Recommend Channels to your librarian for 2008. Download form here.
Sign up for Table of Contents Alerts.
Email this page
Print this page
Research Papers
Calmodulin Kinase II Inhibition Enhances Ischemic Preconditioning by Augmenting ATP-Sensitive K+ Current
Jingdong Li, Celine Marionneau, Olha Koval, Leonid Zingman, Peter Mohler, Jeanne Nerbonne and Mark E. Anderson
volume 1 | issue 5
September/October 2007Pages: 387 - 394
Subscribe to this journal for $79/year
Mice with genetic inhibition (AC3-I) of the multifunctional Ca2+/calmodulin dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) have improved cardiomyocyte survival after ischemia. Some K+ currents are up-regulated in AC3-I hearts, but it is unknown if CaMKII inhibition increases the ATP sensitive K+ current (IKATP) that underlies ischemic preconditioning (IP) and confers resistance to ischemia. We hypothesized increased IKATP was part of the mechanism for improved ventricular myocyte survival during ischemia in AC3-I mice. AC3-I hearts were protected against global ischemia due to enhanced IP compared to wild type (WT) and transgenic control (AC3-C) hearts. IKATP was significantly increased, while the negative regulatory dose-dependence of ATP was unchanged in AC3-I compared to WT and AC3-C ventricular myocytes, suggesting that CaMKII inhibition increased the number of functional IKATP channels available for IP. We measured increased sarcolemmal Kir6.2, a pore-forming IKATP subunit, but not a change in total Kir6.2 in cell lysates or single channel IKATP opening probability from AC3-I compared to WT and AC3-C ventricles, showing CaMKII inhibition increased sarcolemmal IKATP channel expression. There were no differences in mRNA for genes encoding IKATP channel subunits in AC3-I, WT and AC3-C ventricles. The IKATP opener pinacidil (100 M) reduced MI area in WT to match AC3-I hearts, while the IKATP antagonist HMR1098 (30 M) increased MI area to an equivalent level in all groups, indicating that increased IKATP and augmented IP are important for reduced ischemic cell death in AC3-I hearts. Our study results show CaMKII inhibition enhances beneficial effects of IP by increasing IKATP.
Authors
Jingdong Li
Huazhong University of Science and Technology
Celine Marionneau
Washington university
Olha Koval
University of Iowa
Leonid Zingman
University of Iowa
Peter Mohler
University of Iowa
Jeanne Nerbonne
Washington University Medical School
Mark E. Anderson
University of Iowa







