No Direct Postconditioning Effect of Poloxamer 188 on Mitochondrial Function after Ischemia Reperfusion Injury in Rat Isolated Hearts
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (1)
- P188 improves mitochondrial function when given immediately upon reperfusion in rat isolated hearts.
- (2)
- P188 improves mitochondrial function when given during isolation of mitochondria after IR injury in rat isolated hearts.
- (3)
- The effect of P188 is not purely osmotic, but depends on its hydrophobic portion and cannot be substituted with the completely hydrophilic molecule polyethylene glycol (PEG, 8000 Da).
2. Results
2.1. Myocardial Function in the Ex-Vivo Heart
2.2. Mitochondrial Function
2.2.1. ATP Synthesis
2.2.2. O2-Consumption
2.2.3. Calcium Retention Capacity
3. Discussion
3.1. Myocardial Function
3.2. Mitochondrial Function
3.2.1. ATP Synthesis
3.2.2. O2-Consumption
3.2.3. Calcium Retention Capacity
3.3. Effect of P188 on Mitochondrial IR Injury
3.4. Study Limitations
- We used healthy male rodents without the underlying comorbidities and medication that patients usually present with. The latter are confounding factors that might influence cardiac injury as well as protection. The isolated heart model removes the organ from its natural habitat, which might result in shock and excludes physiological modification through hormonal and neuronal input. However, time controls were validated by testing mitochondrial function of freshly excised hearts in advance, and one of this model’s benefits is actually the possibility to look at tissue reaction without extra-cardiac stimuli.
- No further studies on adequate reperfusion times were done. Ischemic injury presents differently than reperfusion injury, which is strongly associated with membrane damage. With insufficient reperfusion time, P188’s beneficial effect might not have been observable; this short-coming had to be accepted for the sake of generating data for mitochondrial function.
- We did not use a mitochondrial uncoupler such as, e.g., 2-[2-[4-(trifluoromethoxy)phenyl]hydrazinylidene]-propanedinitrile (FCCP), which could have helped assess maximal mitochondrial respiratory capacity. In our experience, however, 10 min reperfusion is not enough to cause significant mitochondrial death rather than a profound mitochondrial dysfunction so that normalization to mitochondrial protein concentrations is not expected to be skewed by non-viable mitochondria.
- It also cannot be excluded that a longer reperfusion time would have helped coronary perfusion during diastole by lowering the diastolic contracture further below the isolated heart’s constant perfusion pressure of 70 mmHg.
- Dose optimization for P188 was not conducted as part of this study. With insufficient dosing, not enough P188 may be available to stabilize all injured membranes and thus the protective effects would suffer. Availability of single P188 molecules is also reduced when administered in high concentrations, as the amphiphilic P188 molecules form micelles [39]. In in-vitro studies of cardiomyocytes optimal effects on IR injury were observed with 100 μM P188 [11]. However, our laboratory has shown mitochondrial protective effects in ex-vivo hearts with 1 mM P188 during reperfusion and has found no direct mitochondrial effect on IR injury after incubation of isolated cardiac mitochondria with 100 µM P188 [26]. Additionally, 250 μM P188 showed no direct mitochondrial effect on rat brain isolated mitochondria [28]. Thus, a concentration of 1 mM P188 was chosen for ex-vivo post-conditioning, as well as mitochondrial treatment. This is still in the range of subcritical micelle concentration for P188 [27].
- Isolated mitochondria are a great asset to assess mitochondrial function in great detail but concerns have been voiced that they do not adequately represent normal mitochondrial function and rather put more stress on the already damaged organelle [40]. This has to be considered when analyzing data of these in-vitro experiments. Additionally, it has to be noted that the mere assessment of mitochondrial function might not be able to fully elucidate a direct mechanism of action of P188. Therefore, our results need to be interpreted in the context of the sparse knowledge from previous studies of direct P188 interaction.
- Due to small sample sizes and heterogeneous mitochondrial data, the data at large were shown to not be normally distributed, so that only non-parametric statistic tests could be used. Since these are more conservative, this decreases power and increases the possibility of type II errors.
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. Animals
4.2. Anesthesia
4.3. Preparation of the Isolated Heart
4.4. Isolation of Mitochondria and Treatment with P188 and PEG
4.5. Assessment of Mitochondrial Function
4.5.1. ATP Synthesis
4.5.2. O2-Consumption
4.5.3. Calcium Retention Capacity
4.6. Statistical Analysis
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
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Eskaf, J.; Cleveland, W.J.; Riess, M.L. No Direct Postconditioning Effect of Poloxamer 188 on Mitochondrial Function after Ischemia Reperfusion Injury in Rat Isolated Hearts. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2021, 22, 4879. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22094879
Eskaf J, Cleveland WJ, Riess ML. No Direct Postconditioning Effect of Poloxamer 188 on Mitochondrial Function after Ischemia Reperfusion Injury in Rat Isolated Hearts. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2021; 22(9):4879. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22094879
Chicago/Turabian StyleEskaf, Josephine, William J. Cleveland, and Matthias L. Riess. 2021. "No Direct Postconditioning Effect of Poloxamer 188 on Mitochondrial Function after Ischemia Reperfusion Injury in Rat Isolated Hearts" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 22, no. 9: 4879. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22094879
APA StyleEskaf, J., Cleveland, W. J., & Riess, M. L. (2021). No Direct Postconditioning Effect of Poloxamer 188 on Mitochondrial Function after Ischemia Reperfusion Injury in Rat Isolated Hearts. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 22(9), 4879. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22094879