@article{10.1172/JCI118692, author = {B Cowan AND O Baron AND J Crack AND C Coulber AND G J Wilson AND M Rabinovitch}, journal = {The Journal of Clinical Investigation}, publisher = {The American Society for Clinical Investigation}, title = {Elafin, a serine elastase inhibitor, attenuates post-cardiac transplant coronary arteriopathy and reduces myocardial necrosis in rabbits afer heterotopic cardiac transplantation.}, year = {1996}, month = {6}, volume = {97}, url = {https://www.jci.org/articles/view/118692}, pages = {2452-2468}, abstract = {We have related experimentally induced post-cardiac transplant coronary arteriopathy to increased elastolytic activity, IL-1beta, fibronectin-mediated inflammatory and smooth muscle cell (SMC) migration, and SMC proliferation. Since our in vitro studies show that a serine elastase releases SMC mitogens and facilitates IL-lbeta induction of fibronectin, we hypothesized that administration in vivo of the specific serine elastase inhibitor, elafin, would decrease the post-cardiac transplant coronary arteriopathy. Cholesterol-fed rabbits underwent a heterotopic cardiac transplant without immunosuppression and received elafin (1.79 mg/kg per d continuous infusion after a 9 mg bolus, n = 6) or vehicle (n = 6). 1 wk later, hearts were harvested for morphometric, immunohistochemical, and biochemical analyses. A > 70% decrease in the total number of coronary arteries with intimal thickening in elafin-treated compared to control donor hearts (P < 0.002) was associated with reduced vascular elastolytic activity judged by fewer breaks in the internal elastic lamina (P < 0.03), less accumulation of immunoreactive fibronectin (P < 0.02), and reduced cell proliferation quantified by proliferating cell nuclear antigen (P < 0.0001). Despite myocardial lymphocytic infiltration, wet weight of elafin-treated donor hearts was reduced by 50% compared to untreated controls (P < 0.002) and associated with relative preservation of myocyte integrity, instead of extensive myocardial necrosis (P < 0.004). This protective effect correlated with decreased myocardial elastolytic activity (P < 0.0001) and inflammatory cell proliferation (P < 0.0001) and with an elafin-inhibitable elastase in lymphocytes. Serine elastase activity thus appears an important therapeutic target for post-cardiac transplant coronary arteriopathy and myocardial necrosis induced by rejection.}, number = {11}, doi = {10.1172/JCI118692}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI118692}, }