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Role of Intracellular Na + Kinetics in Preconditioned Rat Heart
Author(s) -
Kenichi Imahashi,
Tsunehiko Nishimura,
Jun Yoshioka,
Hideo Kusuoka
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
circulation research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.899
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1524-4571
pISSN - 0009-7330
DOI - 10.1161/hh1101.092139
Subject(s) - diazoxide , ouabain , intracellular , chemistry , kinetics , biophysics , activator (genetics) , sodium , biochemistry , medicine , biology , receptor , physics , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , insulin
To elucidate the role of intracellular Na(+) kinetics in the mechanism for ischemic preconditioning (IPC), we measured intracellular Na(+) concentration ([Na(+)](i)) using (23)Na-magnetic resonance spectroscopy in isolated rat hearts. IPC significantly delayed the initial [Na(+)](i) increase (d[Na(+)](i)/dt) compared with non-IPC control, resulting in attenuation of Na(+) accumulation (Delta[Na(+)](i)) during 27 minutes of ischemia with better functional recovery. [Na(+)](i) in IPC, but not in control, recovered to preischemic level during a 6-minute reperfusion. The Na(+)-H(+) exchange inhibitor further suppressed d[Na(+)](i)/dt in both control and IPC hearts with concomitant improvement of functional recovery, suggesting little contribution to the mechanism of IPC. The mitochondrial ATP-sensitive K(+) (mito K(ATP)) channel activator diazoxide (30 micromol/L) completely mimicked both [Na(+)](i) kinetics and functional recovery in IPC without any additive effects to IPC. The mito K(ATP) channel blocker 5-hydroxydecanoic acid (100 micromol/L) lost protective effect as well as the attenuation of d[Na(+)](i)/dt and [Na(+)](i) recovery induced by diazoxide. However, 5-hydroxydecanoic acid also lost IPC-induced protection, but incompletely abolished the alteration of d[Na(+)](i)/dt and the [Na(+)](i) recovery. The Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase inhibitor ouabain (200 micromol/L) did not change d[Na(+)](i)/dt in non-IPC hearts, but it abolished the IPC- or diazoxide-induced reduction of d[Na(+)](i)/dt and the [Na(+)](i) recovery, whereas IPC followed by ouabain treatment showed partial functional recovery with smaller Delta[Na(+)](i) than other ouabain groups. In conclusion, alteration of Na(+) kinetics by preserving Na(+) efflux via Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase mediated by mito K(ATP) channel activation mainly contributes to functional protection in IPC hearts. The contribution of mito K(ATP) channel-independent pathway relating to Na(+) kinetics including reduced Na(+) influx is limited in functional protection of IPC.

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