Metformin Rescues the Myocardium from Doxorubicin-Induced Energy Starvation and Mitochondrial Damage in Rats
Author(s) -
Abdelkader E. Ashour,
Mohamed M. SayedAhmed,
Adel R. A. AbdAllah,
Hesham M. Korashy,
Zaid H. Maayah,
Hisham Alkhalidi,
Muhammed Mubarak,
Abdulqader A. Alhaider
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
oxidative medicine and cellular longevity
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.494
H-Index - 93
eISSN - 1942-0900
pISSN - 1942-0994
DOI - 10.1155/2012/434195
Subject(s) - cardiotoxicity , doxorubicin , oxidative stress , catalase , pharmacology , glutathione , in vivo , metformin , mitochondrion , chemistry , endocrinology , biology , medicine , diabetes mellitus , toxicity , biochemistry , chemotherapy , enzyme , microbiology and biotechnology
Clinical use of doxorubicin (DOX) is limited by its cardiotoxic side effects. Recent studies established that metformin (MET), an oral antidiabetic drug, possesses an antioxidant activity. However, whether it can protect against DOX-induced energy starvation and mitochondrial damage has not been reported. Our results, in a rat model of DOX-induced cardiotoxicity, show that DOX treatment significantly increased serum levels of LDH and CK-MB, indicators of cardiac injury, and induced expression of hypertrophic gene markers. DOX also caused marked decreases in the cardiac levels of glutathione, CoA-SH and ATP, and mRNA expression of catalase and NQO-1. These biochemical changes were associated with myocardial histopathological and ultrastructural deteriorations, as observed by light and electron microscopy, respectively. Cotreatment with MET (500 mg/kg) eliminated all DOX-induced biochemical, histopathological, and ultrastructural changes. These findings demonstrate that MET successfully prevents DOX-induced cardiotoxicity in vivo by inhibiting DOX-induced oxidative stress, energy starvation, and depletion of intramitochondrial CoA-SH
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