Abstract

Activation of calpain1 (CPN1) contributes to mitochondrial dysfunction during cardiac ischemia (ISC) – reperfusion (REP). Blockade of electron transport using amobarbital (AMO) protects mitochondria during ISC-REP, indicating that the electron transport chain (ETC) is a key source of mitochondrial injury. We asked if AMO treatment can decrease CPN1 activation as a potential mechanism of mitochondrial protection during ISC-REP. Buffer-perfused adult rat hearts underwent 25 min global ISC and 30 min REP. AMO (2.5 mM) or vehicle was administered for 1 min before ISC to block electron flow in the ETC. Hearts in the time control group were untreated and buffer perfused without ISC. Hearts were collected at the end of perfusion and used for mitochondrial isolation. ISC-REP increased both the cleavage of spectrin (indicating cytosolic CPN1 activation) in cytosol and the truncation of AIF (apoptosis inducing factor, indicating mitochondrial CPN1 activation) in subsarcolemmal mitochondria compared to time control. Thus, ISC-REP activated both cytosolic and mitochondrial CPN1. AMO treatment prevented the cleavage of spectrin and AIF during ISC-REP, suggesting that the transient blockade of electron transport during ISC decreases CPN1 activation. AMO treatment decreased the activation of PARP [poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase] downstream of AIF that triggers caspase-independent apoptosis. AMO treatment also decreased the release of cytochrome c from mitochondria during ISC-REP that prevented caspase 3 activation. These results support that the damaged ETC activates CPN1 in cytosol and mitochondria during ISC-REP, likely via calcium overload and oxidative stress. Thus, AMO treatment to mitigate mitochondrial-driven cardiac injury can decrease both caspase-dependent and caspase-independent programmed cell death during ISC-REP.

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