Abstract
Ischemic preconditioning (IP) triggers cardioprotection via a signaling pathway that converges on mitochondria. The effects of the inhibition of carnitine palmitoyltransferase I (CPT-I), a key enzyme for transport of long chain fatty acids (LCFA) into the mitochondria, on ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury are unknown. Here we investigated, in isolated perfused rat hearts, whether sub-chronic CPT-I inhibition (5 days i.p. injection of 25 mg/kg/day of Etomoxir) affects I/R-induced damages and whether cardioprotection by IP can be induced after this inhibition. Effects of global ischemia (30 min) and reperfusion (120 min) were examined in hearts harvested from Control (untreated), Vehicle- or Etomoxir-treated animals. In subsets of hearts from the three treated groups, IP was induced by three cycles of 3 min ischemia followed by 10 min reperfusion prior to I/R. The extent of I/R injury under each condition was assessed by changes in infarct size as well as in myocardial contractility. Postischemic contractility, as indexed by developed pressure and d P/d t max, was similarly affected by I/R, and was similarly improved with IP in Control, Vehicle or Etomoxir treated animals. Infarct size was also similar in the three subsets without IP, and was significantly reduced by IP regardless of CPT-I inhibition. We conclude that CPT-I inhibition does not affect I/R damages. Our data also show that IP affords myocardial protection in CPT-I inhibited hearts to a degree similar to untreated animals, suggesting that a long-term treatment with the metabolic anti-ischemic agent Etomoxir does not impede the possibility to afford cardioprotection by ischemic preconditioning.
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