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European Journal of Pharmacology 1998-Jun

Mechanisms of amino acid release from the isolated anoxic/reperfused rat heart.

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D Song
M H O'Regan
J W Phillis

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Abstrak

Loss of amino acids into the coronary artery perfusate, which is exacerbated during anoxic stress, may have important implications for the ability of hearts subjected to ischemia or anoxia to recover function during reoxygenation. This work investigates the mechanisms underlying the amino acid efflux. Rat Langendorff heart preparations were used to study amino acid loss into coronary artery perfusates during anoxia or anoxia/reoxygenation sequences. Coronary flow rates, heart rates and intra-aortic pressures were recorded. Changes in myocardial amino acid concentrations were equated with amino acid levels in collected anoxic perfusate. With the exception of taurine, the differences in amino acid levels between normoxic and anoxic hearts were smaller than the amounts lost into the coronary perfusates, indicating ongoing replenishment of most amino acids during the anoxic episode. Fifteen-minute periods of exposure to low oxygen levels (P02 18-20 mmHg) resulted in large percentage increases in perfusate amino acid levels which returned slowly towards control levels upon reoxygenation. Anion channel blockers, anthracene-9-carboxylic acid, furosemide, and 4-acetamido-4-isothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid (SITS), depressed anoxia-elicited increases in amino acid release. Phospholipase inhibition with quinacrine, 4-bromophenacyl bromide and 7,7-dimethyl-eicosadenoic acid (DEDA) depressed the anoxia-evoked release of amino acids. Combined applications of SITS and DEDA exhibited additive effects, virtually abolishing anoxia-evoked release of all the amino acids. The protein kinase C inhibitor, chelerythrine chloride, and the protein tyrosine kinase inhibitors, genistein and lavendustin A, inhibited anoxia-evoked amino acid release. Polyunsaturated fatty acids, arachidonic and linoleic, reduced anoxia-evoked amino acid release whereas monosaturated (oleic) and saturated (stearic) acids were ineffective. The glutamate transport inhibitor, dihydrokainate, depressed anoxia-evoked glutamate and aspartate release. These results suggest that at least three possible mechanisms for the anoxia-evoked amino acid efflux including (a) diffusional release through volume activated anion channels, (b) leakage across myocyte plasma membranes as a consequence of phospholipase activation and (c) reversal of Na+ dependent high-affinity transporters.

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