Myocardial impairment in chronic hypoxia is abolished by short aeration episodes: involvement of K+ATP channels.


Autoria(s): Milano G.; Bianciardi P.; Corno A.F.; Raddatz E.; Morel S.; von Segesser L.K.; Samaja M.
Data(s)

2004

Resumo

In vivo exposure to chronic hypoxia is considered to be a cause of myocardial dysfunction, thereby representing a deleterious condition, but repeated aeration episodes may exert some cardioprotection. We investigated the possible role of ATP-sensitive potassium channels in these mechanisms. First, rats (n = 8/group) were exposed for 14 days to either chronic hypoxia (CH; 10% O(2)) or chronic hypoxia with one episode/day of 1-hr normoxic aeration (CH+A), with normoxia (N) as the control. Second, isolated hearts were Langendorff perfused under hypoxia (10% O(2), 30 min) and reoxygenated (94% O(2), 30 min) with or without 3 microM glibenclamide (nonselective K(+)(ATP) channel-blocker) or 100 microM diazoxide (selective mitochondrial K(+)(ATP) channel-opener). Blood gasses, hemoglobin concentration, and plasma malondialdehyde were similar in CH and CH+A and in both different from normoxic (P < 0.01), body weight gain and plasma nitrate/nitrite were higher in CH+A than CH (P < 0.01), whereas apoptosis (number of TUNEL-positive nuclei) was less in CH+A than CH (P < 0.05). During in vitro hypoxia, the efficiency (ratio of ATP production/pressure x rate product) was the same in all groups and diazoxide had no measurable effects on myocardial performance, whereas glibenclamide increased end-diastolic pressure more in N and CH than in CH+A hearts (P < 0.05). During reoxgenation, efficiency was markedly less in CH with respect to N and CH+A (P < 0.0001), and ratex pressure product remained lower in CH than N and CH+A hearts (P < 0.001), but glibenclamide or diazoxide abolished this difference. Glibenclamide, but not diazoxide, decreased vascular resistance in N and CH (P < 0.005 and < 0.001) without changes in CH+A. We hypothesize that cardioprotection in chronically hypoxic hearts derive from cell depolarization by sarcolemmal K(+)(ATP) blockade or from preservation of oxidative phosphorylation efficiency (ATP turnover/myocardial performance) by mitochondrial K(+)(ATP) opening. Therefore K(+)(ATP) channels are involved in the deleterious effects of chronic hypoxia and in the cardioprotection elicited when chronic hypoxia is interrupted with short normoxic aeration episodes.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_81E0B7AC040B

isbn:1535-3702 (Print)

pmid:15564447

isiid:000225680200015

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Experimental Biology and Medicine, vol. 229, no. 11, pp. 1196-1205

Palavras-Chave #Animals; Anoxia/physiopathology; Apoptosis/physiology; Chronic Disease; Glyburide/pharmacology; Heart/drug effects; Heart/physiopathology; In Situ Nick-End Labeling; Male; Myocardial Reperfusion; Myocardium/pathology; Organ Culture Techniques; Oxidative Stress/physiology; Potassium Channel Blockers/pharmacology; Potassium Channels/drug effects; Potassium Channels/metabolism; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article