Publication: Novel perspectives on the PHD-HIF oxygen sensing pathway in
cardioprotection mediated by IPC and RIPC
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Frontiers Media
Abstract
Reperfusion of ischemic cardiac tissue is the standard treatment for
improving clinical outcome following myocardial infarction but is
inevitably associated with ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI). Ischemic
myocardial injury can be alleviated by exposing the heart to brief
episodes of sublethal ischemia-reperfusion prior to the ischemic insult,
a phenomenon that has been termed ischemic preconditioning (IPC).
Similarly, remote IPC (RIPC) is defined as transient episodes of
ischemia at a distant site before a subsequent prolonged injury of the
target organ. In this setting, adaptive responses to hypoxia/ischemia in
peripheral tissues include the release of soluble factors that have the
potential to protect cardiomyocytes remotely. Oxygen fluctuations is a
hallmark of insufficient tissue perfusion and ischemic episodes.
Emerging evidence indicates that prolyl hydroxylase oxygen sensors
(PHDs) and hypoxia-inducible transcription factors (HIFs) are critical
regulators of IPC and RIPC. In this review, we discuss recent findings
concerning the role of the PHD-HIF axis in IPC and RIPC-mediated
cardioprotection and examine molecular pathways and cell types that
might be involved. We also appraise the therapeutic value of targeting
the PHD-HIF axis to enhance cardiac tolerance against IRI.
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Ischemic preconditioning Heart PHD oxygen sensors Hypoxia-inducible factors Remote ischemic preconditioning ISCHEMIA-REPERFUSION INJURY INDUCIBLE FACTOR-I PRECONDITIONING-INDUCED
CARDIOPROTECTION PERMEABILITY TRANSITION PORE NITRIC-OXIDE SYNTHASE INFARCT SIZE KAPPA-B METABOLIC SWITCH COMPLEX-I RAT-HEART
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Front Physiol. 2015; 6:137







