Department of Cell Biology and Molecular Medicine, Rutgers-New Jersey Medical School, Newark, NJ, 07103, USA.
Department of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an, 710061, China.
Pflugers Arch. 2021 Mar;473(3):407-416. doi: 10.1007/s00424-020-02511-0. Epub 2021 Jan 4.
Hibernation allows animals to enter an energy conserving state to survive severe drops in external temperatures and a shortage of food. It has been observed that the hearts of mammalian hibernators exhibit intrinsic protection against ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury and cardiac arrhythmias in the winter whether they are hibernating or not. However, the molecular and ionic mechanisms for cardioprotection in mammalian hibernators remain elusive. Recent studies in woodchucks (Marmota monax) have suggested that cardiac adaptation occurs at different levels and mediates an intrinsic cardioprotection prior to/in the winter. The molecular/cellular remodeling in the winter (with or without hibernation) includes (1) an upregulation of transcriptional factor, anti-apoptotic factor, nitric oxide synthase, protein kinase C-ε, and phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase; (2) an upregulation of antioxidant enzymes (e.g. superoxide dismutase and catalase); (3) a reduction in the oxidation level of Ca/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII); and (4) alterations in the expression and activity of multiple ion channels/transporters. Therefore, the cardioprotection against I/R injury in the winter is most likely mediated by enhancement in signaling pathways that are shared by preconditioning, reduced cell apoptosis, and increased detoxification of reactive oxygen species (ROS). The resistance to cardiac arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death in the winter is closely associated with an upregulation of the antioxidant catalase and a downregulation of CaMKII activation. This remodeling of the heart is associated with a reduction in the incidence of afterdepolarizations and triggered activities. In this short review article, we will discuss the seasonal changes in gene and protein expression profiles as well as alterations in the function of key proteins that are associated with the occurrence of cardioprotection against myocardial damage from ischemic events and fatal arrhythmias in a mammalian hibernator. Understanding the intrinsic cardiac adaptive mechanisms that confer cardioprotection in hibernators may offer new strategies to protect non-hibernating animals, especially humans, from I/R injury and ischemia-induced fatal cardiac arrhythmias.
冬眠使动物能够进入一种节能状态,以在外部温度骤降和食物短缺时存活下来。人们观察到,哺乳动物冬眠者的心脏在冬季即使不冬眠也表现出对缺血再灌注(I/R)损伤和心律失常的固有保护作用。然而,哺乳动物冬眠者心脏保护的分子和离子机制仍然难以捉摸。最近在土拨鼠(Marmota monax)中的研究表明,心脏适应发生在不同的水平,并在冬季之前/期间介导内在的心脏保护。冬季(有或没有冬眠)的分子/细胞重构包括:(1)转录因子、抗凋亡因子、一氧化氮合酶、蛋白激酶 C-ε 和磷脂酰肌醇-4,5-二磷酸 3-激酶的上调;(2)抗氧化酶(如超氧化物歧化酶和过氧化氢酶)的上调;(3)钙/钙调蛋白依赖性蛋白激酶 II(CaMKII)的氧化水平降低;(4)多种离子通道/转运体的表达和活性改变。因此,冬季对 I/R 损伤的心脏保护很可能是通过增强信号通路来介导的,这些信号通路与预处理、减少细胞凋亡和增加活性氧(ROS)解毒共享。冬季对心律失常和心脏性猝死的抵抗力与抗氧化酶过氧化氢酶的上调和 CaMKII 激活的下调密切相关。心脏的这种重构与后除极和触发活动的发生率降低有关。在这篇简短的综述文章中,我们将讨论与心肌缺血事件和致命性心律失常引起的心肌损伤相关的心脏保护发生相关的基因和蛋白质表达谱的季节性变化,以及关键蛋白质功能的改变。了解赋予冬眠者心脏保护的内在心脏适应机制,可能为保护非冬眠动物,特别是人类免受 I/R 损伤和缺血性致命心律失常提供新策略。