Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT SCH OF MED/DNT
Description
Abstract Text
The major objective is to evaluate the role of the depletion of membrane
phospholipids in reperfusion injury. Ischemia, cardioplegic arrest and
reperfusion in the pig heart model will be studied, estimating individual
and total phospholipids, phosphatidic acid and arachidonic acid in the
heart. Phospholipid metabolism will be further examined by estimating the
enzymes of the de-novo pathway, including phospholipase A2, phospholipase
C, diglyceride lipase, diglyceride kinase and lysophosphatidylcholine
acyltransferase, lysophospholipase and fatty acyl CoA synthetase. Since
phospholipds can be degraded by various pathways, the relative significance
of these pathways will be compared using specific inhibitors. The major
pathway of phospholipid metabolism and turnover, the
"deacylation-reacylation pathway", will be studied by comparing the
intermediary metabolic products with the corresponding enzymes of the
de-novo pathway. Phospholid turnover and arachidonic acid metabolism will
be further evaluated by using isotopic arachidonic acid during ischemia and
reperfusion and quantitating the incorporation of radioactivity from the
arachidonate into the phospholipid pool. Since Ca++ entry during ischemia
and reperfusion is a common event, and Ca++ is known to stimulate both
phospholipase A and C, the role of calcium on lipase activation will be
examined using calcium-calmodulin antagonists in the perfusion system.
Phospholipid degradation will be correlated with Ca++ influx by
simultaneously estimating the influx of Ca++ with tracer elements. The
results of these experiments will be correlated with the measurements of
myocardial preservation: high-energy phosphate levels (ATP, CP),
myocardial contractility and compliance and CK activity. Phospholipid
degradation potentiates reperfusion injury by disturbing metabolic pathways
or by generating harmful products of arachidonic acid metabolism, and the
above experiments will lead us to determine the relative significance of
such mechanisms. This research will focus attention on the clinical events
surrounding reperfusion and cardioplegic preservation during open-heart
surgery. The interventions proposed (e.g., use of calcium-calmodulin
antagonists or specific inhibitors of metabolic pathways) would have direct
clinical relevance to improve myocardial preservation during infarct
reperfusion and routine open-heart surgery.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Data not available.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
acylation arachidonate calcium channel blockers disease /disorder model heart arrest heart contraction heart revascularization heart surgery high energy compound lipase lipolysis membrane lipids myocardial infarction myocardial ischemia /hypoxia myocardium phosphatidate phospholipids radiotracer
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