4.6 Article

Autophagy and protein kinase C are required for cardioprotection by sulfaphenazole

Journal

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpheart.00716.2009

Keywords

protein kinase C; ischemia-reperfusion; cytochrome P-450

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [P01 HL85577, R01 HL071091, R01 AG033283, R01 HL034579, F31 HL091723]

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Huang C, Liu W, Perry CN, Yitzhaki S, Lee Y, Yuan H, Tsukada YT, Hamacher-Brady A, Mentzer RM, Jr, Gottlieb RA. Autophagy and protein kinase C are required for cardioprotection by sulfaphenazole. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 298: H570-H579, 2010. First published December 11, 2009; doi:10.1152/ajpheart.00716.2009.-Previously, we showed that sulfaphenazole (SUL), an antimicrobial agent that is a potent inhibitor of cytochrome P4502C9, is protective against ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury (Ref. 15). The mechanism, however, underlying this cardioprotection, is largely unknown. With evidence that activation of autophagy is protective against simulated I/R in HL-1 cells, and evidence that autophagy is upregulated in preconditioned hearts, we hypothesized that SUL-mediated cardioprotection might resemble ischemic preconditioning with respect to activation of protein kinase C and autophagy. We used the Langendorff model of global ischemia to assess the role of autophagy and protein kinase C in myocardial protection by SUL during I/R. We show that SUL enhanced recovery of function, reduced creatine kinase release, decreased infarct size, and induced autophagy. SUL also triggered PKC translocation, whereas inhibition of PKC with chelerythrine blocked the activation of autophagy in adult rat cardiomyocytes. In the Langendorff model, chelerythrine suppressed autophagy and abolished the protection mediated by SUL. SUL increased autophagy in adult rat cardiomyocytes infected with GFP-LC3 adenovirus, in isolated perfused rat hearts, and in mCherry-LC3 transgenic mice. To establish the role of autophagy in cardioprotection, we used the cell-permeable dominant-negative inhibitor of autophagy, Tat-Atg5(K130R). Autophagy and cardioprotection were abolished in rat hearts perfused with recombinant Tat-Atg5(K130R). Taken together, these studies indicate that cardioprotection mediated by SUL involves a PKC-dependent induction of autophagy. The findings suggest that autophagy may be a fundamental process that enhances the heart's tolerance to ischemia.

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