|
|
Hagir B. Suliman, Martha Sue Carraway, Abdelwahid S. Ali, Chrystal M. Reynolds, Karen E. Welty-Wolf, Claude A. Piantadosi
J Clin Invest. 2007;
117(12):3730
doi:10.1172/JCI32967
Abstract |
Full text
| PDF

T
he clinical utility of anthracycline anticancer agents, especially doxorubicin, is limited by a progressive toxic cardiomyopathy linked to mitochondrial damage and cardiomyocyte apoptosis. Here we demonstrate that the post-doxorubicin mouse heart fails to upregulate the nuclear program for mitochondrial biogenesis and its associated intrinsic antiapoptosis proteins, leading to severe mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) depletion, sarcomere destruction, apoptosis, necrosis, and excessive wall stress and fibrosis. Furthermore, we exploited recent evidence that mitochondrial biogenesis is regulated by the CO/heme oxygenase (CO/HO) system to ameliorate doxorubicin cardiomyopathy in mice. We found that the myocardial pathology was averted by periodic CO inhalation, which restored mitochondrial biogenesis and circumvented intrinsic apoptosis through caspase-3 and apoptosis-inducing factor. Moreover, CO simultaneously reversed doxorubicin-induced loss of DNA binding by GATA-4 and restored critical sarcomeric proteins. In isolated rat cardiac cells, HO-1 enzyme overexpression prevented doxorubicin-induced mtDNA depletion and apoptosis via activation of Akt1/PKB and guanylate cyclase, while HO-1 gene silencing exacerbated doxorubicin-induced mtDNA depletion and apoptosis. Thus doxorubicin disrupts cardiac mitochondrial biogenesis, which promotes intrinsic apoptosis, while CO/HO promotes mitochondrial biogenesis and opposes apoptosis, forestalling fibrosis and cardiomyopathy. These findings imply that the therapeutic index of anthracycline cancer chemotherapeutics can be improved by the protection of cardiac mitochondrial biogenesis.
Citation information
This citation data is accumulated from CrossRef, which receives citation information from participating publishers, including this journal.
Not all publishers participate in CrossRef, so this information is not comprehensive.
Additionally, data may not reflect the most current citations to this article,
and the data may differ from citation information available from other sources
(for example, Google Scholar, Web of Science, and Scopus).
Total citations by year
in CrossRef
Citations to this article
in CrossRef
(5)
| Title and authors |
Publication |
Year |
Therapeutic Potential of Heme Oxygenase-1/Carbon Monoxide in Lung Disease
Myrna Constantin, Alexander J. S. Choi, Suzanne M. Cloonan, Stefan W. Ryter
|
International Journal of Hypertension
|
2012 |
Heme Oxygenase-1 Induction and Organic Nitrate Therapy: Beneficial Effects on Endothelial Dysfunction, Nitrate Tolerance, and Vascular Oxidative Stress
Andreas Daiber, Matthias Oelze, Philip Wenzel, Franziska Bollmann, Andrea Pautz, Hartmut Kleinert
|
International Journal of Hypertension
|
2012 |
Carbon Monoxide Targeting Mitochondria
Cláudia S. F. Queiroga, Ana S. Almeida, Helena L. A. Vieira
|
Biochemistry Research International
|
2012 |
Mitochondria Death/Survival Signaling Pathways in Cardiotoxicity Induced by Anthracyclines and Anticancer-Targeted Therapies
David Montaigne, Christopher Hurt, Remi Neviere
|
Biochemistry Research International
|
2012 |
Sildenafil and cardiomyocyte-specific cGMP signaling prevent cardiomyopathic changes associated with dystrophin deficiency
M. Khairallah, R. J. Khairallah, M. E. Young, B. G. Allen, M. A. Gillis, G. Danialou, C. F. Deschepper, B. J. Petrof, C. Des Rosiers
|
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
|
2008 |
|