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Toll-interacting protein contributes to mortality following myocardial infarction through promoting inflammation and apoptosis

Authors :
Wan, Nian
Liu, Xiaoxiong
Zhang, Xiao-Jing
Zhao, Yichao
Hu, Gangying
Wan, Fengwei
Zhang, Rui
Zhu, Xueyong
Xia, Hao
Li, Hongliang
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, 2015.

Abstract

Toll-interacting protein (Tollip) is an endogenous inhibitor of toll-like receptors, a superfamily that plays a pivotal role in various pathological conditions, including myocardial infarction (MI). However, the exact role of Tollip in MI remains unknown.MI models were established in Tollip knockout (KO) mice, mice with cardiac-specific overexpression of human Tollip gene and in their Tollip(+/+) and non-transgenic controls respectively. The effects of Tollip on MI were evaluated by mortality, infarct size and cardiac function. Hypoxia-induced cardiomyocyte damage was investigated in vitro to confirm the role of Tollip in heart damage.Tollip expression was dramatically up-regulated in human ischaemic hearts and infarcted mice hearts. MI-induced mortality, infarct size and cardiac dysfunction were decreased in Tollip-KO mice compared with Tollip(+/+) controls. Ischaemic hearts from Tollip-KO mice exhibited decreased inflammatory cell infiltration and reduced NF-κB activation. Tollip depletion also alleviated myocardial apoptosis by down-regulating pro-apoptotic protein levels and up-regulating anti-apoptotic protein expressions in infarct border zone. Conversely, MI effects were exacerbated in mice with cardiac-specific Tollip overexpression. This aggravated MI injury by Tollip in vivo was confirmed with in vitro assays. Inhibition of Akt signalling was associated with the detrimental effects of Tollip on MI injury; activation of Akt largely reversed the deleterious effects of Tollip on MI-induced cardiomyocyte death.Tollip promotes inflammatory and apoptotic responses after MI, leading to increased mortality and aggravated cardiac dysfunction. These findings suggest that Tollip may serve as a novel therapeutic target for the treatment of MI.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........cbb32e42c82cad6bc1c066aa5f4c84bc