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. 2010 Jun;10(2):146-51.
doi: 10.1007/s12012-010-9070-2.

Absence of mitochondrial toxicity in hearts of transgenic mice treated with abacavir

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Absence of mitochondrial toxicity in hearts of transgenic mice treated with abacavir

James J Kohler et al. Cardiovasc Toxicol. 2010 Jun.

Abstract

Abacavir (ABC) is a guanosine nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI) with potent antiretroviral activity. Since NRTIs exhibit tissue-specific inhibition of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) synthesis, the ability of ABC to inhibit mtDNA synthesis in vivo was evaluated. Inbred wild-type (WT) and transgenic mice (TG) treated with ABC (3.125 mg/d p. o., 35 days) were used to define mitochondrial oxidative stress and cardiac function. Chosen TGs exhibited overexpression of HIV-1 viral proteins (NL4-3Deltagag/pol, non-replication competent), hemizygous depletion or overexpression of mitochondrial superoxide dismutase (SOD2(+/-) knock-out (KO) or MnSOD OX, respectively), overexpression of mitochondrially targeted catalase (MCAT), or double "knockout" deletion of aldehyde dehydrogenase activity (ALDH2 KO). Impact on mtDNA synthesis was assessed by comparing changes in mtDNA abundance between ABC-treated and vehicle-treated WTs and TGs. No changes in mtDNA abundance occurred from ABC treatment in any mice, suggesting no inhibition of mtDNA synthesis. Left ventricle (LV) mass and LV end-diastolic dimension (LVEDD) were defined echocardiographically and remained unchanged as well. These results indicate that treatment with ABC has no visible cardiotoxicity in these adult mice exposed for 5 weeks compared to findings with other antiretroviral NRTI studies and support some claims for its relative safety.

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Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Cardiac mtDNA abundance in TGs and WTs following ABC treatment. Total DNA was extracted from cardiac tissues isolated from TGs and WTs treated with abacavir (ABC) or vehicle (saline) alone for 35 days. mtDNA abundance was assessed using a ratio of mtDNA/nDNA as determined by real-time PCR amplification. Cardiac mtDNA abundance remained unchanged in all TGs (with or without ABC) compared to WT littermates (1-way ANOVA, all comparisons had P > 0.05)
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Quantitative analysis of ECHO images. LV mass was determined from ECHO images captured just prior to termination. Data were normalized to body weight (mg/g) and plotted as mean ± SEM. a ABC treatment had no effect on LV mass in WT and all TG models compared to vehicle-treated WTs (1-way ANOVA, all comparisons had P > 0.05). b LVEDD also remained unchanged in TGs and WTs following ABC treatment (1-way ANOVA, all comparisons had P > 0.05)

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References

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