Abstract

Ischemic postconditioning (IPoC) modulates the reperfusion maneuver to mitigate ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury. This study aims to investigate the effects and protective mechanism of IPoC on intestinal I/R injury. Intestinal I/R was induced by occluding the superior mesenteric artery for 30 min followed by reperfusion for 60 min on male Wistar rats. IPoC was elicited by three cycles of 30-sec reperfusion and reocclusion of superior mesenteric artery at the initiation of reperfusion. Carboxyatractyloside (CATR), a mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP) opener, and N-methyl-4-isoleucine cyclosporine (NIM811), an mPTP inhibitor, were administered separately in selected groups. The serum and intestinal sections were collected for analysis. IPoC and the administration of NIM811 significantly diminished the expression of intestinal-type fatty acid-binding protein and lactate dehydrogenase (3427±236.8 U/L for I/R, 1190.5±36.7 U/L for IPoC, 1399.3±295.6 U/L for I/R+NIM811, and 2002±370.9 IU/L for IPoC+CATR) in portal blood, the release of cytosolic cytochrome c, and the cleaved caspase 9 expression in intestinal mucosa after intestinal I/R injury (P<0.05). Histopathologically, IPoC and NIM811 mitigated mucosal damage after I/R as well (Chiu's score, 3.8±0.4 for I/R, 0.2±0.2 for IPoC, 0.4±0.2 for I/R+NIM811, and 4.2±0.2 for IPoC+CATR; apoptotic index, 59.5%±4.6% for I/R, 15.7%±15.7% for I/R+IPoC, 3.5%±3.5% for I/R+NIM811, and 67.1%±9.3% in IPoC+CATR). CATR negated the protection conferred by IPoC. IPoC and NIM811 attenuate intestinal I/R injury. The addition of CATR negated the effects of IPoC, indicating that the protective mechanism of IPoC was associated with the modulation of mPTP opening.

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