Gene program for cardiac cell survival induced by transient ischemia in conscious pigs
Open Access
- 31 July 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 98 (16) , 9336-9341
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.171297498
Abstract
Therapy for ischemic heart disease has been directed traditionally at limiting cell necrosis. We determined by genome profiling whether ischemic myocardium can trigger a genetic program promoting cardiac cell survival, which would be a novel and potentially equally important mechanism of salvage. Although cardiac genomics is usually performed in rodents, we used a swine model of ischemia/reperfusion followed by ventricular dysfunction (stunning), which more closely resembles clinical conditions. Gene expression profiles were compared by subtractive hybridization between ischemic and normal tissue of the same hearts. About one-third (23/74) of the nuclear-encoded genes that were up-regulated in ischemic myocardium participate in survival mechanisms (inhibition of apoptosis, cytoprotection, cell growth, and stimulation of translation). The specificity of this response was confirmed by Northern blot and quantitative PCR. Unexpectedly, this program also included genes not previously described in cardiomyocytes. Up-regulation of survival genes was more profound in subendocardium over subepicardium, reflecting that this response in stunned myocardium was proportional to the severity of the ischemic insult. Thus, in a swine model that recapitulates human heart disease, nonlethal ischemia activates a genomic program of cell survival that relates to the time course of myocardial stunning and differs transmurally in relation to ischemic stress, which induced the stunning. Understanding the genes up-regulated during myocardial stunning, including those not previously described in the heart, and developing strategies that activate this program may open new avenues for therapy in ischemic heart disease.Keywords
This publication has 47 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Small Heat Shock Protein αB-Crystallin Negatively Regulates Cytochrome c- and Caspase-8-dependent Activation of Caspase-3 by Inhibiting Its Autoproteolytic MaturationJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2001
- A Novel Human Gene Similar to the Protein Kinase (PK) Coding Domain of the Large Subunit of Herpes Simplex Virus Type 2 Ribonucleotide Reductase (ICP10) Codes for a Serine-Threonine PK and Is Expressed in Melanoma CellsPublished by Elsevier ,2000
- Differential regulation of inotropy and lusitropy in overexpressed Gsα myocytes through cAMP and Ca2+ channel pathwaysJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1999
- The Transcription Factor EGR-1 Suppresses Transformation of Human Fibrosarcoma HT1080 Cells by Coordinated Induction of Transforming Growth Factor-β1, Fibronectin, and Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor-1Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1999
- Egr-1 inhibits apoptosis during the UV response: correlation of cell survival with Egr-1 phosphorylationCell Death & Differentiation, 1998
- Small Stress Proteins as Novel Regulators of ApoptosisJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1996
- Suppression of apoptosis in mammalian cells by NAIP and a related family of IAP genesNature, 1996
- Late preconditioning against myocardial stunning. An endogenous protective mechanism that confers resistance to postischemic dysfunction 24 h after brief ischemia in conscious pigs.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1995
- The stunned myocardium: prolonged, postischemic ventricular dysfunction.Circulation, 1982
- Regional myocardial functional and electrophysiological alterations after brief coronary artery occlusion in conscious dogs.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1975