mimicked when a similar ATP preservation was achieved by hypothermia and were abolished when the sparing effect of cariporide on ATP was suppressed by hyperthermia. We conclude that cariporide acts at the mitochondrial level, delaying mitochondrial matrix acidification and delaying ATP exhaustion during ischemia. These effects can contribute to reduce cell death secondary to ischemia-reperfusion.  相似文献   

6.
Platelets (Plt) accumulate in reperfused myocardium but their effect on myocardial necrosis has not been established. We tested the hypothesis that the effect of Plt depends on their activation status. Pig Plt were obtained before 48 min of coronary occlusion (pre-CO-Plt), 10 min after reperfusion (R-Plt), or after a 60-min sham operation (sham-Plt). Plt were infused into isolated rat hearts (n = 124) and subsequently submitted to 60 min of ischemia and 60 min of reperfusion. P-selectin expression was higher (P = 0.02) in R-Plt than in pre-CO-Plt or sham-Plt. Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release during reperfusion was similar in hearts receiving pre-CO-Plt, sham-Plt, or no Plt, but R-Plt increased LDH release by 60% (P = 0.004). Activation of pre-CO-Plt with thrombin increased P-selectin expression and LDH release (P < 0.001), and these results were unaffected by tirofiban. There was a close correlation between P-selectin expression and LDH release (r = 0.84; P < 0.001), and myocardial Plt accumulation (r = 0.85; P < 0.001). We conclude that the deleterious effect of Plt on reperfused myocardium depends on their activation status as represented by P-selectin expression, which is enhanced by ischemia-reperfusion.  相似文献   

7.
Ischemia-reperfusion causes endothelial dysfunction. Prolongation of acidosis during initial cardiac reperfusion limits infarct size in animal models, but the effects of acidic reperfusion on vascular function are unknown. The present work analyzes the effects of acidic reoxygenation on vascular responses to different agonists in rat aortic rings. Arterial rings obtained from Sprague-Dawley rat aorta were placed in organ baths containing a Krebs solution oxygenated at 37 degrees C (pH 7.4). After equilibration (30 mN, 1 h), the effects of acidosis (pH 6.4) on aortic responses to acetylcholine and norepinephrine were initially assessed under normoxic conditions. Thereafter, the effects of acidosis during hypoxia (1 h) or reoxygenation on aortic responses to acetylcholine, norepinephrine, or sodium nitroprusside were analyzed and compared with those observed in control rings. Acidosis did not modify aortic responses to acetylcholine or adrenaline during normoxia. In contrast, rings submitted to hypoxia and reoxygenated at pH 7.4 showed a reduction in vasodilator responses to acetylcholine and in contractions to norepinephrine with no change in responses to sodium nitroprusside. Reoxygenation at pH 6.4 did not modify the depressed response to norepinephrine but enhanced the recovery of acetylcholine-induced vasorelaxation. Cumulative concentration-response curves to acetylcholine showed an increased responsiveness to this drug in rings reoxygenated at a low pH. This functional improvement was associated with the preservation of aortic cGMP content after stimulation of reoxygenated rings with acetylcholine. In conclusion, acidic reoxygenation preserves endothelial function in arterial rings submitted to simulated ischemia, likely through the preservation of cGMP signaling.  相似文献   

8.
Reperfusion of ATP-depleted tissues after warm or cold ischemia causes pH-dependent necrotic and apoptotic cell death. In hepatocytes and other cell types as well, the mechanism underlying this reperfusion-induced cell death involves onset of the mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT). Opening of permeability transition (PT) pores in the mitochondrial inner membrane initiates the MPT, an event blocked by cyclosporin A (CsA) and pH less than 7.4. Thus, both acidotic pH and CsA prevent MPT-dependent reperfusion injury. Glycine also blocks reperfusion-induced necrosis but acts downstream of PT pore opening by stabilizing the plasma membrane. After the MPT, ATP availability from glycolysis or other source determines whether cell injury after reperfusion progresses to ATP depletion-dependent necrosis or ATP-requiring apoptosis. Thus, apoptosis and necrosis after reperfusion share a common pathway, the MPT. Cell injury progressing to either necrosis or apoptosis by shared pathways can be more aptly termed necrapoptosis.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of simulated ischemia [hypoxia, no glucose, extracellular pH (pH(o)) 6.4] on cGMP synthesis induced by stimulation of soluble (sGC) or particulate guanylyl cyclase (pGC) was investigated in adult rat cardiomyocytes. Intracellular cGMP content was measured after stimulation of sGC by S-nitroso-N-penicillamine (SNAP) or stimulation of pGC by natriuretic peptides [urodilatin (Uro), atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP), or C-type natriuretic peptide (CNP)] for 1 min in the presence of phosphodiesterase inhibitors. After 2 h of simulated ischemia, a decrease of >50% was observed in pGC-dependent cGMP synthesis, but no significant change was observed in sGC-dependent cGMP synthesis. The reduction in cGMP synthesis caused by simulated ischemia was mimicked by extracellular acidosis (pH(o) 6.4), which decreased pGC-mediated cGMP synthesis without altering sGC-mediated cGMP synthesis. An extreme sensitivity of pGC activity to low pH was also observed in membrane cell fractions. Hypoxia without acidosis (pH(o) 7.4) profoundly depressed cellular ATP content but did not change the response to SNAP, Uro, or ANP (selective agonists of pGC type A receptor). Only cGMP synthesis in response to CNP (a selective agonist of pGC type B receptor) was significantly reduced by ATP depletion. These data support the relevance of intracellular pH as a modulator of cGMP and suggest that, in ischemic cardiomyocytes, synthesis of cGMP would be mainly nitric oxide dependent.  相似文献   

10.
Brain ischemic tolerance is a protective mechanism induced by a preconditioning stimulus, which prepare the tissue against harmful insults. Preconditioning with N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) agonists induces brain tolerance and protects it against glutamate excitotoxicity. Recently, the glycine transporters type 1 (GlyT-1) have been shown to potentiate glutamate neurotransmission through NMDA receptors suggesting an alternative strategy to protect against glutamate excitotoxicity. Here, we evaluated the preconditioning effect of sarcosine pre-treatment, a GlyT-1 inhibitor, in rat hippocampal slices exposed to ischemic insult. Sarcosine (300mg/kg per day, i.p.) was administered during seven consecutive days before induction of ischemia in hippocampus by oxygen/glucose deprivation (OGD). To access the damage caused by an ischemic insult, we evaluated cells viability, glutamate release, nitric oxide (NO) production, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) levels, production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), and antioxidant enzymes as well as the impact of oxidative stress in the tissue. We observed that sarcosine reduced cell death in hippocampus submitted to OGD, which was confirmed by reduction on LDH levels in the supernatant. Cell death, glutamate release, LDH levels and NO production were reduced in sarcosine hippocampal slices submitted to OGD when compared to OGD controls (without sarcosine). ROS production was reduced in sarcosine hippocampal slices exposed to OGD, although no changes were found in antioxidant enzymes activities. This study demonstrates that preconditioning with sarcosine induces ischemic tolerance in rat hippocampal slices submitted to OGD.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract: The aim of this study was to elucidate the mechanisms by which retinal cells release endogenous amino acids in response to ascorbate/Fe2+-induced oxidative stress, as compared with chemical hypoxia or ischemia. In the absence of stimulation, oxidative stress increased the release of aspartate, glutamate, taurine, and GABA only when Ca2+ was present. Under hypoxia or ischemia, the release of aspartate, glutamate, glycine, alanine, taurine, and GABA increased mainly by a Ca2+-independent mechanism. The increased release observed in N -methyl- d -glucamine+ medium suggested the reversal of the Na+-dependent amino acid transporters. Upon oxidative stress, the release of aspartate, glutamate, and GABA, occurring through the reversal of the Na+-dependent transporters, was reduced by about 30%, although the release of taurine was enhanced. An increased release of [3H]arachidonic acid and free radicals seems to affect the Na+-dependent transporters for glutamate and GABA in oxidized cells. All cell treatments increased [Ca2+]i (1.5 to twofold), although no differences were observed in membrane depolarization. The energy charge of cells submitted to hypoxia or oxidative stress was not changed. However, ischemia highly potentiated the reduction of the energy charge, as compared with hypoglycemia or hypoxia alone. The present work is important for understanding the mechanisms of amino acid release that occur in vivo upon oxidative stress, hypoxia, or ischemia, frequently associated with the impairment of energy metabolism.  相似文献   

12.
Previously, we reported that glucose-deprived astrocytes were highly vulnerable to peroxynitrite (ONOO-). Here we demonstrate that the increased vulnerability caused by glucose deprivation and ONOO- depends on intracellular pH. The ONOO- releasing reagent 3-morpholinosydnonimine (SIN-1) markedly induced the release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH, the marker of cytotoxicity) in glucose-deprived astrocytes. Morphological studies and caspase activity assay showed that astrocytes treated together with glucose deprivation and ONOO- died mostly in a necrotic mode. Alkalinization of pH from 7.4 to 7.8 increased LDH release, whereas acidification from pH 7.4 to 7.0 decreased it. However, intracellular pH (pHi), not extracellular pH (pHe), appeared to play a critical role in the synergistic death. Thus, without a change in pHe (7.4) cytosolic acidification by a weak acid salt, sodium acetate, and a Na+/H+ antiporter inhibitor, amiloride, reduced LDH release. In contrast, a weak base, NH4Cl, and a Na+/H+ antiporter stimulator, monensin, increased pHi and greatly enhanced LDH release. The augmented death was found to be due, in part, to the preceding decrease in the level of reduced glutathione, the ONOO- scavenger, and collapse of the mitochondrial transmembrane potential at alkaline pH.  相似文献   

13.
In vitro experimental models designed to study the effects of hypoxia and ischemia typically employ oxygen-depleted media and/or hypoxic chambers. These approaches, however, allow for metabolites to diffuse away into a large volume and may not replicate the high local concentrations that occur in ischemic myocardium in vivo. We describe herein a novel and simple method for creating regional hypoxic and ischemic conditions in neonatal rat cardiac myocyte monolayers. This method consists of creating a localized diffusion barrier by placing a glass coverslip over a portion of the monolayer. The coverslip restricts covered myocytes to a thin film of media while leaving uncovered myocytes free to access the surrounding bulk media volume. Myocytes under the coverslip undergo marked morphology changes over time as assessed by video microscopy. Fluorescence microscopy shows that these changes are accompanied by alterations in mitochondrial membrane potential and plasma membrane dynamics and eventually result in myocyte death. We also show that the metabolic activity of myocytes drives cell necrosis under the coverslip. In addition, the intracellular pH of synchronously contracting myocytes under the coverslip drops rapidly, which further implicates metabolic activity in regulating cell death under the coverslip. In contrast with existing models of hypoxia/ischemia, this technique provides a simple and effective way to create hypoxic/ischemic conditions in vitro. Moreover, we conclude that myocyte death is hastened by the combination of hypoxia, metabolites, and acidosis and is facilitated by a reduction in media volume, which may better represent ischemic conditions in vivo.  相似文献   

14.
Glycine prevention of cold ischemic injury in isolated hepatocytes   总被引:5,自引:2,他引:3  
Isolated hepatocytes suspended in a liver preservation solution (University of Wisconsin (UW) solution) and exposed to cold (5 degrees C) ischemia lose viability (LDH release) after 3 (76.5 +/- 2.6% extracellular LDH) and 4 days (90.3 +/- 5.7% extracellular LDH) storage when rewarmed (37 degrees C) in Krebs-Henseleit buffer. However, if 3 mM glycine is added to Krebs-Henseleit buffer the loss of LDH on rewarming was suppressed (% LDH = 24.4 +/- 2.2% and 33.2 +/- 3.0%, at 3 and 4 days, respectively). The protection by glycine could also be obtained by storing the hepatocytes in the UW solution containing 15 mM glycine and rewarming in the absence of glycine in Krebs-Henseleit buffer. There did not appear to be a relationship between the protection by glycine and glutathione concentration of the hepatocytes as shown by the lack of effect of a glutathione synthetase inhibitor (butathionine sulfoximine) on the protective effects of glycine. Other amino acids did not provide protection to hepatocytes exposed to cold ischemia. The mechanism of action of glycine is not known, but this compound may be important in improving cold storage of livers for transplantation.  相似文献   

15.
Opening of a non-specific, high conductance permeability transition pore or megachannel in the inner mitochondrial membrane causes onset of the mitochondrial permeability transition, which is characterized by mitochondrial swelling, depolarization and uncoupling. Inducers of the permeability transition include Ca2+, oxidant stress and a permissive pH greater than 7.0. Blockers include cyclosporin A, trifluoperazine and pH < 7. Using laser scanning confocal microscopy, we developed techniques to visualize onset of the mitochondrial permeability transition in situ in living cells. In untreated cells, the permeability transition pore is continuously closed and does not 'flicker' open. By contrast, the pore opens in liver and heart cells after exposure to oxidant chemicals, calcium ionophore, hypoxia and ischemia/reperfusion, causing mitochondrial uncoupling and aggravation of ATP depletion. In injury to hepatocytes from tert-butylhydroperoxide, an analog of lipid hydroperoxides generated during oxidative stress, onset of the mitochondrial permeability transition is preceded by oxidation of mitochondrial pyridine nucleotides, mitochondrial generation of oxygen radicals and an increase of mitochondrial Ca2+, all inducers of the mitochondrial permeability transition. In ischemia, the acidosis of anaerobic metabolism protects strongly against cell death. During reperfusion, recovery of pH to normal levels is a stress that actually precipitates cell killing. Onset of the mitochondrial permeability transition may be responsible, in part, for this pH-dependent injury, or pH paradox. The mitochondrial permeability transition may also be responsible for a variety of pathological phenomena. In particular, the mitochondrial permeability transition may underlie Reye's syndrome and Reye's-like drug toxicities. In conclusion, multiple mechanisms contribute to cell injury after hypoxia, ischemia/reperfusion and toxic chemicals, but a common final pathway leading to acute cellular nec rosis may be ATP depletion after mitochondrial failure. One important mechanism causing mitochondrial failure is the mitochondrial permeability transition, which both uncouples oxidative phosphorylation and accelerates ATP hydrolysis. Interventions that block this pH-dependent phenomenon protect against onset of cell death. (Mol Cell Biochem 174: 159–165, 1997)  相似文献   

16.
The influence of external potassium Ko and tetraethylammonium on the cellular K content of hypoxic myocardium was investigated. Perfused rabbit hearts were submitted to 60 min hypoxia in medium containing 5 mM K throughout or either low (1.5 mM) or high (10 mM) K during the last 20 min of hypoxia. Paced electrical activity (2.5 Hz) was kept throughout the experiments. Tissue samples excised from the left ventricle were analyzed for total water, inulin space, and Na and K content. Lowering Ko to 1.5 mM increased both K loss and Na accumulation. Addition of 3.5 mM RbCl under these conditions reversed Na accumulation to levels found for hypoxia in normal medium but did not modify the cellular K loss. Tetraethylammonium (10 mM) did not alter Na accumulation but partly prevented the decrease in K content produced by hypoxia. A similar effect was observed by increasing Ko to 10 mM. At this high Ko prolongation of hypoxia did not enhance K loss. Abolition of electrical activity by TTX in a high K solution prevented K loss and reduced the sodium content. These results are consistent with the view that voltage-dependent channels are implicated in the K loss induced by hypoxia or ischemia. Furthermore, they indicate that the K loss may be modulated by external K because of the influence of the electrochemical gradient on passive K efflux and thus provide an explanation for the existence of a plateau in the early extracellular K accumulation observed during cardiac ischemia.  相似文献   

17.
Perfused cat livers subjected to 2.5 hr of hypoxia exhibited dramatic increases in perfusate cathepsin D and lactic acid dehydrogenase (LDH) activities, amino nitrogen concentrations, and a 60% depression in the clearance rate of carbon particles by the reticuloendothelial system (RES). Addition of aprotinin (250 KIU/ml) to the perfusate prior to hypoxia prevented the increases in circulating cathepsin D, LDH, and amino-nitrogen observed at 150 minutes. In addition, aprotinin prevented the reduction in carbon clearance during severe hypoxia. However, aprotinin had no effect on the percent free cathepsin D activity indicating that this agent did not directly prevent increases in lysosomal fragility occurring in response to hypoxia. Thus, addition of pharmacologic doses of aprotinin to the perfusate protected RES cells, and markedly reduced the release of cytoplasmic and lysosomal enzymes. The prevention of cell membrane dissolution appears to be a critical factor in hepatic preservation, and may be related to the inhibition of proteolysis by aprotinin. These effects may help explain the therapeutic effectiveness of this agent in shock and in myocardial ischemia.  相似文献   

18.
Germinated maize (Zea mays L.) seedlings were enclosed in modified triaxial cells in an artificial substrate and exposed to oxygen deficiency stress (4% oxygen, hypoxia) or to mechanical resistance to elongation growth (mechanical impedance) achieved by external pressure on the artificial substrate, or to both hypoxia and impedance simultaneously. Compared with controls, seedlings that received either hypoxia or mechanical impedance exhibited increased rates of ethylene evolution, greater activities of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) synthase, ACC oxidase, and cellulase, and more cell death and aerenchyma formation in the root cortex. Effects of hypoxia plus mechanical impedance were strongly synergistic on ethylene evolution and ACC synthase activity; cellulase activity, ACC oxidase activity, or aerenchyma formation did not exhibit this synergism. In addition, the lag between the onset of stress and increases in both ACC synthase activity and ethylene production was shortened by 2 to 3 h when mechanical impedance or impedance plus hypoxia was applied compared with hypoxia alone. The synergistic effects of hypoxia and mechanical impedance and the earlier responses to mechanical impedance than to hypoxia suggest that different mechanisms are involved in the promotive effects of these stresses on maize root ethylene biosynthesis.  相似文献   

19.
Disturbances of blood flow upon vascular occlusions and spasms result in hypoxia and acidosis, while its subsequent restoration leads to reoxygenation and pH normalization (re-alkalization) in ischemic sites of the vascular bed. The effect of hypoxia/reoxygenation on activation and stimulation of apoptosis in cultured human endothelial cells was studied. The cells were subjected to hypoxia (2% O2, 5% CO2, 93% N2) for 24 h followed by reoxygenation (21% O2, 5% CO2, 74% N2) for 5 h. Reoxygenation was carried out at different pH-6.4 (preservation of acidosis after hypoxia), 7.0, and 7.4 (partial and complete re-alkalization, respectively). Hypoxia only slightly (by ~30%) increased the cell adhesion molecule ICAM-1 content on the cell surface, whereas reoxygenation more than doubled its expression. The reoxygenation effect depended on the medium acidity, and ICAM-1 increase was more pronounced at pH 7.0 compared to that at pH 6.4 and 7.4. Neither hypoxia nor reoxygenation induced expression of two other cell adhesion molecules, VCAM and E-selectin. Incubation of cells under hypoxic conditions but not reoxygenation stimulated secretion of von Willebrand factor and increased its concentration in the culture medium by more than 4 times. The percentage of cells containing apoptosis marker, activated caspase-3, was increased by approximately 1.5 times upon hypoxia as well as hypoxia/reoxygenation. Maximal values were achieved when reoxygenation was performed at pH 7.0. These data show that hypoxia/reoxygenation stimulate pro-inflammatory activation (ICAM-1 expression) and apoptosis (caspase-3 activation) of endothelial cells, and the extracellular pH influences both processes.  相似文献   

20.
Gao Q  Pan HY  Qiu S  Lu Y  Bruce IC  Luo JH  Xia Q 《Life sciences》2006,79(3):217-224
The aim of the present study was to determine whether the clinically effective cardioprotection conferred by puerarin (Pue) against ischemia and reperfusion is mediated by mitochondrial transmembrane pores and/or channels. Hearts isolated from male Sprague-Dawley rats were perfused on a Langendorff apparatus and subjected to 30 min of global ischemia followed by 120 min of reperfusion. The production of formazan, which provides an index of myocardial viability, was measured by absorbance at 550 nm, and the level of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) in the coronary effluent was determined. In this model, Pue (0.0024-2.4 mmol/l) had a dose-dependent, negatively inotropic effect. Pretreatment with Pue at 0.24 mmol/l for 5 min before ischemia increased myocardial formazan content, reduced LDH release, improved recovery of left ventricular end-diastolic pressure and rate-pressure product (left ventricular developed pressure multiplied by heart rate) during reperfusion. Administration of atractyloside (20 micromol/l), an opener of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore, for the first 20 min of reperfusion, and 5-hydroxydecanoate (100 micromol/l), the mitochondrial-specific ATP-sensitive potassium channel blocker, for 20 min before ischemia, attenuated the protective effects of Pue. In mitochondria isolated from hearts pretreated with 0.24 mmol/l Pue for 5 min, a significant inhibition of Ca(2+)-induced swelling was observed, and this inhibition was attenuated by 5-hydroxydecanoate. In isolated ventricular myocytes, pretreatment with Pue prevented ischemia-induced cell death and depolarization of the mitochondrial membrane, and atractyloside and 5-hydroxydecanoate attenuated the effects of Pue. These findings indicate that puerarin protects the myocardium against ischemia and reperfusion injury via inhibiting mitochondrial permeability transition pore opening and activating the mitochondrial ATP-sensitive potassium channel.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号