Abstract

Intermittent hypoxia and various pharmacological compounds protect the heart from ischemia reperfusion injury in experimental approaches, but the translation into clinical trials has largely failed. One reason may lie in species differences and the lack of suitable human in vitro models to test for ischemia/reperfusion. We aimed to develop a novel hypoxia-reoxygenation model based on three-dimensional, spontaneously beating and work performing engineered heart tissue (EHT) from rat and human cardiomyocytes. Contractile force, the most important cardiac performance parameter, served as an integrated outcome measure. EHTs from neonatal rat cardiomyocytes were subjected to 90 min of hypoxia which led to cardiomyocyte apoptosis as revealed by caspase 3-staining, increased troponin I release (time control vs. 24 h after hypoxia: cTnI 2.7 vs. 6.3 ng/mL, ** p = 0.002) and decreased contractile force (64 ± 6% of baseline) in the long-term follow-up. The detrimental effects were attenuated by preceding the long-term hypoxia with three cycles of 10 min hypoxia (i.e., hypoxic preconditioning). Similarly, [d-Ala2, d-Leu5]-enkephalin (DADLE) reduced the effect of hypoxia on force (recovery to 78 ± 5% of baseline with DADLE preconditioning vs. 57 ± 5% without, p = 0.012), apoptosis and cardiomyocyte stress. Human EHTs presented a comparable hypoxia-induced reduction in force (55 ± 5% of baseline), but DADLE failed to precondition them, likely due to the absence of δ-opioid receptors. In summary, this hypoxia-reoxygenation in vitro model displays cellular damage and the decline of contractile function after hypoxia allows the investigation of preconditioning strategies and will therefore help us to understand the discrepancy between successful conditioning in vitro experiments and its failure in clinical trials.

Highlights

  • Prolonged ischemia of the heart leads to myocardial infarction

  • While IPost can be performed in the catheter lab, though posing a risk for coronary microembolization [5], ischemic conditioning has been reported to be effective by brief occlusions of other coronary arteries or even remote organs [6]

  • In contrast to rat engineered heart tissue (EHT) containing all types of heart cells, human EHTs were generated only of cardiomyocytes derived from human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) by reprogramming human fibroblasts [14]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Prolonged ischemia of the heart leads to myocardial infarction. As the duration of ischemic interval correlates with infarct size, the treatment goal is timely reperfusion with percutaneous coronary intervention. Additional brief episodes of ischemia before a longer ischemia interval reduce the ultimate infarct size [1], a phenomenon called ischemic preconditioning (IPC). IPC can be applied either shortly (≤2 h) or longer (24–48 h, delayed IPC) before the deleterious ischemia [2], and ischemic conditioning is effective at the early reperfusion stage (ischemic postconditioning, IPost) [3]. This proved that the ischemic phase and the reperfusion phase contributes to the myocardial damage [4]. The sufficiently powered prospective randomized controlled trial CONDI-2/ERIC-PPCI recently failed to demonstrate any benefit of remote ischemic conditioning [7]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call