Peroxynitrite reduces myocardial infarct size and preserves coronary endothelium after ischemia and reperfusion in cats
- PMID: 9337206
- DOI: 10.1161/01.cir.96.7.2317
Peroxynitrite reduces myocardial infarct size and preserves coronary endothelium after ischemia and reperfusion in cats
Abstract
Background: Peroxynitrite (ONOO-) is purported to exert cytotoxic effects at high doses. However, physiologically relevant concentrations of ONOO- inhibit polymorphonuclear neutrophil (PMN) adhesion to the endothelium and attenuate PMN-mediated contractile dysfunction in isolated perfused rat hearts. We are unaware of any reports in vivo showing effects of peroxynitrite in myocardial ischemia and reperfusion (MI/R). Thus, the purpose of this study was to examine the in vivo effects of a physiologically relevant concentration of ONOO- (1 micromol/L) in a feline model of MI/R injury.
Methods and results: ONOO- (1 micromol/L) or its vehicle (0.9% NaCl at pH 8.4) was infused intraventricularly, starting 10 minutes before reperfusion in cats subjected to 90 minutes of myocardial ischemia and 4.5 hours of reperfusion. ONOO(-)-treated cats demonstrated marked attenuation of cardiac necrosis after MI/R compared with cats receiving only vehicle (P<.001). Moreover, vasorelaxation of ischemic-reperfused left anterior descending (LAD) coronary artery rings in response to the endothelium-dependent dilators acetylcholine and A23187 was greater in rings isolated from ONOO(-)-treated MI/R cats compared with MI/R cats receiving only vehicle, indicating that postreperfusion coronary vascular endothelial function was preserved by ONOO-. ONOO- also significantly reduced adherence of neutrophils to the ischemic-reperfused LAD coronary endothelium. Immunohistochemical localization of P-selectin was also significantly attenuated in hearts from ONOO(-)-infused MI/R cats.
Conclusions: These data suggest that physiologically relevant concentrations of ONOO- exert significant cardioprotective and vasculoprotective effects in MI/R in cats, at least partially by attenuating PMN-endothelium interactions.
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