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Protection through postconditioning or a mitochondria-targeted S-nitrosothiol is unaffected by cardiomyocyte-selective ablation of protein kinase G.

Authors :
Methner, Carmen
Lukowski, Robert
Grube, Karina
Loga, Florian
Smith, Robin
Murphy, Michael
Hofmann, Franz
Krieg, Thomas
Source :
Basic Research in Cardiology. Mar2013, Vol. 108 Issue 2, p1-7. 7p.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Protein kinase G type I (PKGI) plays a critical role in survival signaling of pre- and postconditioning downstream of cardiac cGMP. However, it is unclear whether PKGI exerts its protective effects in the cardiomyocyte or if other cardiac cell types are involved, and whether nitric oxide (NO) metabolism can target cardiomyocyte mitochondria independently of cGMP/PKGI. We tested whether protection against reperfusion injury by ischemic postconditioning (IPost), soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC) activation and inhibition, adenosine A receptor (AAR) agonist, phosphodiesterase type-5 (PDE-5) inhibitor, or mitochondria-targeted S-nitrosothiol (MitoSNO) was affected by a cardiomyocyte-specific ablation of the PKGI gene in the mouse (CMG-KO). In situ hearts underwent 30 min of regional ischemia followed by 2 h of reperfusion. As expected, in CMG-CTRs all interventions at early reperfusion lead to profound infarct size reduction: IPost (six cycles of 10-s reperfusion and 10-s coronary occlusion) with or without treatment with the sGC inhibitor ODQ, treatment with the specific sGC activator BAY58-2667 (BAY58), the selective AAR agonist BAY60-6583 (BAY60), PDE-5 inhibitor sildenafil, and MitoSNO. MitoSNO accumulates within mitochondria, driven by the membrane potential, where it generates NO· and S-nitrosates thiol proteins. In contrast, the hearts of CMG-KO animals were not protected by BAY58 and sildenafil, whereas the protective effects of IPost, IPost with ODQ, BAY60, and MitoSNO were unaffected by the lack of PKGI. Taken together, PKGI is important for the protection against ischemia reperfusion injury afforded by sGC activation or PDE-5 inhibition. However, the beneficial effects of IPost, activation of the AAR, as well as the direct effects via mitochondrial S-nitrosation do not depend on PKGI in cardiomyocytes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03008428
Volume :
108
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Basic Research in Cardiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
86051691
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00395-013-0337-1