个性化文献订阅>期刊> Journal of clinical investigation
 

Cardiac macrophage migration inhibitory factor inhibits JNK pathway activation and injury during ischemia/reperfusion

  作者 Qi, D; Hu, XY; Wu, XH; Merk, M; Leng, L; Bucala, R; Young, LH  
  选自 期刊  Journal of clinical investigation;  卷期  2009年119-12;  页码  3807-3816  
  关联知识点  
 

[摘要]Macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) is a proinflammatory cytokine that also modulates physiologic cell signaling pathways. MIF is expressed in cardiomyocytes and limits cardiac injury by enhancing AMPK activity during ischemia. Reperfusion injury is mediated in part by activation of the stress kinase JNK, but whether MIF modulates JNK in this setting is unknown. We examined the role of MIF in regulating JNK activation and cardiac injury during experimental ischemia/reperfusion in mouse hearts. Isolated perfused Mif(-/-) hearts had greater contractile dysfunction, necrosis, and JNK activation than WT hearts, with increased upstream MAPK kinase 4 phosphorylation, following ischemia/reperfusion. These effects were reversed if recombinant MIF was present during reperfusion, indicating that MIF deficiency during reperfusion exacerbated injury. Activated JNK acts in a proapoptotic manner by regulating BCL2-associated agonist of cell death (BAD) phosphorylation, and this effect was accentuated in Mif(-/-) hearts after ischemia/reperfusion. Similar detrimental effects of MIF deficiency were observed in vivo following coronary occlusion and reperfusion in Mif(-/-) mice. Importantly, excess JNK activation also was observed after hypoxia-reoxygenation in human fibroblasts homozygous for the MIF allele with the lowest level of promoter activity. These data indicate that endogenous MIF inhibits JNK pathway activation during reperfusion and protects the heart from injury. These findings have clinical implications for patients with the low-expression MIF allele.

 
      被申请数(0)  
 

[全文传递流程]

一般上传文献全文的时限在1个工作日内