Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5916947 | Molecular Immunology | 2013 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Loss of plasma membrane integrity (LPMI) is a hallmark of necrotic cell death. The involvement of complement and ROS in the development of LPMI during the early stages of murine myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury was investigated. LPMI developed within 1Â h of reperfusion to a level that was sustained through 24Â h. C3 deposition became significant at 3-h reperfusion and thus contributed little to LPMI prior to this time. SOD1 transgenic mice had significantly less LPMI compared with WT mice at 1Â h of reperfusion but not at later time points. Catalase transgenic mice were not protected from LPMI at 1-h reperfusion compared with WT mice, but had 69% less LPMI at 3-h reperfusion. This protection was transient. At 24-h reperfusion the LPMI of catalase transgenic mice was identical to that of WT mice. The delayed benefits of over-expressed catalase compared with SOD1 are consistent with its antioxidant action downstream of SOD1. The onset of LPMI occurs within 1Â h of reperfusion at a level that is maintained through 24Â h. ROS contribute significantly to LPMI during the first 3Â h of reperfusion, while complement deposition, which becomes significant after 3-h reperfusion, may contribute thereafter.
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Authors
Pradeepkumar Charlagorla, Junying Liu, Monaliben Patel, Julie I. Rushbrook, Ming Zhang,