Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8292693 | Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2018 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
It was previously found that patients with symptom of myocardial dysfunction had increased levels of thrombin. Apixaban is one of the novel oral anticoagulant drugs widely used in clinic. As the inhibitor of FXa (prothrombin), it inhibits prothrombin conversion into thrombin leading to thrombin deficiency in vivo. However, the effects of apixaban on myocardial fibrosis were still unclear, and the concomitant molecular mechanisms remain to be investigated. Here, we showed that myocardial fibrosis-bearing mice induced by continuous myocardial ischemia (MI) had higher levels of thrombin. Orally administration of apixaban significantly abrogated fibrosis condition and thrombin levels. In vitro, thrombin induced collagen deposition in primary cardiac fibroblasts in a dose-dependent manner. Mechanistic experiments showed that thrombin induced collagen deposition by activation of the Par-1-coupled Gq/PKC signaling. Genetic ablation of Gq or pharmacological inhibition of PKC effectively blunted thrombin-induced collagen deposition in cardiac fibroblasts. Moreover, administration of PKC inhibitor or Gq antagonist obviously blocked MI-induced myocardial fibrosis in mice. To conclude, apixaban attenuates MI-induced myocardial fibrosis by inhibition of thrombin-dependent Par-1/Gq/PKC signaling axis.
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Authors
Guiliang Shi, Xiangjun Yang, Min Pan, Jianhui Sun, Haiyan Ke, Chi Zhang, Haihua Geng,