Abstract

Group IVA cytosolic phospholipase A(2) (cPLA(2)α), which preferentially cleaves arachidonic acid from phospholipids, plays a role in apoptosis and tissue injury. Downstream signals in response to tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α, a mediator of myocardial ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury, involve cPLA(2)α activation. This study examined the potential role of cPLA(2)α and its mechanistic link with TNF-α in myocardial I/R injury using cPLA(2)α knockout (cPLA(2)α(-/-)) mice. Myocardial I/R was created with 10-wk-old male mice by 1 h ligation of the left anterior descending coronary artery, followed by 24 h of reperfusion. As a result, compared with wild-type (cPLA(2)α(+/+)) mice, cPLA(2)α(-/-) mice had a 47% decrease in myocardial infarct size, preservation of echocardiographic left ventricle (LV) function (%fractional shortening: 14 vs. 21%, respectively), and lower content of leukotriene B(4) and thromboxane B(2) (62 and 50% lower, respectively) in the ischemic myocardium after I/R. Treatment with the TNF-α inhibitor (soluble TNF receptor II/IgG1 Fc fusion protein, sTNFR:Fc) decreased myocardial I/R injury and LV dysfunction in cPLA(2)α(+/+) mice but not cPLA(2)α(-/-) mice. sTNFR:Fc also suppressed cPLA(2)α phosphorylation in the ischemic myocardium after I/R of cPLA(2)α(+/+) mice. Similarly, sTNFR:Fc exerted protective effects against hypoxia-reoxygenation (H/R)-induced injury in the cultured cardiomyocytes from cPLA(2)α(+/+) mice but not cPLA(2)α(-/-) cardiomyocytes. H/R and TNF-α induced cPLA(2)α phosphorylation in cPLA(2)α(+/+) cardiomyocytes, which was reversible by sTNFR:Fc. In cPLA(2)α(-/-) cardiomyocytes, TNF-α induced apoptosis and release of arachidonic acid to a lesser extent than in cPLA(2)α(+/+) cardiomyocytes. In conclusion, disruption of cPLA(2)α attenuates myocardial I/R injury partly through inhibition of TNF-α-mediated pathways.

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