CBS 2019
CBSMD教育中心
English

Acute Coronary Syndrom

科研文章

荐读文献

Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection: Current State of the Science: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association Red Cell Distribution Width in Patients with Diabetes and Myocardial Infarction: an analysis from the EXAMINE trial Culprit lesion location and outcome in patients with cardiogenic shock complicating myocardial infarction: a substudy of the IABP-SHOCK II-trial Percutaneous Intervention for Concurrent Chronic Total Occlusions in Patients With STEMI: The EXPLORE Trial Incidence and Outcomes of Acute Coronary Syndrome After Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement Acute Microvascular Impairment Post-Reperfused STEMI Is Reversible and Has Additional Clinical Predictive Value: A CMR OxAMI Study Comparison in prevalence, predictors, and clinical outcome of VSR versus FWR after acute myocardial infarction: The prospective, multicenter registry MOODY trial-heart rupture analysis Invasive Management of Acute Myocardial Infarction Complicated by Cardiogenic Shock: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association Epinephrine Versus Norepinephrine for Cardiogenic Shock After Acute Myocardial Infarction Letter by Jiang et al Regarding Article, “Direct Comparison of Cardiac Myosin-Binding Protein C With Cardiac Troponins for the Early Diagnosis of Acute Myocardial Infarction”

Original Research2020 Oct 7;S0022-2828(20)30296-0.

JOURNAL:J Mol Cell Cardio. Article Link

Decreased inspired oxygen stimulates de novo formation of coronary collaterals in adult heart

A Aghajanian, H Zhang, JE Faber et al. Keywords: hypoxia; collateral vessels lessen myocardial ischemia; coronary obstruction; ischemic heart disease; coronary circulation

ABSTRACT

RATIONALE - Collateral vessels lessen myocardial ischemia when acute or chronic coronary obstruction occurs. It has long been assumed that although native (pre-existing) collaterals enlarge in obstructive disease, new collaterals do not form in the adult. However, the latter was recently shown to occur after coronary artery ligation. Understanding the signals that drive this process is challenged by the difficulty in studying collateral vessels directly and the complex milieu of signaling pathways, including cell death, induced by ligation. Herein we show that hypoxemia alone is capable of inducing collateral vessels to form and that the novel gene Rabep2 is required.

 

OBJECTIVE - Hypoxia stimulates angiogenesis during embryonic development and in pathological states. We hypothesized that hypoxia also stimulates collateral formation in adult heart by a process that involves RABEP2, a recently identified protein required for formation of collateral vessels during development.

 

METHODS AND RESULTS - Exposure of mice to reduced FiO 2 induced collateral formation that resulted in smaller infarctions following LAD ligation and that reversed on return to normoxia. Deletion of Rabep2 or knockdown of Vegfa inhibited formation. Hypoxia upregulated Rabep2, Vegfa and Vegfr2 in heart and brain microvascular endothelial cells (HBMVECs). Knockdown of Rabep2 impaired migration of HBMVECs. In contrast to systemic hypoxia, deletion of Rabep2 did not affect collateral formation induced by ischemic injury caused by LAD ligation.

 

CONCLUSIONS - Hypoxia induced formation of coronary collaterals by a process that required VEGFA and RABEP2, proteins also required for collateral formation during development. Knockdown of Rabep2 impaired cell migration, providing one potential mechanism for RABEP2's role in collateral formation. This appears specific to hypoxia, since formation after acute ischemic injury was unaffected in Rabep2 /mice. These findings provide a novel model for studying coronary collateral formation, and demonstrate that hypoxia alone can induce new collaterals to form in adult heart.