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Remote ischemic preconditioning of cardiomyocytes inhibits the mitochondrial permeability transition pore independently of reduced calcium‐loading or sarcKATP channel activation

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posted on 2016-08-31, 14:28 authored by Helen E. Turrell, Chokanan Thaitirarot, Hayley Crumbie, Glenn C. Rodrigo
Ischemic preconditioning (IPC) inhibits Ca²⁺‐loading during ischemia which contributes to cardioprotection by inhibiting mechanical injury due to hypercontracture and biochemical injury through mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT) pores during reperfusion. However, whether remote‐IPC reduced Ca²⁺‐loading during ischemia and its subsequent involvement in inhibiting MPT pore formation during reperfusion has not been directly shown. We have developed a cellular model of remote IPC to look at the impact of remote conditioning on Ca²⁺‐regulation and MPT pore opening during simulated ischemia and reperfusion, using fluorescence microscopy. Ventricular cardiomyocytes were isolated from control rat hearts, hearts preconditioned with three cycles of ischemia/reperfusion or naïve myocytes remotely conditioned with effluent collected from preconditioned hearts. Both conventional‐IPC and remote‐IPC reduced the loss of Ca²⁺‐homeostasis and contractile function following reenergization of metabolically inhibited cells and protected myocytes against ischemia/reperfusion injury. However, only conventional‐IPC reduced the Ca²⁺‐loading during metabolic inhibition and this was independent of any change in sarcKATP channel activity but was associated with a reduction in Na⁺‐loading, reflecting a decrease in Na/H exchanger activity. Remote‐IPC delayed opening of the MPT pores in response to ROS, which was dependent on PKCε and NOS‐signaling. These data show that remote‐IPC inhibits MPT pore opening to a similar degree as conventional IPC, however, the contribution of MPT pore inhibition to protection against reperfusion injury is independent of Ca²⁺‐loading in remote IPC. We suggest that inhibition of the MPT pore and not Ca²⁺‐loading is the common link in cardioprotection between conventional and remote IPC.

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Citation

Physiological Reports, 2014, 2, e12231

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Medicine/Department of Cardiovascular Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Physiological Reports

Publisher

Wiley Open Access

issn

2051-817X

Acceptance date

2014-11-06

Copyright date

2014

Available date

2016-08-31

Publisher version

http://physreports.physiology.org/content/2/11/e12231

Language

en

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