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1Group in Matrix Dynamics, Faculty of Dentistry, 2Heart and Stroke/Richard Lewar Centre of Excellence, and 3Canadian Institutes of Health Research, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario M5G 1G6, Canada
Submitted 4 February 2004 ; accepted in final form 18 May 2004
Reperfusion-induced oxidative injury to the myocardium promotes activation and proliferation of cardiac fibroblasts and repair by scar formation. Osteopontin (OPN) is a proinflammatory cytokine that is upregulated after reperfusion. To determine whether OPN enhances fibroblast survival after exposure to oxidants, cardiac fibroblasts from wild-type (WT) or OPN-null (OPN/) mice were treated in vitro with H2O2 to model reperfusion injury. Within 1 h, membrane permeability to propidium iodide (PI) was increased from 5 to 60% in OPN/ cells but was increased to only 20% in WT cells. In contrast, after 18 h of treatment with H2O2, the percent of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling (TUNEL)-stained cells was more than twofold higher in WT than OPN/ cells. Electron microscopy of WT cells treated with H2O2 showed chromatin condensation, nuclear fragmentation, and cytoplasmic and nuclear shrinkage, which are consistent with apoptosis. In contrast, H2O2-treated OPN/ cardiac fibroblasts exhibited cell and nuclear swelling and membrane disruption that are indicative of cell necrosis. Treatment of OPN/ and WT cells with a cell-permeable caspase-3 inhibitor reduced the percentage of TUNEL staining by more than fourfold in WT cells but decreased staining in OPN/ cells by
30%. Although the percentage of PI-permeable WT cells was reduced threefold, the percent of PI-permeable OPN/ cells was not altered. Restoration of OPN expression in OPN/ fibroblasts reduced the percentage of PI-permeable cells but not TUNEL staining after H2O2 treatment. Thus H2O2-induced cell death in OPN-deficient cardiac fibroblasts is mediated by a caspase-3-independent, necrotic pathway. We suggest that the increased expression of OPN in the myocardium after reperfusion may promote fibrosis by protecting cardiac fibroblasts from cell death.
necrosis; reperfusion; myocardium; nuclear fragmentation
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