Wainwright Cherry L, McCabe Christopher, Kane Kathleen A
School of Pharmacy, The Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen, UK.
Curr Vasc Pharmacol. 2005 Oct;3(4):333-41. doi: 10.2174/157016105774329417.
Soon after its identification as a powerful vasoconstrictor peptide, endothelin (ET-1) was implicated as a detrimental agent involved in determining the outcome of myocardial ischaemia and reperfusion. Early experimental studies demonstrated that ET(A) selective and mixed ET(A)/ET(B) receptor antagonists can reduce infarct size and prevent ischaemia-induced ventricular arrhythmias in models of ischaemia/reperfusion, implying that ET-1 acts through the ET(A) receptor to contribute to injury and arrhythmogenesis. However, as our understanding of the physiology of ET-1 has expanded, the role of ET-1 in the ischaemic heart appears ever more complex. Recent evidence suggests that ET-1 exerts actions on the heart that are not only detrimental (vasoconstriction, inhibition of NO production, activation of inflammatory cells), but which may also contribute to tissue repair, such as inhibition of cardiomyocyte apoptosis. In addition, ET-1-induced mast cell degranulation has been linked to a homeostatic mechanism that controls endogenous ET-1 levels, which may have important implications for the ischaemic heart. Furthermore the mechanism by which ET-1 promotes arrhythmogenesis remains controversial. Some studies imply a direct electrophysiological effect of ET-1, via ET(A) receptors, to increase monophasic action potential duration (MAPD) and induce early after-depolarisations (EADs), while other studies support the view that coronary constriction resulting in ischaemia is the basis for the generation of arrhythmias. Moreover, ET-1 can induce cardioprotection (precondition) against infarct size and ventricular arrhythmias, through as yet incompletely understood mechanisms. To enable us to identify the most appropriate means of targeting this system in a therapeutically meaningful way we need to continue to explore the physiology of ET-1, both in the normal and the ischaemic heart.
内皮素(ET-1)被鉴定为一种强大的血管收缩肽后不久,就被认为是一种有害因子,参与决定心肌缺血和再灌注的结果。早期实验研究表明,ET(A)选择性拮抗剂和ET(A)/ET(B)混合型受体拮抗剂可缩小梗死面积,并预防缺血/再灌注模型中缺血诱导的室性心律失常,这意味着ET-1通过ET(A)受体发挥作用,导致损伤和心律失常的发生。然而,随着我们对ET-1生理学的理解不断扩展,ET-1在缺血性心脏中的作用似乎变得更加复杂。最近的证据表明,ET-1对心脏的作用不仅有害(血管收缩、抑制一氧化氮生成、激活炎症细胞),而且可能也有助于组织修复,如抑制心肌细胞凋亡。此外,ET-1诱导的肥大细胞脱颗粒与一种控制内源性ET-1水平的稳态机制有关,这可能对缺血性心脏具有重要意义。此外,ET-1促进心律失常发生的机制仍存在争议。一些研究表明,ET-1通过ET(A)受体产生直接电生理效应,增加单相动作电位时程(MAPD)并诱导早期后除极(EADs),而其他研究则支持这样的观点,即冠状动脉收缩导致缺血是心律失常发生的基础。此外,ET-1可通过尚未完全了解的机制诱导对梗死面积和室性心律失常的心脏保护作用(预处理)。为了能够以治疗上有意义的方式确定针对该系统的最合适方法,我们需要继续探索ET-1在正常心脏和缺血性心脏中的生理学。