Diabetes exacerbates ischemic heart disease morbidity and mortality via incompletely understood mechanisms. Although adiponectin (APN) reduces myocardial ischemia/reperfusion (MI/R) injury in nondiabetic animals, whether APN's cardioprotective actions are altered in diabetes, a pathologic condition with endogenously reduced APN, has never been investigated. High-fat diet (HD)-induced diabetic mice and normal diet (ND) controls were subjected to MI via coronary artery ligation, and given vehicle or APN globular domain (gAPN, 2 mg/g) 10 min before reperfusion. Compared to ND mice (where gAPN exerted pronounced cardioprotection), HD mice manifested greater MI/R injury, and a tripled gAPN dose was requisite to achieve cardioprotective extent seen in ND mice (i.e., infarct size, apoptosis, and cardiac function). APN reduces MI/R injury via AMPactivated protein kinase (AMPK)-dependent metabolic regulation and AMPK-independent antioxidative/ antinitrative pathways. Compared to ND, HD mice manifested significantly blunted gAPN-induced AMPK activation, basally and after MI/R ( p < 0.05). Although both low-and high-dose gAPN equally attenuated MI/ R-induced oxidative stress (i.e., NADPH oxidase expression and superoxide production) and nitrative stress (i.e., inducible nitric oxide synthase expression, nitric oxide production, and peroxynitrite formation) in ND mice, only high-dose gAPN efficaciously did so in HD mice. We demonstrate for the first time that HD-induced diabetes diminished both AMPK-dependent and AMPK-independent APN cardioprotection, suggesting an unreported diabetic heart APN resistance. Antioxid. Redox Signal. 15, 1779-1788.
Acellular biological tissues, including bovine pericardia (BP), have been proposed as natural biomaterials for tissue engineering. However, small pore size, low porosity and lack of extra cellular matrix (ECM) after native cell extraction directly restrict the seed cell adhesion, migration and proliferation and which is a vital problem for ABP's application in the tissue engineered heart valve (TEHV). In the present study, we treated acellular BP with acetic acid, which increased the scaffold pore size and porosity and conjugated RGD polypeptides to ABP scaffolds. After 10 days of culture in vitro, the human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) attached the best and proliferated the fastest on RGD-modified acellular scaffolds, and the cell has grown deep into the scaffold. In contrast, a low density of cells attached to the unmodified scaffolds, with few infiltrating into the acellular tissues. These findings support the potential use of modified acellular BP as a scaffold for tissue engineered heart valves.
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