Abstract

Animals exposed for a few hours to low oxygen content (8%) develop resistance against further ischemic myocardial damage. The molecular mechanism(s) behind this phenomenon, known as hypoxic preconditioning (HOPC), is still incompletely understood. Stanniocalcin-1 (STC-1) is an evolutionarily conserved glycoprotein originally discovered in fish, in which it regulates calcium/phosphate homeostasis and protects against toxic hypercalcemia. Our group originally reported expression of mammalian STC-1 in brain neurons and showed that STC-1 is a prosurvival factor that guards neurons against hypercalcemic and hypoxic damage. This study investigates the involvement of STC-1 in HOPC-induced cardioprotection. Wild-type mice and IL-6-deficient (Il-6(-/-)) mice were kept in hypoxic conditions (8% O(2)) for 6 h. Myocardial Stc-1 mRNA expression was quantified during hypoxia and after recovery. HOPC triggered a biphasic upregulation of Stc-1 expression in hearts of wild-type mice but not in those of Il-6(-/-) mice. Treatment of cardiomyocyte cells in culture with hypoxia or IL-6 elicited an Stc-1 response, and ectopically expressed STC-1 in HL-1 cells localized to the mitochondria. Our findings indicate that IL-6-induced expression of STC-1 is one molecular mechanism behind the ischemic tolerance generated by HOPC in the heart.

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