Abstract

Despite major advances in early revascularization techniques, cardiovascular diseases are still the leading cause of death worldwide, and myocardial infarctions contribute heavily to this. Over the past decades, it has become apparent that reperfusion of blood to a previously ischemic area of the heart causes damage in and of itself, and that this ischemia reperfusion induced injury can be reduced by up to 50% by mechanical manipulation of the blood flow to the heart. The recent discovery of remote ischemic preconditioning (RIPC) provides a non-invasive approach of inducing this cardioprotection at a distance. Finding its endogenous mediators and their operative mode is an important step toward increasing the ischemic tolerance. The release of humoral factor(s) upon RIPC was recently demonstrated and several candidate proteins were published as possible mediators of the cardioprotection. Before clinical applicability, these potential biomarkers and their efficiency must be validated, a task made challenging by the large heterogeneity in reported data and results. Here, in an attempt to reproduce and provide more experimental data on these mediators, we conducted an unbiased in-depth analysis of the human plasma proteome before and after RIPC. From the 68 protein markers reported in the literature, only 28 could be mapped to manually reviewed (Swiss-Prot) protein sequences. 23 of them were monitored in our untargeted experiment. However, their significant regulation could not be reproducibly estimated. In fact, among the 394 plasma proteins we accurately quantified, no significant regulation could be confidently and reproducibly assessed. This indicates that it is difficult to both monitor and reproduce published data from experiments exploring for RIPC induced plasma proteomic regulations, and suggests that further work should be directed towards small humoral factors. To simplify this task, we made our proteomic dataset available via ProteomeXchange, where scientists can mine for novel potential targets.

Highlights

  • Remote ischemic preconditioning (RIPC) is an emerging treatment for reducing ischemia reperfusion injury (IRI) in the heart

  • This was demonstrated by a significant decrease in cardiac troponin I release, significantly improving prognosis with a reduction in mortality in the group receiving RIPC compared to controls [6]

  • Compelling preclinical evidence suggests communication via one or more unknown humoral factors: First, it seems that a period of reperfusion after the RIPC stimulus is required for protection, suggesting that wash-out of blood borne factors and transport to the site of protection is involved [8,9,10]

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Summary

Introduction

Remote ischemic preconditioning (RIPC) is an emerging treatment for reducing ischemia reperfusion injury (IRI) in the heart. It was reported that 3 cycles of 5 min upper arm ischemia substantially reduced myocardial injury after coronary artery bypass graft in large pools of patients. This was demonstrated by a significant decrease in cardiac troponin I (cTnI) release, significantly improving prognosis with a reduction in mortality in the group receiving RIPC compared to controls [6]. It was demonstrated that effluent from preconditioned hearts could transfer the protection to naıve recipient hearts and that the protection is mediated via small, unknown hydrophobic factors of protein nature between 3.5 and 15–30 kDa [11,12,13,14,15,16]. The fact that this humoral factor is effective at a remote location after dilution in blood or perfusion fluid, hints at a large concentration change which should be detectable by modern proteomic techniques

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