Abstract

Carbon monoxide (CO) is an endogenous gaseous transmitter that exerts multi-protection in ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury, but few experimental studies regarding CO on myocardial I/R-induced apoptosis, as well as its underlying mechanism have been conducted. The present study was designed to investigate whether CO released from CO-releasing molecule-2 (CORM-2) is capable of ameliorating myocardial I/R-induced apoptosis via a mitochondrial apoptotic pathway. Primary cultures of neonatal rat cardiomyocytes were randomly distributed into four groups: Control, I/R (cultured cardiomyocytes were subjected to 2 h simulated ischemia followed by 4 h reperfusion), CORM-2 and inactive CORM-2 (iCORM-2) groups (20 µM CORM-2 and 20 µM iCORM-2 were administered at the beginning of reperfusion following ischemia, respectively). Flow cytometric analysis showed that CORM-2 treatment significantly decreased apoptosis of cardiomyocytes triggered by simulated I/R. CORM-2 partially recovered mitochondrial respiration and ultrastructure alteration, and lowered caspase-3 expression and the release of cytochrome c. Furthermore, CORM-2 partly reduced BAK/BAX expression in mitochondria, as well as the BAX level in the cytoplasm. Cardioprotection is lost when CORM-2 is replaced by iCORM-2. CORM-2 treatment, at the time of reperfusion, was concluded to attenuate myocardial I/R-induced apoptosis. The protection mechanisms may be targeted to the mitochondria and involved in the inhibition of the BAK/BAX‑mediated intrinsic pathway.

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