학술논문

5.1 Enhanced Communication Via Gap Junctions Protects the Endothelium from Ischaemia-Reperfusion Injury in Vivo in Man
Document Type
Abstract
Source
Artery Research. 4(4):147-148
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
1872-9312
1876-4401
Abstract
Background: Endothelial dysfunction is the hallmark of ischaemia- reper-fusion (IR) injury and intercellular gap junctions appear to play a role in this process. Rotigaptide (ZP-123) is a novel anti-arrhythmic agent that increases inter-cellular communication via gap junctions. We tested the hypothesis that rotigaptide protects the human forearm arterial circulation from IR induced endothelial dysfunction.Methods: Healthy male subjects (n = 21) were recruited into a randomised double-blind cross-over study. IR injury (upper arm cuff inflated to 200 mmHg for 20 min) was induced in the presence of intra-arterial rotigaptide (25 nmol/min) or saline placebo on separate visits. Using venous occlusion plethysmography, forearm arterial blood flow was measured during intra-arterial infusion of acetylcholine (ACh; 5–20 µg/min) or sodium nitroprus-side (SNP; 2 -8 mg/min) before and after IR injury.Results: Resting blood flow remained unchanged throughout (P = NS). ACh and SNP caused arterial vasodilatation (P < 0.01) that was not affected by rotigaptide (P = NS). IR injury caused substantial impairment of ACh-induced vasodilatation (P = 0.007). This effect was abolished by rotigaptide. Endothelium-independent vasodilatation evoked by SNP was unaffected by either IR injury or rotigaptide (P = NS).Conclusion: IR injury impairs endothelium-dependent vasomotion: an effect that is reversed by rotigaptide. This is the first clinical study to demonstrate that enhanced communication via gap junctions protects the endothelium from IR injury.