Abstract

Background Recently, we have shown that the selective opening of mitochondrial ATP-sensitive potassium channels with diazoxide significantly decreases myocardial injury. The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of diazoxide on apoptosis and the mechanisms modulating apoptosis and myocardial injury in a blood-perfused model of acute myocardial infarction. Methods Pigs (32 to 42 kg) undergoing total cardiopulmonary bypass underwent left anterior descending coronary artery occlusion for 30 minutes. The aorta was cross-clamped and magnesium-supplemented potassium cold-blood cardioplegia (DSA; n = 6) or magnesium-supplemented potassium cardioplegia containing 50 μmol/L diazoxide (DZX; n = 6) was administered, followed by 30 minutes of global ischemia and 120 minutes of reperfusion. Left ventricular tissue samples from DSA and DZX hearts were obtained after reperfusion. Apoptosis was determined by TUNEL, caspase-3 and PARP cleavage, and caspase-3 activity. Bax and bcl-2 levels were determined and tissue morphology was examined by light and transmission electron microscopy. Results Apoptosis, as estimated by TUNEL-positive nuclei/3,000 myocardial cells, was 120.3 ± 48.8 in DSA hearts and was significantly decreased to 21.4 ± 5.3 in DZX hearts ( p < 0.05 vs control). Caspase-3 and poly-ADP-ribose polymerase cleavage and pro-apoptotic bax protein levels were significantly decreased with diazoxide ( p < 0.05 vs DSA). Light and transmission electron microscopy indicated severe disruption of tissue with capillary dilatation, mitochondrial cristae damage, and evidence of increased presence of mitochondrial granules in DSA as compared with DZX hearts. Conclusions The addition of diazoxide (50 μmol/L) to cardioplegia significantly decreases regional myocardial apoptosis and mitochondrial damage, and provides an additional modality for achieving myocardial protection.

Highlights

  • We have shown that the selective opening of mitochondrial ATPsensitive potassium channels with diazoxide significantly decreases myocardial injury

  • Cardiac surgery in the management of these high-risk patients can provide an integral component in the early-phase management of acute myocardial infarction, but effective cardioplegia formulations that would allow for enhanced tissue preservation in this high-risk group have yet to be determined

  • We investigate the effects of the specific mitoKATP channel opener, diazoxide, when added to DSA cardioplegia on the modulation of apoptosis after ischemia/reperfusion, and the mechanisms modulating apoptosis in an in situ blood-perfused model of acute myocardial infarction

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Summary

Introduction

We have shown that the selective opening of mitochondrial ATPsensitive potassium channels with diazoxide significantly decreases myocardial injury. We investigate the effects of the specific mitoKATP channel opener, diazoxide, when added to DSA cardioplegia on the modulation of apoptosis after ischemia/reperfusion, and the mechanisms modulating apoptosis in an in situ blood-perfused model of acute myocardial infarction.

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