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Selective protein kinase C inhibition switches time-dependent glucose cardiotoxicity to cardioprotection

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journal contribution
posted on 2023-10-20, 12:29 authored by Sean Brennan, Simona Esposito, Muhammad IM Abdelaziz, Christopher AA Martin, Samir Makwana, Mark WW Sims, Iain BB Squire, Parveen Sharma, Amy EE Chadwick, Richard D Rainbow
Hyperglycaemia at the time of myocardial infarction has an adverse effect on prognosis irrespective of a prior diagnosis of diabetes, suggesting glucose is the damaging factor. In ex vivo models of ischaemia, we demonstrated that deleterious effects of acutely elevated glucose are PKCα/β-dependent, and providing PKCα/β are inhibited, elevated glucose confers cardioprotection. Short pre-treatments with high glucose were used to investigate time-dependent glucose cardiotoxicity, with PKCα/β inhibition investigated as a potential mechanism to reverse the toxicity. Freshly isolated non-diabetic rat cardiomyocytes were exposed to elevated glucose to investigate the time-dependence toxic effects. High glucose challenge for >7.5 min was cardiotoxic, proarrhythmic and lead to contractile failure, whilst cardiomyocytes exposed to metabolic inhibition following 5-min high glucose, displayed a time-dependent protection lasting ∼15 min. This protection was further enhanced with PKCα/β inhibition. Cardioprotection was measured as a delay in contractile failure and KATP channel activation, improved contractile and Ca2+ transient recovery and increased cell survival. Finally, the effects of pre-ischaemic treatment with high glucose in a whole-heart coronary ligation protocol, where protection was evident with PKCα/β inhibition. Selective PKCα/β inhibition enhances protection suggesting glycaemic control with PKC inhibition as a potential cardioprotective therapeutics in myocardial infarction and elective cardiac surgery.

Funding

This work was supported by the van Geest Cardiovascular Research Fund, University of Leicester (SB and RR), the British Heart Foundation (PG/16/14/32039 and PG/19/18/34280) (SB and RR) and Wellcome Trust Institutional Strategic Support Fund and University of Liverpool (SB).

History

Citation

Front. Cardiovasc. Med. (2022) 9:997013

Author affiliation

Department of Cardiovascular Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine

Volume

9

Publisher

Frontiers Media

issn

2297-055X

eissn

2297-055X

Acceptance date

2022-08-15

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2023-10-20

Spatial coverage

Switzerland

Language

English