Mechanisms that contribute to the preservation of the heart
Cardioprotection includes all mechanisms and means that contribute to the preservation of the heart by reducing or even preventing myocardial damage.[1]
Mechanisms
Cardioprotection encompasses several regimens that have shown to preserve function and viability of cardiac muscle cell tissue subjected to ischemic insult or reoxygenation.
Cardioprotection includes strategies that are implemented:
A role for PKCε in more contemporary cardioprotection strategies including RIPC,[9] local PostC,[10] and remote PostC[11] have been either demonstrated or suggested. It was shown that PKCε translocates from the cytosolic to the particulate fraction upon RIPC induction and that the protection conferred by RIPC can be inhibited with the PKC inhibitor chelerythrine[12][13] Similarly, in models of local PostC, phosphorylation and activation of PKCε has been shown to be induced and PKCε inhibition attenuated the beneficial effects of these regimens.[14][15] A recent study showed that blocking Hsp90 function with geldanamycin inhibits PostC protection and PKCε translocation.[16] Additional studies are required to investigate a role for PKCε in remote PostC and PerC, as this has not been conclusively demonstrated.
Clinical relevance
Cardioprotective strategies are studied for their potential to reduce heart damage in conditions like heart attack or surgery involving reperfusion.
^ abVinten-Johansen, J; Shi, W (2011). "Perconditioning and postconditioning: current knowledge, knowledge gaps, barriers to adoption, and future directions". Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology and Therapeutics. 16 (3–4): 260–6. doi:10.1177/1074248411415270. PMID21821526. S2CID20432309.
^Philipp, S; Yang, XM; Cui, L; Davis, AM; Downey, JM; Cohen, MV (1 May 2006). "Postconditioning protects rabbit hearts through a protein kinase C-adenosine A2b receptor cascade". Cardiovascular Research. 70 (2): 308–14. doi:10.1016/j.cardiores.2006.02.014. PMID16545350.
^Zhong, GQ; Tu, RH; Zeng, ZY; Li, QJ; He, Y; Li, S; He, Y; Xiao, F (15 June 2014). "Novel functional role of heat shock protein 90 in protein kinase C-mediated ischemic postconditioning". The Journal of Surgical Research. 189 (2): 198–206. doi:10.1016/j.jss.2014.01.038. PMID24742623.