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. 2006 Jan;290(1):H87-95.
doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.00285.2005. Epub 2005 Sep 9.

Chronic activation of PPARalpha is detrimental to cardiac recovery after ischemia

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Chronic activation of PPARalpha is detrimental to cardiac recovery after ischemia

Nandakumar Sambandam et al. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2006 Jan.

Abstract

High fatty acid oxidation (FAO) rates contribute to ischemia-reperfusion injury of the myocardium. Because peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)alpha regulates transcription of several FAO enzymes in the heart, we examined the response of mice with cardiac-restricted overexpression of PPARalpha (MHC-PPARalpha) or whole body PPARalpha deletion including the heart (PPARalpha-/-) to myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury. Isolated working hearts from MHC-PPARalpha and nontransgenic (NTG) littermates were subjected to no-flow global ischemia followed by reperfusion. MHC-PPARalpha hearts had significantly higher FAO rates during aerobic and postischemic reperfusion (aerobic 1,479 +/- 171 vs. 699 +/- 117, reperfusion 1,062 +/- 214 vs. 601 +/- 70 nmol x g dry wt(-1) x min(-1); P < 0.05) and significantly lower glucose oxidation rates compared with NTG hearts (aerobic 225 +/- 36 vs. 1,563 +/- 165, reperfusion 402 +/- 54 vs. 1,758 +/- 165 nmol x g dry wt(-1) x min(-1); P < 0.05). In hearts from PPARalpha-/- mice, FAO was significantly lower during aerobic and reperfusion (aerobic 235 +/- 36 vs. 442 +/- 75, reperfusion 205 +/- 25 vs. 346 +/- 38 nmol x g dry wt(-1) x min(-1); P < 0.05) whereas glucose oxidation was significantly higher compared with wild-type (WT) hearts (aerobic 2,491 +/- 631 vs. 901 +/- 119, reperfusion 2,690 +/- 562 vs. 1,315 +/- 172 nmol x g dry wt(-1) x min(-1); P < 0.05). Increased FAO rates in MHC-PPARalpha hearts were associated with a markedly lower recovery of cardiac power (45 +/- 9% vs. 71 +/- 6% of preischemic levels in NTG hearts; P < 0.05). In contrast, the percent recovery of cardiac power of PPARalpha-/- hearts was not significantly different from that of WT hearts (80 +/- 8% vs. 75 +/- 9%). This study demonstrates that chronic activation of PPARalpha is detrimental to the cardiac recovery during reperfusion after ischemia.

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