Abstract

Experimental studies have linked the adipocytokines with acute cardioprotection. Whether the adipocytokine, resistin, confers protection is, however, debatable. In the current study, the actions of resistin, administered at reperfusion, were investigated in in vivo and in vitro rodent and in vitro human models of myocardial ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury. Resistin did not reduce infarct size in Langendorff-perfused rat hearts or murine hearts perfused in vivo. Resistin also did not protect human atrial muscle subjected to hypoxia-reoxygenation. Although cyclosporin A delayed mitochondrial permeability transition pore (MPTP) opening in murine cardiomyocytes, resistin was ineffective. Western blot analysis revealed that resistin treatment was associated with enhanced phosphorylation of Akt, at both the serine-473 (+ 51.9%, P = .01) and threonine-308 (+107%, P < .01) phosphorylation sites, although not to the extent seen with ischemic preconditioning (+132.5%, P = .002 and +389.1%, P < .01, respectively). We conclude that resistin administered at reperfusion at concentrations/doses equivalent to normal (upper end) and pathological serum levels does not protect against I/R injury or inhibit MPTP opening.

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