ROS scavenging before 27°C ischemia protects hearts and reduces mitochondrial ROS, Ca2+ overload, and changes in redox state

Author:

Camara Amadou K. S.,Aldakkak Mohammed,Heisner James S.,Rhodes Samhita S.,Riess Matthias L.,An JiangZhong,Heinen André,Stowe David F.

Abstract

We have shown that cold perfusion of hearts generates reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (ROS/RNS). In this study, we determined 1) whether ROS scavenging only during cold perfusion before global ischemia improves mitochondrial and myocardial function, and 2) which ROS leads to compromised cardiac function during ischemia and reperfusion (I/R) injury. Using fluorescence spectrophotometry, we monitored redox balance (NADH and FAD), O2•− levels and mitochondrial Ca2+ (m[Ca2+]) at the left ventricular wall in 120 guinea pig isolated hearts divided into control (Con), MnTBAP (a superoxide dismutase 2 mimetic), MnTBAP (M) + catalase (C) + glutathione (G) (MCG), C+G (CG), and NG-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester (l-NAME; a nitric oxide synthase inhibitor) groups. After an initial period of warm perfusion, hearts were treated with drugs before and after at 27°C. Drugs were washed out before 2 h at 27°C ischemia and 2 h at 37°C reperfusion. We found that on reperfusion the MnTBAP group had the worst functional recovery and largest infarction with the highest m[Ca2+], most oxidized redox state and increased ROS levels. The MCG group had the best recovery, the smallest infarction, the lowest ROS level, the lowest m[Ca2+], and the most reduced redox state. CG and l-NAME groups gave results intermediate to those of the MnTBAP and MCG groups. Our results indicate that the scavenging of cold-induced O2•− species to less toxic downstream products additionally protects during and after cold I/R by preserving mitochondrial function. Because MnTBAP treatment showed the worst functional return along with poor preservation of mitochondrial bioenergetics, accumulation of H2O2 and/or hydroxyl radicals during cold perfusion may be involved in compromised function during subsequent cold I/R injury.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Cell Biology,Physiology

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