Objective: Reperfusion injury may affect the cardiac NO and endothelin production. We investigated whether 20 min of total ischemia followed by 40 min of reperfusion can induce apoptosis in a Langendorff model of retrogradely perfused rat hearts (37 degrees C; paced at 300/'), and we attempted to correlate these findings with measured tissue NO and ET-1 levels.
Methods: An apoptosis detection system was utilized which catalytically incorporates fluorescein-12-dUTP at the 3'-OH DNA ends using the principle of the TUNEL assay, with direct visualization of the labeled DNA. ET-1 was measured by radioimmunoassay and NO3/NO2 by ion pairing HPLC on C18 reverse phase columns.
Results: None of the postischemic (n = 6) nor of the control perfused (90 min, n = 6) hearts showed signs of apoptosis, while those exposed to longer ischemia (40 min) and reperfusion (2 h) confirmed the presence of apoptotic cells. Myocardial ET-1 concentrations were 4.8 +/- 1.0 versus 8.3 +/- 2.5 pg/100 mg (control vs. ischemic hearts, respectively; mean +/- SD; p < 0.05). Myocardial NO contents showed no differences.
Conclusion: These data suggest that the time window of apoptosis with detectable DNA fragmentation exceeds 20 min of global total ischemia and 40 min of reperfusion, a model frequently used for inducing myocardial stunning. While NO was not increased in postischemic hearts, increased ET-1 levels indirectly argue for a role of ET-1 as inducer of apoptosis, but only at a later stage of reperfusion.