4.7 Article

Pretreatment of cardiac progenitor cells with bradykinin attenuates H2O2-induced cell apoptosis and improves cardiac function in rats by regulating autophagy

Journal

STEM CELL RESEARCH & THERAPY
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13287-021-02503-6

Keywords

Bradykinin; Cardiac c-kit plus progenitor cells; Myocardial infarction; Autophagy; Apoptosis

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81970283, 81900336, U1605226]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of Fujian Province [U1605226]
  3. Science and Technology Project from Xiamen Science and Technology Bureau, Fujian Province, China [3502Z20184025, 3502Z20184024]

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This study demonstrates that pretreatment with BK can improve the survival rate of hCPCs in the infarcted heart by regulating cell apoptosis and autophagy. In vitro, BK suppresses H2O2-induced hCPCs apoptosis and ROS production while reducing cell autophagy. In vivo, BK-treated transplanted hCPCs showed enhanced cardiac function, decreased cardiomyocyte apoptosis, inflammatory infiltration, myocardial fibrosis, and promoted neovascularization in the infarcted heart.
Background Previous studies have demonstrated that human cardiac c-Kit(+) progenitor cells (hCPCs) can effectively improve ischemic heart disease. However, the major challenge in applying hCPCs to clinical therapy is the low survival rate of graft hCPCs in the host heart, which limited the benefit of transplanted hCPCs. Bradykinin (BK) is a principal active agent of the tissue kinin-kallikrein system. Our previous studies have highlighted that BK mediated the growth and migration of CPCs by regulating Ca2+ influx. However, the protective effect of BK on CPCs, improvement in the survival rate of BK-pretreated hCPCs in the infarcted heart, and the related mechanism remain elusive. Methods HCPCs were treated with H2O2 to induce cell apoptosis and autophagy, and different concentration of BK was applied to rescue the H2O2-induced injury detected by MTT assay, TUNEL staining, flow cytometry, western blotting, and mitoSOX assays. The role of autophagy in the anti-apoptotic effect of BK was chemically activated or inhibited using the autophagy inducer, rapamycin, or the inhibitor, 3-methyladenine (3-MA). To explore the protective effect of BK on hCPCs, 3-MA or BK-pretreated hCPCs were transplanted into the myocardial infarcted rats. An echocardiogram was used to determine cardiac function, H&E and Masson staining were employed to assess pathological characteristics, HLA gene expression was quantified by qRT-PCR, and immunostaining was applied to examine neovascularization using confocal microscopy. Results The in vitro results showed that BK suppressed H2O2-induced hCPCs apoptosis and ROS production in a concentration-dependent manner by promoting pAkt and Bcl-2 expression and reducing cleaved caspase 3 and Bax expression. Moreover, BK restrained the H2O2-induced cell autophagy by decreasing LC3II/I, Beclin1, and ATG5 expression and increasing P62 expression. In the in vivo experiment, the transplanted BK- or 3-MA-treated hCPCs were found to be more effectively improved cardiac function by decreasing cardiomyocyte apoptosis, inflammatory infiltration, and myocardial fibrosis, and promoting neovascularization in the infarcted heart, compared to untreated-hCPCs or c-kit(-) cardiomyocytes (CPC- cells). Conclusions Our present study established a new method to rescue transplanted hCPCs in the infarcted cardiac area via regulating cell apoptosis and autophagy of hCPCs by pretreatment with BK, providing a new therapeutic option for heart failure.

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