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-adrenergic inotropism of stunned
myocardium by an antioxidant mechanism
Department of Integrative Physiology and Cardiovascular Research Institute, University of North Texas Health Science Center, Fort Worth, Texas 76107-2699
Blunted
-adrenergic inotropism in
stunned myocardium is restored by pharmacological
(N-acetylcysteine) and metabolic (pyruvate) antioxidants.
The ketone body acetoacetate is a natural myocardial fuel and
antioxidant that improves contractile function of prooxidant-injured myocardium. The impact of acetoacetate on postischemic cardiac function and
-adrenergic signaling has never been reported. To test
the hypothesis that acetoacetate restores contractile performance and
-adrenergic inotropism of stunned myocardium, postischemic Krebs-Henseleit-perfused guinea pig hearts were treated with 5 mM
acetoacetate and/or 2 nM isoproterenol at 15-45 and 30-45 min of reperfusion, respectively, while cardiac power was monitored. The
myocardium was snap frozen, and its energy state was assessed from
phosphocreatine phosphorylation potential. Antioxidant defenses were
assessed from GSH/GSSG and NADPH/NADP+ redox potentials.
Stunning lowered cardiac power and GSH redox potential by 90 and 70%,
respectively. Given separately, acetoacetate and isoproterenol each
increased power and GSH redox potential three- to fivefold.
Phosphocreatine potential was 70% higher in acetoacetate- vs.
isoproterenol-treated hearts (P < 0.01). In combination, acetoacetate and isoproterenol synergistically increased power and GSH redox potential 16- and 7-fold, respectively, doubled NADPH redox potential, and increased cAMP content 30%. The combination increased cardiac power four- to sixfold vs. the individual treatments without a coincident increase in phosphorylation potential.
Potentiation of isoproterenol's inotropic actions endured even after
acetoacetate was discontinued and GSH potential waned, indicating that
temporary enhancement of redox potential persistently restored
-adrenergic mechanisms. Thus acetoacetate increased contractile
performance and potentiated
-adrenergic inotropism in stunned
myocardium without increasing energy reserves, suggesting its
antioxidant character is central to its beneficial actions.
isoproterenol; glutathione; adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate; nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate; citrate
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