Abstract

We have previously demonstrated that Akt was required for repetitive ischemia (RI)-induced coronary collateral growth (CCG) in healthy rats but was not activated by RI in the metabolic syndrome (JCR:LA-cp rats) where CCG was impaired. Here we hypothesized that failure of angiotensin type I receptor (AT₁R) blockers to restore Akt activation is a key determinant of their inability to completely restore CCG in the metabolic syndrome. Therefore, we investigated whether adenovirus-mediated delivery of constitutively active Akt (MyrAkt-Adv) in conjunction with AT₁R blockade (candesartan) was able to restore RI-induced CCG in JCR:LA-cp rats. Successful myocardial MyrAkt-Adv delivery was confirmed by a >80% transduction efficiency and an approximately fourfold increase in Akt expression and activation. CCG was assessed by myocardial blood flow measurements in the normal and collateral-dependent zones. MyrAkt-Adv alone significantly increased RI-induced CCG in JCR:LA-cp rats (~30%), but it completely restored CCG in conjunction with administration of candesartan. In contrast, dominant negative Akt (DN-Akt-Adv) reversed the beneficial effect of candesartan on CCG in JCR:LA-cp rats. We conclude that optimal restoration of coronary collateral growth in JCR:LA-cp rats requires a combination of AT₁R blockade with constitutive Akt activation. These findings may carry implications for metabolic syndrome patients in need of coronary revascularization.

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