Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0151744 (myocardial ischemia)
31,282 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Protein kinase C (PKC), a family of 12 distinct serine-threonine kinases, is an important intracellular signaling pathway involved in various cellular functions, such as proliferation, hypertrophy, apoptosis, and adhesion. PKC-epsilon, a novel PKC isoform that is activated in the diabetic kidney, has been demonstrated to have a central role in the underlying signaling infrastructure of myocardial ischemia and hypertrophy. The renal phenotype of PKC-epsilon(-/-) mice was studied with regard to renal hypertrophy and fibrosis. PKC-epsilon(-/-) deficient knockout mice were generated and then killed after 6, 16, and 26 wk of life. Kidney/body weight ratio did not show any significant group difference compared with appropriate wild-type controls. Urinary albumin/creatinine ratio remained normal in wild-type mice, whereas PKC-epsilon(-/-) mice after 6 and 16 wk showed elevated albuminuria. Masson-Goldner staining revealed that tubulointerstitial fibrosis and mesangial expansion were significantly increased in PKC-epsilon(-/-) mice. However, this profibrotic phenotype was not observed in other organs, such as liver and lung. Immunohistochemistry of the kidneys from PKC-epsilon(-/-) mice showed increased renal fibronectin and collagen IV expression that was further aggravated in the streptozotocin-induced diabetic stress model. Furthermore, TGF-beta(1), phospho-Smad2, and phospho-p38 mitogen-activate protein kinase expression was increased in PKC-epsilon(-/-) mice, suggesting a regulatory role of PKC-epsilon in TGF-beta(1) and its signaling pathway in the kidney. These results indicate that deletion of PKC-epsilon mediates renal fibrosis and that TGF-beta1 and its signaling pathway might be involved. Furthermore, these data suggest that activation of PKC-epsilon in the diabetic state may rather represent a protective response to injury than be a mediator of renal injury.
...
PMID:Deletion of protein kinase C-epsilon signaling pathway induces glomerulosclerosis and tubulointerstitial fibrosis in vivo. 1736 Sep 53

The complement system activation can mediate myocardial ischemia and reperfusion (I/R). Inhibition of C5a activity reveals attenuation of I/R-induced myocardial infarct size. However, the contribution of C5a receptor (C5aR) to I/R injury remains to be unknown. Here, we reported that both mRNA and protein for the C5aR were constitutively expressed on cardiomyocytes and upregulated as a function of time after I/R-induced myocardial cell injury in mice. Blockade of C5aR markedly decreased microvascular permeability in ischemic myocardial area and leukocyte adherence to coronary artery endothelium. Importantly, the blocking of C5aR with an anti-C5aR antibody was associated with inhibition in activation of protein kinase C delta (PKC-delta) and induction of PKC-mediated mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphatases-1 (MKP-1) leading to the increased activity of p42/p44 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase cascade. These data provide evidence that C5aR-mediated myocardial cell injury is an important pathogenic factor, and that C5aR blockade may be useful therapeutic targets for the prevention of myocardial I/R injury.
...
PMID:C5aR-mediated myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury. 1741 41

Intercellular adhesion molecule-1 plays a key role in mediating inflammatory and immune responses. There is also increasing appreciation of the role of its soluble form, sICAM-1, in regulating inflammation. This study evaluated the effects of hypoxia and N-acetyl-L-cysteine on sICAM-1 production by adult rat cardiac fibroblasts. By ELISA, hypoxia was found to cause a 61% increase in sICAM-1 in cardiac fibroblast culture supernates. However, RT-PCR did not reveal a concomitant increase in cell surface ICAM-1 transcript levels, suggesting that the increase in sICAM-1 may involve post-transcriptional and/or post-translational mechanisms. Using pharmacological inhibitors, it was observed that p42/44 MAPK and PKC mediate the stimulatory effect of hypoxia on sICAM-1 production. Remarkably, N-acetyl-L-cysteine caused a 3-fold increase in sICAM-1 by p42/44 MAPK-, p38 MAPK- and PKC-independent mechanisms. Pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate, another potent antioxidant, also augmented sICAM-1. The findings presented in this communication underscore the link between redox status and sICAM-1 release from cardiac fibroblasts. Further, because hypoxia is a major component of myocardial ischemia and is pro-inflammatory, and both N-acetylcysteine and pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate are clinically used antioxidants, the observations may have clinical significance.
...
PMID:Hypoxia and antioxidants enhance soluble ICAM-1 release from cardiac fibroblasts. 1745 16

Current treatment for acute myocardial infarction (AMI) is aimed at limiting the duration of ischemia by either mechanical (balloon catheters) or enzymatic (thrombolytics) means to disrupt the occlusion. While these treatments are effective in limiting the duration of ischemia, no therapeutic treatment is currently available to prevent ischemic injury and to reduce reperfusion injury, which occurs after these interventions. The development of rationally designed PKC isozyme-selective regulator peptides has permitted investigation into the role of specific PKC isozymes in ischemia-reperfusion (IR) injury. Based on these studies, it is now evident that epsilon and deltaPKC have distinct temporal and opposing roles in regulating myocardial damage induced by IR. Activation of epsilonPKC before ischemia protects the heart by mimicking preconditioning, whereas inhibition of deltaPKC during reperfusion protects the heart from reperfusion-induced damage. These cardioprotective effects have been observed in isolated cardiomyocytes, isolated perfused hearts and in vivo in all species tested including mouse, rat and pig and may provide the basis for future therapeutic agents. Having established the efficacy of PKC isozyme-specific regulators in reducing IR injury, the next challenge is to outline the molecular mechanisms regulated by delta and epsilonPKC isozymes that result in enhanced tolerance to IR. In this review, we discuss progress that has been made in establishing cytoprotective mechanisms, which arise as a consequence of epsilonPKC activation or deltaPKC inhibition, and how they may lead to protection in the setting of myocardial ischemia reperfusion.
...
PMID:Cardioprotective mechanisms of PKC isozyme-selective activators and inhibitors in the treatment of ischemia-reperfusion injury. 1757 73

In acute myocardial ischemia and in chronic heart failure, sympathetic activation with excessive norepinephrine (NE) release from and reduced NE reuptake into sympathetic nerve endings is a prominent cause of arrhythmias and cardiac dysfunction. The Na(+)/H(+) exchanger NHE1 is the predominant isoform in the heart. It contributes to cellular acid-base balance, and electrolyte, and volume homeostasis, and is activated in response to intracellular acidosis and/or activation of guanine nucleotide binding (G) protein-coupled receptors. NHE1 mediates its signaling via protein kinases A (PKA) or C (PKC). In cardiomyocytes, NHE1 is restricted to specialized membrane domains, where it regulates the activity of pH-sensitive proteins and modulates the driving force of the Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger. During acute ischemia/reperfusion and in heart failure the activity/amount of NHE1 is increased, leading to intracellular Ca(2+) overload and promoting structural (apoptosis, hypertrophy) and functional (arrhythmias, hypercontraction) myocardial damage. In sympathetic nerve endings, increased NHE1 activity results in the accumulation of axoplasmic Na(+) that diminishes the inward and/or favors the outward transport of NE via the neuronal norepinephrine transporter (NET). The increased NE levels within the nerve-muscle junction facilitate the sustained stimulation of myocardial alpha- and beta-adrenoceptors (ARs), which in turn aggravate the increases in myocardial NHE1 activity and the associated deleterious effects. Furthermore, the responsiveness of the beta-AR declines overtime, which results in further release of NE, initiating a vicious cycle. Accordingly, NHE1 is a potential candidate for targeted intervention to suppress this feedback loop.
...
PMID:Regulation and role of the presynaptic and myocardial Na+/H+ exchanger NHE1: effects on the sympathetic nervous system in heart failure. 1761 35

Protease-activated receptor-2 (PAR-2) may have proinflammatory effects in some tissues and protective effects in other tissues. The role of PAR-2 in in vivo myocardial ischemia-reperfusion has not yet been determined. This study tested the hypothesis that PAR-2 activation with the PAR-2 agonist peptide SLIGRL (PAR-2 AP) reduces myocardial infarct size when given at reperfusion in vivo, and this cardioprotection involves the ERK1/2 pathway. Anesthetized rats were randomly assigned to the following groups with 30 min of regional ischemia and 3 h reperfusion: 1) control with saline; 2) vehicle (DMSO); 3) PAR-2 AP, 1 mg/kg given intravenously 5 min before reperfusion; 4) scrambled peptide (SP), 1 mg/kg; 5) the ERK1/2 inhibitor PD-98059 (PD), 0.3 mg/kg given 10 min before reperfusion; 6) the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibitor LY-294002 (LY), 0.3 mg/kg given 10 min before reperfusion; 7) PD + PAR-2 AP, 0.3 mg/kg PD given 5 min before PAR-2 AP; 8) LY + PAR-2 AP, 0.3 mg/kg LY given 5 min before PAR-2 AP; 9) chelerythrine (Chel) alone, 5 mg/kg given 10 min before reperfusion; and 10) Chel + PAR-2 AP, Chel was given 5 min before PAR-2 AP (10 min before reperfusion). Activation of ERK1/2, ERK5, Akt, and the downstream targets of ERK1/2 [P90 RSK and bcl-xl/bcl-2-associated death promoter (BAD)] was determined by Western blot analysis in separate experiments. PAR-2 AP significantly reduced infarct size compared with control (36 +/- 2% vs. 53 +/- 1%, P < 0.05), and SP had no effect on infarct size (53 +/- 3%). PAR-2 AP significantly increased phosphorylation of ERK1/2, p90RSK, and BAD but not Akt or ERK5. Accordingly, the infarct-size sparing effect of PAR-2 AP was abolished by PD (PAR-2 AP, 36 +/- 2% vs. PD + PAR-2 AP, 50 +/- 1%; P < 0.05) and by Chel (Chel + PAR-2 AP, 58 +/- 2%) but not by LY (PAR-2 AP, 36 +/- 2% vs. LY + PAR-2 AP, 38 +/- 3%; P > 0.05). Therefore, PAR-2 activation is cardioprotective in the in vivo rat heart ischemia-reperfusion model, and this protection involves the ERK1/2 pathway and PKC.
...
PMID:PAR-2 activation at the time of reperfusion salvages myocardium via an ERK1/2 pathway in in vivo rat hearts. 1772 Jul 72

Ceramide, a sphingolipid metabolite, has emerged as a key second messenger molecule that mediates multiple cellular functions. Its de nova synthesis and accumulation in ischemic myocardium, congestive heart failure and diabetic cardiomyopathy is associated with the abnormalities such as abnormal QT prolongation and increased risk of arrhythmias. To investigate how ceramide is involved in modulating cardiac repolarization, we performed whole-cell patch-clamp studies on HERG current (I(HERG)), a critical determinant of cardiac repolarization, expressed in HEK293 cells. Acute application (superfusion for 25 min) of membrane permeable ceramide (C2, 5 microM) did not alter I(HERG). Prolonged incubation with C2 for 10 hrs caused pronounced I(HERG) inhibition in a concentration-dependent and voltage-independent fashion and positive shift of voltage-dependent HERG activation. The IC(50) for I(HERG) suppression was 19.5 microM. C2 did not affect the inactivation property and time-dependent kinetics of I(HERG). Similar effects were observed with production of endogenous ceramide catalyzed by sphingomyelinase. Tyrosine kinase inhibitors failed to reverse C2-induced suppression of HERG function, and PKA and PKC inhibitors only slightly reversed the I(HERG) depression. Western blotting and immunocytochemical analyses indicate that C2 does not alter HERG protein expression on the cytoplasmic membrane. The inhibitory effect of C2 on I(HERG) was reversed by antioxidants vitamin E or MnTBAP. C2 caused considerable production of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS), which was prevented by vitamin E or MnTBAP. We conclude that ceramide depresses I(HERG) mainly via ROS overproduction and ceramide-induced I(HERG) impairment may contribute to QT prolongation in prolonged myocardial ischemia, heart failure and diabetic cardiomyopathy.
...
PMID:Sphingolipid metabolite ceramide causes metabolic perturbation contributing to HERG K+ channel dysfunction. 1776 70

Protein kinase C-betaII (PKCbetaII) is an important modulator of cellular stress responses. To test the hypothesis that PKCbetaII modulates the response to myocardial ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury, we subjected mice to occlusion and reperfusion of the left anterior descending coronary artery. Homozygous PKCbeta-null (PKCbeta(-/-)) and wild-type mice fed the PKCbeta inhibitor ruboxistaurin displayed significantly decreased infarct size and enhanced recovery of left ventricular (LV) function and reduced markers of cellular necrosis and serum creatine phosphokinase and lactate dehydrogenase levels compared with wild-type or vehicle-treated animals after 30 min of ischemia followed by 48 h of reperfusion. Our studies revealed that membrane translocation of PKCbetaII in LV tissue was sustained after I/R and that gene deletion or pharmacological blockade of PKCbeta protected ischemic myocardium. Homozygous deletion of PKCbeta significantly diminished phosphorylation of c-Jun NH(2)-terminal mitogen-activated protein kinase and expression of activated caspase-3 in LV tissue of mice subjected to I/R. These data implicate PKCbeta in I/R-mediated myocardial injury, at least in part via phosphorylation of JNK, and suggest that blockade of PKCbeta may represent a potent strategy to protect the vulnerable myocardium.
...
PMID:PKCbeta modulates ischemia-reperfusion injury in the heart. 1824 60

Myocardial ischaemia activates blood platelets, which in turn stimulate cardiac sympathetic afferents, leading to chest pain and sympathoexcitatory reflex cardiovascular responses. Previous studies have shown that activated platelets stimulate ischaemically sensitive cardiac sympathetic afferents, and that thromboxane A(2) (TxA(2)) is one of the mediators released from activated platelets during myocardial ischaemia. The present study tested the hypothesis that endogenous TxA(2) stimulates cardiac afferents during ischaemia through direct activation of TxA(2) (TP) receptors coupled with the phospholipase C-protein kinase C (PLC-PKC) cellular pathway. Nerve activity of single unit cardiac sympathetic afferents was recorded from the left sympathetic chain or rami communicantes (T(2)-T(5)) in anaesthetized cats. Single fields of 39 afferents (conduction velocity = 0.27-3.65 m s(-1)) were identified in the left or right ventricle initially with mechanical stimulation and confirmed with a stimulating electrode. Five minutes of myocardial ischaemia stimulated all 39 cardiac afferents (8 Adelta-, 31 C-fibres) and the responses of these 39 afferents to chemical stimuli were further studied in the following four protocols. In the first protocol, 2.5, 5 and 10 microg of the TxA(2) mimetic, U46619, injected into the left atrium (LA), stimulated seven ischaemically sensitive cardiac afferents in a dose-dependent manner. Second, BM13,177, a selective TxA(2) receptor antagonist, abolished the responses of six afferents to 5 microg of U46619 injected into the left atrium and attenuated the ischaemia-related increase in activity of seven other afferents by 44%. In contrast, cardiac afferents, in the absence of TP receptor blockade responded consistently to repeated administration of U46619 (n = 6) and to recurrent myocardial ischaemia (n = 7). In the fourth protocol, administration of PKC-(19-36), a selective PKC inhibitor, attenuated the responses of six other cardiac afferents to U46619 by 38%. Finally, using an immunohistochemical staining approach, we observed that TP receptors were expressed in cardiac sensory neurons in thoracic dorsal root ganglia. Taken together, these data indicate that endogenous TxA(2) contributes to the activation of cardiac afferents during myocardial ischaemia through direct stimulation of TP receptors probably located in the cardiac sensory nervous system and that the stimulating effect of TxA(2) on cardiac afferents is dependent, at least in part, upon the PLC-PKC cellular pathway.
...
PMID:Undiscovered role of endogenous thromboxane A2 in activation of cardiac sympathetic afferents during ischaemia. 1848 73

The role of protein kinase C epsilon (PKC epsilon) in polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN)-induced myocardial ischemia/reperfusion (MI/R) injury and novel-related mechanisms, such as regulation of vascular endothelium nitric oxide (NO) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) release from blood vessels, have not been previously evaluated. A cell-permeable PKC epsilon peptide activator (1-10 microM) significantly increased endothelial NO release from non-ischemic rat aortic segments (p < 0.01). By contrast, PKC epsilon peptide inhibitor (1-10 microM) dose-dependently decreased NO release (p < 0.01). Then, these corresponding doses of PKC epsilon activator or inhibitor were examined in MI/R. The PKC epsilon inhibitor (5 microM given during reperfusion, n=6) significantly attenuated PMN-induced postreperfused cardiac contractile dysfunction and PMN adherence/infiltration (both p < 0.01), and expression of intracellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1; p < 0.05). By contrast, only PKC epsilon activator pretreated hearts (5 muM PKC epsilon activator given before ischemia (PT), n = 6), not PKC epsilon activator given during reperfusion (5 microM, n=6) exerted significant cardioprotection (p < 0.01). Moreover, the NO synthase inhibitor, N(G)-nitro-L: -arginine methyl ester, did not block the cardioprotection of PKC epsilon inhibitor, whereas it completely abolished the cardioprotective effects of PKC epsilon activator PT. In addition, PKC epsilon inhibitor (0.4 mg/kg) significantly decreased H(2)O(2) release during reperfusion in a femoral I/R model (p < 0.01). Therefore, the cardioprotection of PKC epsilon inhibitor maybe related to attenuating ICAM-1 expression and H2O2 release during reperfusion. By contrast, the cardioprotective effects of PKC epsilon activator PT may be mediated by enhancing vascular endothelial NO release before ischemia.
...
PMID:Mechanisms related to the cardioprotective effects of protein kinase C epsilon (PKC epsilon) peptide activator or inhibitor in rat ischemia/reperfusion injury. 1849 74


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 Next >>