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Pharmacological Preconditioning With Tumor Necrosis Factor-α Activates Signal Transducer and Activator of Transcription-3 at Reperfusion Without Involving Classic Prosurvival Kinases (Akt and Extracellular Signal–Regulated Kinase)
Author(s) -
Sandrine Lecour,
Naushaad Suleman,
Graeme A. Deuchar,
Sarin Somers,
Lydia Lacerda,
Barbara Huisamen,
Lionel H. Opie
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
circulation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.795
H-Index - 607
eISSN - 1524-4539
pISSN - 0009-7322
DOI - 10.1161/circulationaha.105.581058
Subject(s) - medicine , kinase , extracellular signal regulated kinases , protein kinase b , stat protein , activator (genetics) , cancer research , extracellular , tumor necrosis factor alpha , microbiology and biotechnology , signal transduction , stat3 , mapk/erk pathway , receptor , biology
Background— We previously reported that tumor necrosis-factor-α (TNF-α) can mimic classic ischemic preconditioning (IPC) in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Because TNF-α activates the signal transducer and activator of transcription-3 (STAT-3), we hypothesized that TNF-α–induced preconditioning requires phosphorylation of STAT-3 rather than involving the classic prosurvival kinases, Akt and extracellular signal–regulated kinase (Erk) 1/2, during early reperfusion.Methods and Results— Isolated, ischemic/reperfused rat hearts were preconditioned by either IPC or low-dose TNF-α (0.5 ng/mL). Western blot analysis confirmed that IPC phosphorylated Akt and Erk 1/2 after 5 minutes of reperfusion (Akt increased by 34±6% and Erk, by 105±28% versus control;P <0.01). Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt inhibition (wortmannin) or mitogen-activated protein kinase–Erk 1/2 kinase inhibition (PD-98059) during early reperfusion abolished the infarct-sparing effect of IPC. In contrast, TNF-α preconditioning did not phosphorylate these kinases (Akt increased by 7±7% and Erk, by 17±14% versus control;P =NS). Neither wortmannin nor PD-98059 inhibited TNF-α–mediated cardioprotection. However, TNF-α and IPC both phosphorylated STAT-3 and the proapoptotic protein Bcl-2 antagonist of cell death (BAD) (STAT-3 increased by 58±17% with TNF-α or by 68±12% with IPC; BAD increased by 75±8% with TNF-α or by 205±20% with IPC;P <0.01 versus control), thereby activating the former and inactivating the latter. The STAT-3 inhibitor AG 490 abolished cardioprotection and BAD phosphorylation with both preconditioning stimuli.Conclusions— Activation of the classic prosurvival kinases (Akt and Erk 1/2) is not essential for TNF-α–induced preconditioning in the early reperfusion phase. We show the existence of an alternative protective pathway that involves STAT-3 activation specifically at reperfusion in response to both TNF-α and classic IPC. This novel prosurvival pathway may have potential therapeutic significance.

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