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ROLE OF MATRIX METALLOPROTEINASE-2 IN THE CARDIOPROTECTIVE EFFECT OF ISCHEMIC POSTCONDITIONING. Experimental physiology [Exp Physiol] Journal article

 
TitleROLE OF MATRIX METALLOPROTEINASE-2 IN THE CARDIOPROTECTIVE EFFECT OF ISCHEMIC POSTCONDITIONING.
Author(s)Donato M, D Annunzio V, Buchholz B, Miksztowicz V, Lorenzo Carrión C, Valdez LB, Zaobornyj T, Schreier L, Wikinski R, Boveris A, Berg G, Gelpi RJ 
Institution1 Institute of Cardiovascular Physiopathology and Department of Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, UBA;
SourceExp Physiol 2009 Oct 30.
AbstractThe activation of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) contributes to myocardial injury at the onset of reperfusion; however, their role in ischemic postconditioning is unknown.
Aim: to examine the effects of ischemic postconditioning on MMP activity in isolated rabbit hearts.
Methods: Isolated rabbit hearts were subjected to 30 min of global ischemia followed by 180 min of reperfusion (I/R group; n=8). In Postcon group (n=8), a postconditioning protocol was performed (two cycles of 30 sec reperfusion/ischemia). In other experiments we added doxycycline an MMP inhibitor, at 25 (n=7) and 50 mumol/L (n=8), respectively during the first 2 min of reperfusion. Coronary effluent and left ventricular tissue were taken during pre-ischemic conditions and at different times of the reperfusion period to measure MMP-2 activity and cardiac protein nitrotyrosinylation. We evaluated ventricular function and infarct size.
Results: In the I/R group, infarct size was 32.1+/-5.2 %; Postcon reduced infarct size to 9.5+/-3.8 % (p<0.05) and inhibited MMP-2 activity during reperfusion. The administration of doxycycline at 50 mumol/L inhibited MMP-2 activity, cardiac protein nitrotyrosinylation and reduced infarct size to 9.7+/-2.8 % (p<0.05). A lower dose of doxycycline (25 mumol/L) failed to inhibit MMP-2 activity and did not modify the infarct size.
Conclusion: Our results strongly suggest that ischemic postconditioning may exert part of its cardioprotective effects through the inhibition of MMP-2 activity.
LanguageENG
Pub Type(s)JOURNAL ARTICLE
PubMed ID19880538
  
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