Publication | Open Access
Different Signaling Pathways Induce Apoptosis in Endothelial Cells and Cardiac Myocytes During Ischemia/Reperfusion Injury
167
Citations
7
References
2002
Year
Endothelial CellsApoptosisCell DeathCardiovascular ToxicityOxidative StressInflammationApoptosis ContributesCell SignalingCardiologyAtherosclerosisIschemic SyndromeEndothelial Cell PathobiologyIschemia/reperfusion InjuryCardiac MyocytesVascular BiologyReperfusion InjuryPharmacologyCell BiologyCardiovascular DiseasePhysiologyEndothelial DysfunctionCardiac Cell LossMedicine
Apoptosis contributes, with necrosis, to the cardiac cell loss after ischemia/reperfusion injury. The apoptotic cascade is initiated either by mitochondrial damage and activation of caspase-9 or by death receptor ligation and activation of caspase-8. In the present study, performed in the isolated rat heart exposed either to ischemia alone or ischemia followed by reperfusion, cleavage of caspase-9 was observed primarily in endothelial cells. Conversely, caspase-8 cleavage was only found in cardiomyocytes, where it progressively increased throughout reperfusion. Addition of a specific caspase-9 inhibitor to the perfusate before ischemia prevented endothelial apoptosis, whereas preischemic infusion of a specific caspase-8 inhibitor affected only myocyte apoptosis. Additionally, caspase-8-mediated BID processing was observed only during reperfusion. Production of tBID then sustains mitochondrial injury and perpetuates caspase-9 activation.
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