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1 Department of Pathology, John D. Dingell Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and Departments of 2 Pathology and 3 Pediatrics, Wayne State University Medical School, Detroit, Michigan 48201
The transition from reversible to
irreversible ischemic injury
(ischemia-reperfusion, I/R) occurs coincident with the
loss of vinculin, a cytoskeletal protein involved in the attachment of the myofibrils to the sarcolemmal membrane. If the loss of vinculin
were critical to the development of I/R, then increased levels of
vinculin would be predicted to delay the onset of irreversible injury
assuming that the protein is functional and localized to the proper
subcellular site. The present study determined whether increased
expression of vinculin, specifically in the cytoskeletal compartment,
would provide protection from I/R injury. Neonatal rat myocytes were
cultured and infected with a newly created replication-deficient adenovirus driving the expression of vinculin. I/R was induced with
chemical inhibitors of glycolysis and mitochondrial respiration. Irreversible cell injury was assessed with lactate dehydrogenase (LDH)
release. Virus-infected myocytes expressed significantly more vinculin
in the cytoskeletal fraction and increased the expression of paxillin
but sustained the same amount of injury in response to simulated I/R as
control cells (n = 4; P = not
significant, paired t-test). Hypothermic I/R
(ischemia at 25°C) resulted in a significant reduction in LDH
release (P
0.02; n = 4). Virus-mediated overexpression of vinculin does not appear to represent a rational approach to overcoming I/R injury.
cytoskeleton; paxillin; myocyte; adenovirus
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