16 research outputs found

    Myocardial protection by insulin at reperfusion requires early administration and is mediated via Akt and p70s6 kinase cell-survival signaling

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    The "metabolic cocktail" comprising glucose-insulin-potassium administrated at reperfusion reduces infarct size in the in vivo rat heart. We propose that insulin is the major component mediating this protection and acts via Akt prosurvival signaling. This hypothesis was studied in isolated perfused rat hearts (measuring infarct size to area of risk [%]) subjected to 35 minutes regional myocardial ischemia and 2 hours reperfusion. Insulin administered at the onset of reperfusion attenuated infarct size by 45% versus control hearts (P<0.001). Insulin-mediated cardioprotection was found to be independent of the presence of glucose at reperfusion. Moreover, the cell survival benefit of insulin is temporally dependent, in that insulin administration from the onset of reperfusion and maintained for either 15 minutes or for the duration of reperfusion reduced infarct size. In contrast, protection was abrogated if insulin administration was delayed until 15 minutes into reperfusion. Pharmacological inhibition of both upstream and downstream signals in the Akt prosurvival pathway abolished the cardioprotective effects of insulin. Here coadministration of insulin with the tyrosine kinase inhibitor lavendustin A, the phosphatidylinositol3-kinase (PI3-kinase) inhibitor wortmannin, and mTOR/p70s6 kinase inhibitor rapamycin abolished cardioprotection. Steady-state levels of activated/phosphorylated Akt correlated with insulin administration. Finally, downstream prosurvival targets of Akt including p70s6 kinase and BAD were modulated by insulin. In conclusion, insulin administration at reperfusion reduces myocardial infarction, is dependent on early administration during reperfusion, and is mediated via Akt and p70s6 kinase dependent signaling pathway. Moreover, BAD is maintained in its inert phosphorylated state in response to insulin therapy

    PKCĪµ promotes cardiac mitochondrial and metabolic adaptation to chronic hypobaric hypoxia by GSK3Ī² inhibition

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    PKCĪµ is central to cardioprotection. Sub-proteome analysis demonstrated co-localization of activated cardiac PKCĪµ (aPKCĪµ) with metabolic, mitochondrial, and cardioprotective modulators like hypoxia-inducible factor 1Ī± (HIF-1Ī±). aPKCĪµ relocates to the mitochondrion, inactivating glycogen synthase kinase 3Ī² (GSK3Ī²) to modulate glycogen metabolism, hypertrophy and HIF-1Ī±. However, there is no established mechanistic link between PKCĪµ, p-GSK3Ī² and HIF1-Ī±. Here we hypothesized that cardiac-restricted aPKCĪµ improves mitochondrial response to hypobaric hypoxia by altered substrate fuel selection via a GSK3Ī²/HIF-1Ī±-dependent mechanism. aPKCĪµ and wild-type (WT) mice were exposed to 14 days of hypobaric hypoxia (45kPa, 11% O2) and cardiac metabolism, functional parameters, p-GSK3Ī²/HIF-1Ī± expression, mitochondrial function and ultrastructure analyzed versus normoxic controls. Mitochondrial ADP-dependent respiration, ATP production and membrane potential were attenuated in hypoxic WT but maintained in hypoxic aPKCĪµ mitochondria (P&lt;0.005, n=8). Electron microscopy revealed a hypoxia-associated increase in mitochondrial number with ultrastructural disarray in WT versus aPKCĪµ hearts. Concordantly, left ventricular work was diminished in hypoxic WT but not aPKCĪµ mice (glucose only perfusions). However, addition of palmitate abrogated this (P&lt;0.05 vs. WT). aPKCĪµ hearts displayed increased glucose utilization at baseline and with hypoxia. In parallel, p-GSK3Ī² and HIF1-Ī± peptide levels were increased in hypoxic aPKCĪµ hearts versus WT. Our study demonstrates that modest, sustained PKCĪµ activation blunts cardiac pathophysiologic responses usually observed in response to chronic hypoxia. Moreover, we propose that preferential glucose utilization by PKCĪµ hearts is orchestrated by a p-GSK3Ī²/HIF-1Ī±-mediated mechanism, playing a crucial role to sustain contractile function in response to chronic hypobaric hypoxia. Ā© 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Articl

    PET Measurement of Myocardial Metabolism

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    Myocardial Protection from Ischemia and Reperfusion Injury

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