The Role of Pyroptosis in Ischemic and Reperfusion Injury of the Heart.
Sergey V PopovLeonid N MaslovNatalia V NaryzhnayaAlexandr V MukhomezyanovAndrey V KrylatovSergey Y TsibulnikovVyacheslav V RyabovMichael V CohenJames M DowneyPublished in: Journal of cardiovascular pharmacology and therapeutics (2021)
While ischemia itself can kill heart muscle, much of the infarction after a transient period of coronary artery occlusion has been found to result from injury during reperfusion. Here we review the role of inflammation and possible pyroptosis in myocardial reperfusion injury. Current evidence suggests pyroptosis's contribution to infarction may be considerable. Pyroptosis occurs when inflammasomes activate caspases that in turn cleave off an N-terminal fragment of gasdermin D. This active fragment makes large pores in the cell membrane thus killing the cell. Inhibition of inflammation enhances cardiac tolerance to ischemia and reperfusion injury. Stimulation of the purinergic P2X7 receptor and the β-adrenergic receptor and activation of nuclear factor κ-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells (NF-κB) by toll-like receptor (TLR) agonists are all known to contribute to ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) cardiac injury through inflammation, potentially by pyroptosis. In contrast, stimulation of the cannabinoid CB2 receptor reduces I/R cardiac injury and inhibits this pathway. MicroRNAs, Akt, the phosphate and tension homology deleted on chromosome 10 protein (PTEN), pyruvate dehydrogenase and sirtuin-1 reportedly modulate inflammation in cardiomyocytes during I/R. Cryopyrin and caspase-1/4 inhibitors are reported to increase cardiac tolerance to ischemic and reperfusion cardiac injury, presumably by suppressing inflammasome-dependent inflammation. The ambiguity surrounding the role of pyroptosis in reperfusion injury arises because caspase-1 also activates cytotoxic interleukins and proteolytically degrades a surprisingly large number of cytosolic enzymes in addition to activating gasdermin D.
Keyphrases
- toll like receptor
- cerebral ischemia
- nuclear factor
- oxidative stress
- acute myocardial infarction
- left ventricular
- coronary artery
- nlrp inflammasome
- signaling pathway
- immune response
- heart failure
- acute ischemic stroke
- cell proliferation
- stem cells
- cell death
- computed tomography
- gene expression
- atrial fibrillation
- single cell
- dna methylation
- acute coronary syndrome
- magnetic resonance
- induced apoptosis
- bone marrow
- endothelial cells
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- small molecule
- copy number
- single molecule
- sensitive detection