Abstract

Abstract In a previous study from our laboratory, we demonstrated that chronic and selective cardiac sympathetic afferent (spinal) denervation at the time of myocardial infarction (MI) using epicardial application of resiniferatoxin (RTX), a neuronal toxin capable of inducing rapid degeneration of transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 (TRPV1)-expressing afferent neurons and fibers, markedly reduced the cardiac remodeling process 9–11 weeks post-MI in rats. This included reduced cardiac hypertrophy, fibrosis and apoptosis. Here, we further investigated the effect of epicardial application of RTX at the time of MI on cardiac extracellular matrix (ECM) and remodeling post-MI. Echocardiographic and morphologic data demonstrated that, compared to MI+vehicle, MI+RTX exhibited a significantly slower LV chamber dilation (6-week echocardiographic data: left ventricular end-diastolic diameter, 10.7±0.2 vs. 9.6±0.3 mm; left ventricular end-systolic diameter: 8.8±0.2 vs. 7.8±0.3 mm; MI+vehicle vs. MI+RTX, n=18, p<0.05; mean±SE). Scanning electron microscopy showed that RTX reduced collagen deposition in the peri-infarct area in post-MI rats. Western blot and zymography were used to further evaluate the effect of RTX application on matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) expression and activity, which is responsible for degrading ECM and contributing to cardiac dilation post MI. Our data suggest time-dependent increases in MMP expression in infarcted hearts post MI. RTX application largely prevented the increase in MMP9 but not MMP2, 4 weeks post-MI. RTX prevented both increased MMP2 and MMP9 activities in the peri-infarct myocardium at 8–10 weeks post-MI. We further investigated the effect of RTX application on MI-induced cardiac inflammation, which has been reported as an upstream mechanism triggering MMP activation post-MI. The data show that RTX largely abolished MI-induced plasma extravasation and reduced macrophage infiltration and cardiac cytokine content in the peri-infarct or remote myocardium of post-MI rats. These data suggest that cardiac sympathetic afferent denervation at the time of MI exerts a local anti-inflammatory effect and reduces ECM remodeling by preventing excessive MMP activation in post-MI rats. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding sources: Public grant(s) – National budget only. Main funding source(s): National Institutes of Health Grant HL126796

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