Stimulation of Coronary Collateral Growth by Granulocyte Stimulating Factor
2009; Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; Volume: 29; Issue: 11 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1161/atvbaha.109.186445
ISSN1524-4636
AutoresAna Catarina Ribeiro Carrao, William M. Chilian, June Yun, Christopher Kolz, Petra Ročić, Kerstin Lehmann, Jeroen P. H. M. van den Wijngaard, Pepijn van Horssen, Jos A. E. Spaan, Vahagn Ohanyan, Yuh Fen Pung, Ivo Buschmann,
Tópico(s)Cardiac Ischemia and Reperfusion
ResumoThe purpose of this study was to determine whether G-CSF promotes coronary collateral growth (CCG) and decipher the mechanism for this stimulation.In a rat model of repetitive episodic myocardial ischemia (RI, 40 seconds LAD occlusion every 20 minutes for 2 hours and 20 minutes, 3 times/d for 5 days) CCG was deduced from collateral-dependent flow (flow to LAD region during occlusion). After RI, G-CSF (100 microg/kg/d) increased CCG (P<0.01) (0.47+/-0.15) versus vehicle (0.14+/-0.06). Surprisingly, G-CSF treatment without RI increased CCG (0.57+/-0.18) equal to G-CSF+RI. We evaluated ROS by dihydroethidine (DHE) fluorescence (LV injection, 60 microg/kg, during two episodes of ischemia). DHE fluorescence was double in G-CSF+RI versus vehicle+RI (P<0.01), and even higher in G-CSF without RI (P<0.01). Interestingly, the DHE signal did not colocalize with myeloperoxidase (immunostaining, neutrophil marker) but appeared in cardiac myocytes. The study of isolated cardiac myocytes revealed the cytokine stimulates ROS which elicit production of angiogenic factors. Apocynin inhibited G-CSF effects both in vivo and in vitro.G-CSF stimulates ROS production directly in cardiomyocytes, which plays a pivotal role in triggering adaptations of the heart to ischemia including growth of the coronary collaterals.
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