| Literature DB >> 28388574 |
Yixin Zhang1,2, Lisa A Moszczynski2, Qing Liu1, Jifu Jiang2, Duo Zhao1,2, Douglas Quan3,4,5, Tina Mele3,5, Vivian McAlister3,4,5, Anthony Jevnikar4,5,6,7, Seung Joon Baek8, Kexiang Liu1, Xiufen Zheng2,3,4,5.
Abstract
Ischemia reperfusion (I/R) injury which inevitably occurs during heart transplantation is the major factor leading to organ failure and graft rejection. In order to develop new therapies to prevent I/R injury, we used both a murine heart transplantation model with 24 hour cold I/R and an in vitro cell culture system to determine whether growth differentiation factor 15 (GDF15) is a protective factor in preventing I/R injury in heart transplantation and to further investigate underlying mechanisms of I/R injury. We found that cold I/R caused severe damage to the endocardium, epicardium and myocardium of heart grafts from wild type C57BL/6 mice, whereas grafts from GDF15 transgenic (TG) mice showed less damage as demonstrated by decreased cell apoptosis/death, decreased neutrophils infiltration and the preservation of the normal structure of the heart. Over-expression of GDF15 reduced expression of phosphorylated RelA p65, pre-inflammatory and pro-apoptotic genes while it enhanced Foxo3a phosphorylation in vitro and in vivo. Over-expression of GDF15 inhibited cell apoptosis/death and reduced neutrophil infiltration. In conclusion, this study, for the first time, demonstrates that GDF15 is a promising target for preventing cold I/R injury in heart transplantation. This study also shows that the resultant protective effects are mediated by the Foxo3 and NFκB signaling pathways.Entities:
Keywords: Foxo3a; GDF15; heart transplantation; ischemia reperfusion injury
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28388574 PMCID: PMC5482674 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.16607
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1GDF15 protects hearts from I/R injury in heart transplantation
(A) I/R increased GDF15 expression. Donor hearts were harvested from WT C57BL/6 (n=6) and preserved with UW solution at 4°C for 24 h before implantation into syngeneic recipients. 24 h after transplantation, heart grafts were harvested for gene expression. (B) A timeline for heart transplantation. (C-F) H&E staining. Donor hearts were harvested from WT C57BL/6 and GDF15 TG mice (n=6, each) and preserved at 4°C for 24 h, followed by a heterotopic syngeneic transplantation. Three days after transplantation, heart grafts were harvested for H&E staining. (C) Endocardium infiltrated with neutrophils. (D) Cardiomyocyte damage. (E) Epicardium thickening. (F) Trichrome staining for fibrosis. Representative images from 6 independent grafts per group. Images were taken at X 200 magnification.
Histopathological change in I/R injured heart grafts
| Epicardium injury | Endocardium injury | Infarction | Neutrophil infiltration | Fibrosis | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WT | 3.5 ± 0.2887 | 3.167±0.4410 | 4 ± 0.2887 | 3.333±0.333 | 3.367±0.1856 |
| GDF15TG | 2.25 ± 0.3227 | 2 ± 0.2041 | 1.875± 0.427 | 2.375±0.125 | 1.750±0.1443 |
| 0.0395 | 0.0457 | 0.0127 | 0.0289 | 0.0009 |
Figure 2Over expression of GDF15 decreased the expression of pro- and anti-apoptotic genes and reduced apoptotic cells in heart grafts
(A & B) Expression of Bax and Bcl-XL. RNA was extracted from the above heart graft tissues (Figure 1C–1F). The expression of Bax and Bcl-XL was determined using qRT-PCR. (A) Bax; (B) Expression of Bcl-XL. (C) Cell apoptosis detected by TUNEL assays. Heart grafts from Figure 1 were subjected to a TUNEL assays. Upper panel: representative images of TUNEL assays (n=6). Lower Panel: Semi score of apoptosis in WT and GDF15TG heart grafts. * p< 0.05 was defined as statistical significance.
Figure 3Inflammatory cytokine expression in heart grafts
Heart grafts samples (n=4) were collected from grafts prepared by the procedure described by Figure 1C-F. Gene expression of inflammatory cytokines IFN-γ, IL-1β, and IL-6- was measured by qRT-PCR. GAPDH was used as an internal loading control gene. ΔΔCT was used to present relative changes of gene expression. * p< 0.05 was defined as statistical significance. (A) IFN-γ expression; (B) IL-1β expression; and (C) IL-6 expression.
Semi-quantitative expression of proinflammatory cytokines detected by IHC
| IL-1β | IL-6 | TNF-α | |
|---|---|---|---|
| WT | 2.75 ± 0.25 | 2.875 ± 0.125 | 2.250 ± 0.2500 |
| GDF15 TG | 0.9375 ± 0.0625 | 1.313 ± 0.2772 | 1.250 ± 0.2500 |
| P value | 0.0005 | 0.0209 | 0.0690 |
Figure 4Over-expression of GDF15 prevents cell apoptosis and death induced by I/R in vitro
H9C2 cells (80,000 cells/well) were plated in six well plates and allowed to culture at 37°C 5% CO2 overnight. Cells were infected with human GDF15 expression adenovirus or control null virus for 24h. Cells were then subjected to a hypoxia chamber with 0% O2 and 15% CO2 at 10°C for 16 h, followed by 24h reperfusion at 5% CO2, 28% O2 at 37°C. Gene expression of GDF15 was detected by RT-PCR and cell apoptosis was detected by double staining with FITC labeled Annexin-V and PI and flow cytometry. (A) Expression of human GDF15. Human GDF15 expression in H9C2 cells was detected by RT-PCR using primers specific to human GDF15 sequence and Western blotting. Left panel: regular RT-PCR; Middle panel: qRT-PCR. Right panel; Western blotting. (B) Cell apoptosis/death detected by Annenix-V and PI binding. Upper panel: representative data; bottom panel: Summarized data of flow cytometry for cell apoptosis/death. (C) Representative images of cell death detected by an incucyte system. (D) A cell death curve over time. Data are the summary of three independent experiments. * p< 0.05 was defined as statistical significance.
Figure 5GDF15 increased phosphorylation of Foxo3a
(A) Phosphorylation of Foxo3a in the heart grafts. Total protein was extracted from heart grafts at day 3 post transplantation (n=6). Phosphorylation of Foxo3a was detected by Western blotting with primary antibodies against phosphorylated Foxo3a. Left panel: Representative images of Western blotting for Foxo3a. Right panel: Densitometry values of p-Foxo3a/β-actin. (B) Over expression of GDF15 recovered expression of phosphorylated Foxo3a in vitro. H9C2 cells (80,000 cells/well) were plated in six well plates and allowed to culture at 37°C 5% CO2 overnight. Cells were infected with human GDF15 expression adenovirus or control null virus, for 24 h, Cells were then subjected to a hypoxia chamber with 0% O2 and 15% CO2 at 10°C for 16 h, followed by a 24 h reperfusion period at 5% CO2, 28% O2 at 37°C. Total protein was extracted from the cells and the expression of GDF15, p-Foxo3a and β-actin were detected by Western blotting using appropriate antibodies. Left panel: Representative images of Western blotting for p-Foxo3a, and β-actin from three independent experiments. Right panel Densitometry values of p-Foxo3a/β-actin. (C) GDF15 siRNA reduced GDF15 expression. H9C2 cells were transfected with GDF15 siRNA prior to hypoxia/reperfusion. Left panel: Representative images of Western blotting for GDF15 and β-actin from three independent experiments. Right panel Densitometry values of GDF15/β-actin. (D) GDF15 siRNA reduced phosphorylated Foxo3a expression. Left panel: Representative images of Western blotting for p-Foxo3a, and β-actin from three independent experiments. Right panel Densitometry values of p-Foxo3a/β-actin* p< 0.05 was defined as statistical significance.
Figure 6The expression of p-RelA p65
Cells were treated and protein was extracted from the cells as Figure 5. The expression of p-RelA p65 was detected by Western blotting. (A) Representative image from three independent experiments. (B) Densitometry values for p-RelA p65/β-actin. * p< 0.05 was defined as statistical significance.