Cardioprotective effects of osteopontin-1 during development of murine ischemic cardiomyopathy

  • Georg D Duerr
  • Bettina Mesenholl
  • Jan C Heinemann
  • Martin Zoerlein
  • Peter Hübener
  • Prisca Schneider
  • Andreas Feisst
  • Alexander Ghanem
  • Klaus Tiemann
  • Daniela Dewald
  • Armin Welz
  • Oliver Dewald

Related Research units

Abstract

Repetitive brief ischemia and reperfusion (I/R) is associated with ventricular dysfunction in pathogenesis of murine ischemic cardiomyopathy and human hibernating myocardium. We investigated the role of matricellular protein osteopontin-1 (OPN) in murine model of repetitive I/R. One 15-min LAD-occlusion followed by reperfusion was performed daily over 3, 5, and 7 consecutive days in C57/Bl6 wildtype- (WT-) and OPN(-/-)-mice (n = 8/group). After echocardiography hearts were processed for histological and mRNA-studies. Cardiac fibroblasts were isolated, cultured, and stimulated with TGF- β 1. WT-mice showed an early, strong, and cardiomyocyte-specific osteopontin-expression leading to interstitial macrophage infiltration and consecutive fibrosis after 7 days I/R in absence of myocardial infarction. In contrast, OPN(-/-)-mice showed small, nontransmural infarctions after 3 days I/R associated with significantly worse ventricular dysfunction. OPN(-/-)-mice had different expression of myocardial contractile elements and antioxidative mediators and a lower expression of chemokines during I/R. OPN(-/-)-mice showed predominant collagen deposition in macrophage-rich small infarctions. We found lower induction of tenascin-C, MMP-9, MMP-12, and TIMP-1, whereas MMP-13-expression was higher in OPN(-/-)-mice. Cultured OPN(-/-)-myofibroblasts confirmed these findings. In conclusion, osteopontin seems to modulate expression of contractile elements, antioxidative mediators, and inflammatory response and subsequently remodel in order to protect cardiomyocytes in murine ischemic cardiomyopathy.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN2314-6133
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01.01.2014
PubMed 24971311