Salie Ruduwaan, Huisamen Barbara, Lochner Amanda
Cardiovasc Diabetol. 2014 Jul 18;13:109. doi: 10.1186/s12933-014-0109-8.
Although obesity is still considered a risk factor in the development of cardiovascular disorders, recent studies suggested that it may also be associated with reduced morbidity and mortality, the so-called "obesity paradox". Experimental data on the impact of diabetes, obesity and insulin resistance on myocardial ischaemia/reperfusion injury are controversial. Similar conflicting data have been reported regarding the effects of ischaemic preconditioning on ischaemia/reperfusion injury in hearts from such animals. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the susceptibility to myocardial ischaemia/reperfusion damage in two models of diet-induced obesity as well as the effect of ischaemic and pharmacological preconditioning on such hearts.
Three groups of rats were fed with: (i) normal rat chow (controls) (ii) a sucrose-supplemented diet (DIO) (iii) a high fat diet (HFD). After 16 weeks, rats were sacrificed and isolated hearts perfused in the working mode and subjected to 35 min regional ischaemia/60 min reperfusion. Endpoints were infarct size and functional recovery. Infarct size was determined, using tetrazolium staining. Activation of PKB/Akt and ERKp44/p42 (RISK pathway) during early reperfusion was determined using Western blot. Statistical evaluation was done using ANOVA and the Bonferroni correction.
Infarct sizes of non-preconditioned hearts from the two obese groups were significantly smaller than those of the age-matched controls. Ischaemic as well as pharmacological (beta-adrenergic) preconditioning with a beta2-adrenergic receptor agonist, formoterol, caused a significant reduction in infarct size of the controls, but were without effect on infarct size of hearts from the obese groups. However, ischaemic as well as beta-preconditioning caused an improvement in functional performance during reperfusion in all three groups. A clear-cut correlation between the reduction in infarct size and activation of ERKp44/p42 and PKB/Akt was not observed: The reduction in infarct size observed in the non-preconditioned hearts from the obese groups was not associated with activation of the RISK pathway. However, beta-adrenergic preconditioning caused a significant activation of ERKp44/p42, but not PKB/Akt, in all three groups.
Relatively long-term administration of the two obesity-inducing diets resulted in cardioprotection against ischaemia/reperfusion damage. Further protection by preconditioning was, however, without effect on infarct size, while an improvement in functional recovery was observed.
尽管肥胖仍被认为是心血管疾病发生的一个危险因素,但最近的研究表明,它也可能与发病率和死亡率的降低有关,即所谓的“肥胖悖论”。关于糖尿病、肥胖和胰岛素抵抗对心肌缺血/再灌注损伤影响的实验数据存在争议。关于缺血预处理对这类动物心脏缺血/再灌注损伤的影响,也有类似的相互矛盾的数据报道。本研究的目的是评估两种饮食诱导肥胖模型中心肌对缺血/再灌注损伤的易感性,以及缺血预处理和药物预处理对这类心脏的影响。
将三组大鼠分别喂食:(i)正常大鼠饲料(对照组)(ii)补充蔗糖的饮食(饮食诱导肥胖组)(iii)高脂肪饮食(高脂肪饮食组)。16周后,处死大鼠,分离心脏并在工作模式下灌注,然后进行35分钟的局部缺血/60分钟的再灌注。观察指标为梗死面积和功能恢复情况。梗死面积采用四氮唑染色法测定。早期再灌注期间PKB/Akt和ERKp44/p42(RISK通路)的激活情况采用蛋白质免疫印迹法测定。采用方差分析和Bonferroni校正进行统计学评估。
两个肥胖组未预处理心脏的梗死面积显著小于年龄匹配的对照组。缺血预处理以及用β2肾上腺素能受体激动剂福莫特罗进行药物(β肾上腺素能)预处理,可使对照组的梗死面积显著减小,但对肥胖组心脏的梗死面积无影响。然而,缺血预处理和β预处理均使三组在再灌注期间的功能表现得到改善。未观察到梗死面积的减小与ERKp44/p42和PKB/Akt的激活之间存在明确的相关性:肥胖组未预处理心脏中观察到的梗死面积减小与RISK通路的激活无关。然而,β肾上腺素能预处理在所有三组中均导致ERKp44/p42的显著激活,但未导致PKB/Akt的激活。
相对长期给予两种致肥胖饮食可对缺血/再灌注损伤产生心脏保护作用。然而,预处理的进一步保护作用对梗死面积无影响,而观察到功能恢复有所改善。