4.7 Article

Neutrophil Elastase Deficiency Ameliorates Myocardial Injury Post Myocardial Infarction in Mice

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22020722

Keywords

neutrophil elastase; myocardial infarction; apoptosis; remodeling; neutrophil; sivelestat

Funding

  1. JSPS KAKENHI [15K19364, 17K09567]
  2. Japan Heart Foundation Hiroshi Irisawa & Aya Irisawa Memorial Research Grant
  3. Ichiro Kanehara Foundation

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The study investigated the role of neutrophil elastase (NE) in the pathogenesis of myocardial infarction (MI) in mice. NE deficiency or inhibition improved survival and cardiac function post-MI, limited fibrosis, reduced heart-infiltrating neutrophils and inflammatory macrophages, and decreased apoptotic cells in the heart. NE deficiency might improve cardiac survival by upregulating insulin/Akt signaling, suggesting that inhibition of NE could be a novel therapeutic target in the treatment of MI.
Neutrophils are recruited into the heart at an early stage following a myocardial infarction (MI). These secrete several proteases, one of them being neutrophil elastase (NE), which promotes inflammatory responses in several disease models. It has been shown that there is an increase in NE activity in patients with MI; however, the role of NE in MI remains unclear. Therefore, the present study aimed to investigate the role of NE in the pathogenesis of MI in mice. NE expression peaked on day 1 in the infarcted hearts. In addition, NE deficiency improved survival and cardiac function post-MI, limiting fibrosis in the noninfarcted myocardium. Sivelestat, an NE inhibitor, also improved survival and cardiac function post-MI. Flow cytometric analysis showed that the numbers of heart-infiltrating neutrophils and inflammatory macrophages (CD11b(+)F4/80(+)CD206(low) cells) were significantly lower in NE-deficient mice than in wild-type (WT) mice. At the border zone between intact and necrotic areas, the number of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labeling (TUNEL)-positive apoptotic cells was lower in NE-deficient mice than in WT mice. Western blot analyses revealed that the expression levels of insulin receptor substrate 1 and phosphorylation of Akt were significantly upregulated in NE-knockout mouse hearts, indicating that NE deficiency might improve cardiac survival by upregulating insulin/Akt signaling post-MI. Thus, NE may enhance myocardial injury by inducing an excessive inflammatory response and suppressing Akt signaling in cardiomyocytes. Inhibition of NE might serve as a novel therapeutic target in the treatment of MI.

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