4.7 Article

Postconditioning by Delayed Administration of Ciclosporin A: Implication for Donation after Circulatory Death (DCD)

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms232112858

Keywords

donation after circulatory death (DCD); heart transplantation; ciclosporin A-postconditioning-ischemia reperfusion injury (IRI)-delayed reperfusion-mitochondria-permeability transition pore

Funding

  1. FRM [PME20170637799]
  2. Agence Biomedecine AOR Greffe 2017 [ANR-18-CE18-0015]
  3. Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) [ANR-18-CE18-0015] Funding Source: Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR)

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This study aimed to evaluate the protective effects of postconditioning on DCD hearts. The results showed that CsA and POST could reduce necrosis and improve heart function. However, the efficacy of POST was lost if delayed beyond 3 minutes of reperfusion, while CsA treatment remained effective even if applied after a delay. Delayed CsA application correlated with better functional recovery and higher mitochondrial respiratory index, suggesting the crucial role of MPTP in delayed protection of DCD hearts.
Heart transplantation is facing a shortage of grafts. Donation after Circulatory Death (DCD) would constitute a new potential of available organs. In the present work, we aimed to evaluate whether Postconditioning (ischemic or with ciclosporin-A (CsA)) could reduce ischemia-reperfusion injury in a cardiac arrest model when applied at the start of reperfusion or after a delay. An isolated rat heart model was used as a model of DCD. Hearts were submitted to a cardiac arrest of 40 min of global warm ischemia (37 degrees C) followed by 3 h of 4 degrees C-cold preservation, then 60 min reperfusion. Hearts were randomly allocated into the following groups: control, ischemic postconditioning (POST, consisting of two episodes each of 30 s ischemia and 30 s reperfusion at the onset of reperfusion), and CsA group (CsA was perfused at 250 nM for 10 min at reperfusion). In respective subgroups, POST and CsA were applied after a delay of 3, 10, and 20 min. Necrosis was lower in CsA and POST versus controls (p < 0.01) whereas heart functions were improved (p < 0.01). However, while the POST lost its efficacy if delayed beyond 3 min of reperfusion, CsA treatment surprisingly showed a reduction of necrosis even if applied after a delay of 3 and 10 min of reperfusion (p < 0.01). This cardioprotection by delayed CsA application correlated with better functional recovery and higher mitochondrial respiratory index. Furthermore, calcium overload necessary to induce mitochondrial permeability transition pore (MPTP) opening was similar in all cardioprotection groups, suggesting a crucial role of MPTP in this delayed protection of DCD hearts.

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