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Reperfusion, not simulated ischemia, initiates intrinsic apoptosis injury in chick cardiomyocytes

Authors :
Vanden Hoek, Terry L.
Qin, Yimin
Wojcik, Kim
Li, Chang-Qing
Shao, Zuo-hui
Anderson, Travis
Becker, Lance B.
Hamann, Kimm J.
Source :
The American Journal of Physiology. Jan, 2003, Vol. 284 Issue 1, pH141, 10 p.
Publication Year :
2003

Abstract

Although ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) can initiate apoptosis, the timing and contribution of the mitochondrial/cytochrome c apoptosis death pathway to I/R injury is unclear. We studied the timing of cytochrome c release during I/R and whether subsequent caspase activation contributes to reperfusion injury in confluent chick cardiomyocytes. One-hour simulated ischemia followed by 3-h reperfusion resulted in significant cell death, with most cell death evident during the reperfusion phase and demonstrating mitochondrial cytochrome c release within 5 min after reperfusion. By contrast, cells exposed to prolonged ischemia for 4 h had only marginally increased cell death and no detectable cytochrome c release into the cytosol. Caspase activation could not be detected after ischemia only, but it significantly increased after reperfusion. Caspase inhibiters benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp-fluoromethyl ketone, Ac-Asp-Gln-Thr-Asp-H, or benzyloxycarbonyl-Leu-Glu (Ome)-His-Asp-(Ome)-fluoromethyl ketone given only at reperfusion significantly attenuated cell death and resulted in return of contraction. Antixoxidants decreased cytochrome c release, nuclear condensation, and cell death. These results suggest that reperfusion oxidants initiate cytochrome c release within minutes, and apoptosis within hours, significant enough to increase cell death and contractile dysfunction. oxidants; ischemia-reperfusion; reperfusion injury; caspase inhibition

Details

ISSN :
00029513
Volume :
284
Issue :
1
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
The American Journal of Physiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.97550276