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Hypoxia-activated apoptosis of cardiac myocytes requires reoxygenation or a pH shift and is independent of p53
Nanette H. Bishopric, … , Jie Zang, Keith A. Webster
Nanette H. Bishopric, … , Jie Zang, Keith A. Webster
Published August 1, 1999
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 1999;104(3):239-252. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI5871.
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Article

Hypoxia-activated apoptosis of cardiac myocytes requires reoxygenation or a pH shift and is independent of p53

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Abstract

Ischemia and reperfusion activate cardiac myocyte apoptosis, which may be an important feature in the progression of ischemic heart disease. The relative contributions of ischemia and reperfusion to apoptotic signal transduction have not been established. We report here that severe chronic hypoxia alone does not cause apoptosis of cardiac myocytes in culture. When rapidly contracting cardiac myocytes were exposed to chronic hypoxia, apoptosis occurred only when there was a decrease in extracellular pH ([pH]o). Apoptosis did not occur when [pH]o was neutralized. Addition of acidic medium from hypoxic cultures or exogenous lactic acid stimulated apoptosis in aerobic myocytes. Hypoxia-acidosis–mediated cell death was independent of p53: equivalent apoptosis occurred in cardiac myocytes isolated from wild-type and p53 knockout mice, and hypoxia caused no detectable change in p53 abundance or p53-dependent transcription. Reoxygenation of hypoxic cardiac myocytes induced apoptosis in 25–30% of the cells and was also independent of p53 by the same criteria. Finally, equivalent levels of apoptosis, as demonstrated by DNA fragmentation, were induced by ischemia-reperfusion, but not by ischemia alone, of Langendorff-perfused hearts from wild-type and p53 knockout mice. We conclude that acidosis, reoxygenation, and reperfusion, but not hypoxia (or ischemia) alone, are strong stimuli for programmed cell death that is substantially independent of p53.

Authors

Nanette H. Bishopric, Daryl J. Discher, Shari Kaiser, Olga Hernandez, Barbara Sato, Jie Zang, Keith A. Webster

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Figure 1

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Contributions of waste metabolic buildup to apoptosis induced by chronic...
Contributions of waste metabolic buildup to apoptosis induced by chronic hypoxia. (a and b) Parallel cultures of cardiac myocytes were exposed to hypoxia as described in Methods. In a, the medium was replaced with fresh hypoxic medium every 12 hours; in b, there was no medium replacement. Cultures were harvested at the indicated times and processed for DNA fragmentation. (c) Intracellular ATP, medium glucose, and [pH]o were measured in parallel cultures as described in Methods; results are means of 3 separate experiments. Open circles are results from cultures without medium replacement; closed circles, with medium replacement. (d–f) Typical fields of myocytes stained with HOECHST 33342 and anti-myosin antibody as described in Methods. (g) Quantitations of HOECHST-stained condensed nuclei, also described in Methods. At 24 and 48 hours, less than 2% of cells were PI positive (scored as necrotic) under any condition; at 72 hours, hypoxia-acidic cultures had more PI-positive cells, and these were scored as apoptotic if they contained condensed nuclei. Costaining populations were not distinguished from PI-excluding cells at this stage. Results are representative of at least 3 experiments.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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