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Vol. 302, Issue 3, 1123-1128, September 2002
Departments of Anesthesia and Perioperative Care (C.U.N.),
Radiology (M.S., H.A.), and Biopharmaceutical Sciences (W.J., L.Z.B.,
U.C., N.S.), University of California, San Francisco, California;
Department of Anesthesiology (W.J., U.C., N.S.), University of Colorado
Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado; and Department of
Biology/Chemistry (N.S.), Universität Bremen, Bremen, Germany
Cyclosporine protects the heart against ischemia/reperfusion injury,
but its effect on cardiac metabolism is largely unknown. We assessed
cyclosporine-induced metabolic changes in the rat heart prior to
occlusion using magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) and correlated
effects with infarct size in a coronary occlusion/reperfusion model.
The two study groups were cyclosporine and cyclosporine + coronary
occlusion (n = 20/group). Rats were pretreated with cyclosporine (5, 10, 15, and 25 mg/kg/day) or the vehicle by oral gavage for 3 days (n = 4/dose). On day 4, hearts of
rats in the cyclosporine group were excised, and extracted cell
metabolites were measured using 1H and 31P MRS.
The second group was subjected to 30 min of coronary artery occlusion
followed by 24 h of reperfusion. Infarct size and area at risk
were measured using a double staining method. In the cyclosporine group, cyclosporine reduced cardiac energy metabolism (ATP:
r =
0.89, P < 0.001) via
depression of oxidative phosphorylation and the Krebs' cycle in a
dose-dependent manner. The decrease of ATP levels was positively
correlated with changes of NAD+ (r = 0.89), glutamate (r = 0.95), glutamine
(r = 0.84), and glucose concentrations
(r = 0.92, all P < 0.002). It
was inversely correlated with lactate (r =
0.93,
P < 0.001). In the coronary occlusion group,
cyclosporine dose dependently reduced the ratio [area of infarct/area
of the left ventricle] (r =
0.86,
P < 0.01), with 15 mg/kg/day being the most
effective cyclosporine dose. The reduction in infarct size correlated
with the reduction in oxidative phosphorylation (ATP:
r = 0.97; NAD+: r = 0.82, P < 0.01). The reduction in cardiac energy
metabolism before occlusion may be the cause of myocardial preservation
during ischemia/reperfusion.
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