4.6 Article

Intrinsic cardiac ganglia and acetylcholine are important in the mechanism of ischaemic preconditioning

Journal

BASIC RESEARCH IN CARDIOLOGY
Volume 112, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00395-017-0601-x

Keywords

Myocardial infarction; Ischaemic preconditioning; Intrinsic cardiac nervous system

Funding

  1. National Institute for Health Research [NF-SI-0510-10164] Funding Source: researchfish

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This study aimed to investigate the role of the intrinsic cardiac nervous system in the mechanism of classical myocardial ischaemic preconditioning (IPC). Isolated perfused rat hearts were subjected to 35-min regional ischaemia and 60-min reperfusion. IPC was induced as three cycles of 5-min global ischaemia-reperfusion, and provided significant reduction in infarct size (IS/AAR = 14 +/- 2% vs control IS/AAR = 48 +/- 3%, p < 0.05). Treatment with the ganglionic antagonist, hexamethonium (50 mu M), blocked IPC protection (IS/AAR = 37 +/- 7%, p < 0.05 vs IPC). Moreover, the muscarinic antagonist, atropine (100 nM), also abrogated IPC-mediated protection (IS/AAR = 40 +/- 3%, p < 0.05 vs IPC). This indicates that intrinsic cardiac ganglia remain intact in the Langendorff preparation and are important in the mechanism of IPC. In a second group of experiments, coronary effluent collected following IPC, from ex vivo perfused rat hearts, provided significant cardioprotection when perfused through a naive isolated rat heart prior to induction of regional ischaemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) (IS/ARR = 19 +/- 2, p < 0.05 vs control effluent). This protection was also abrogated by treating the naive heart with hexamethonium, indicating the humoral trigger of IPC induces protection via an intrinsic neuronal mechanism (IS/AAR = 46 +/- 5%, p < 0.05 vs IPC effluent). In addition, a large release in ACh was observed in coronary effluent was observed following IPC (IPCeff = 0.36 +/- 0.03 mu M vs C-eff = 0.04 +/- 0.04 mu M, n = 4, p < 0.001). Interestingly, however, IPC effluent was not able to significantly protect isolated cardiomyocytes from simulated ischaemia-reperfusion injury (cell death = 45 +/- 6%, p = 0.09 vs control effluent). In conclusion, IPC involves activation of the intrinsic cardiac nervous system, leading to release of ACh in the ventricles and induction of protection via activation of muscarinic receptors.

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