Tiron ameliorates high glucose-induced cardiac myocyte apoptosis by PKCδ-dependent inhibition of osteopontin.
Ping JiangDeling ZhangHong QiuXianqi YiYemin ZhangYingkang CaoBo ZhaoZhongyuan XiaChanghua WangPublished in: Clinical and experimental pharmacology & physiology (2018)
Tiron functions as an effective antioxidant alleviating the intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) or the acute toxic metal overload. Previous studies have shown that cardiac myocyte apoptosis can be effectively inhibited by tiron administration in streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic rats, primary neonatal rat cardiomyocytes (NRVMs), and H9c2 embryonic rat cardiomyocytes. However, the underlying signalling mechanism is ill-defined. In the present study, we found that tiron supplementation significantly inhibited apoptosis of high glucose (HG)-treated NRVMs and the left ventricular cardiomyocytes from STZ-diabetic rat, accompanied with a reduction of osteopontin (OPN) levels as well as an inhibition of PKCδ phosphorylation. OPN knockdown protected NRVMs against HG-induced cell apoptosis. In addition, genetic inhibition of PKCδ mitigated HG-stimulated enhancement of intracellular OPN levels in NRVMs. These findings indicate that ROS-mediated activation of PKCδ upregulated OPN expression, leading to cardiac myocyte apoptosis. Interfering with ROS/PKCδ pathway by antioxidants such as tiron provides an optional therapeutic strategy for treatment and prevention of apoptosis-related cardiovascular diseases including diabetic cardiomyopathy.
Keyphrases
- diabetic rats
- oxidative stress
- high glucose
- reactive oxygen species
- endothelial cells
- dna damage
- left ventricular
- cell death
- cell cycle arrest
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cardiovascular disease
- type diabetes
- heart failure
- protein kinase
- poor prognosis
- acute myocardial infarction
- fluorescent probe
- left atrial
- newly diagnosed
- drug induced
- living cells
- adipose tissue
- transcatheter aortic valve replacement
- long non coding rna
- genome wide
- cardiovascular events
- single molecule