It has been shown that, in the remote myocardium after infarction (MI), protein kinase C (PKC) inhibition reduces apoptosis both by blocking proapoptotic pathways and by activating antiapoptotic signals including the Akt pathway. However, it was open if vice versa, blockade of antiapoptotic pathways may influence proapoptotic signals. To clarify this, the present study tested the effects of the PI3-kinase blocker Wortmannin on proapoptotic signals and on apoptosis execution in the remote myocardium after infarction. Rats were subjected to MI by LAD ligation in situ. Some were pre-treated with Wortmannin alone or in combination with the PKC inhibitor Chelerythrine. After 24 h, pro- and anti-apoptotic signals (caspase-3, PKC isoforms, p38-MAPK, p42/44-MAPK, Akt, Bad), and marker of apoptosis execution (TUNEL) were quantified in the myocardium remote from the infarction. Wortmannin treatment increased apoptosis in the remote myocardium both at baseline and after MI, together with an activation of the PKC-δ/p38-MAPK-pathway. PKC-ε and p42/44-MAPK were unaffected. Combined treatment with Wortmannin and Chelerythrine fully reversed the pro-apoptotic effects of Wortmannin both at baseline and after MI. The PKC-δ-p38-MAPK-pathway as a strong signal for apoptosis in the non-infarcted myocardium can be influenced by targeting the anti-apoptotic PI3-kinase pathway. This gives evidence of a bi-directional crosstalk of pro- and anti-apoptotic signals after infarction.
A b s t r a c tBackground: Following myocardial infarction (MI), apoptosis occurs early in the remote myocardium and contributes to the processes of myocardial remodelling. Increased nitrosative stress is a well-known and potent inductor of myocardial apoptosis. Excess activation of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) increases its uncoupling potential and results in nitrosative stress via formation of peroxynitrite. However, the pathophysiological role of eNOS signalling in the remote myocardium after MI is as yet undefined. Aim:The impact of eNOS activation on pro-and anti-apoptotic signalling in the remote myocardium and the influence of pretreatment with the eNOS cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) on eNOS activation, nitrosative stress level, and apoptosis induction and execution were studied in a rat MI model in vivo.Results: Twenty-four hours after anterior MI, eNOS activity in animals treated with left anterior descending coronary artery ligation (LIG) significantly increased in the posterior left ventricular (LV) myocardium as did protein nitrosylation when compared to sham treatment. This was paralleled by induction of apoptosis via the extrinsic and intrinsic pathways. Moreover, anti-apoptotic signalling via protein kinase B/Akt and glycogen synthase-kinase 3 beta was suppressed. Notably, pretreatment with the eNOS cofactor BH4 reduced eNOS activation, prevented excess protein nitrosylation, blunted apoptosis induction, facilitated anti-apoptotic signalling, and eventually prevented apoptosis execution. Conclusions:Here we showed that 24 h after experimental MI in rats in vivo, apoptosis was induced in the posterior non-infarcted LV wall. Evidence is presented that pretreatment with the eNOS cofactor BH4 resulted in less nitrosative stress and weakened apoptotic processes, although the stabilisers contained did participate in this phenomenon. Because apoptosis is a crucial component of myocardial remodelling, influencing eNOS signalling might be an interesting pharmacological target for the development of novel anti-remodelling therapies.
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