Abstract

To address whether adult rat ventricular cardiomyocytes (ARVCs) exposed to oxidant stress die via apoptosis (secondarily by necrosis) or primarily by necrosis, we exposed ARVCs to hydrogen peroxide (H2O2; 0.1-100 microM) for up to 24 h and then compared them with isoproterenol-induced apoptotic and Triton X-induced necrotic controls. Cellular shrinkage preceded plasma membrane disruption, reflected by trypan blue uptake in ARVCs exposed to lower concentrations of H2O2 (<1 microM; an apoptotic pattern), but the order was reversed in cells exposed to higher concentrations of H2O2 (>1 microM; a necrotic pattern). DNA fragmentation, caspase-3 activation, mitochondrial membrane potential preservation, and ATP preservation were all apparent in ARVCs treated with low H2O2 (0.5 microM), but not in those treated with high H2O2 (10 microM). In addition, electron microscopy revealed unique morphology in H2O2-treated ARVCs; i.e., the nuclei had a homogeneous ground glass-like appearance that was never accompanied by chromatin condensation. Apparently, high concentrations of H2O2 caused primary necrosis in ARVCs, whereas low concentrations induced biochemically comparable apoptosis, although the latter did not satisfy the morphological criteria of apoptosis. These findings caution against the use of oxidant stress, H2O2 in particular, as an inducer of apoptosis in ARVCs.

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