flavin-adenine-dinucleotide has been researched along with Reperfusion-Injury* in 7 studies
1 review(s) available for flavin-adenine-dinucleotide and Reperfusion-Injury
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Mechanism of mitochondrial complex I damage in brain ischemia/reperfusion injury. A hypothesis.
Topics: Animals; Electron Transport Complex I; Flavin-Adenine Dinucleotide; Humans; Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery; Reactive Oxygen Species; Reperfusion Injury | 2019 |
6 other study(ies) available for flavin-adenine-dinucleotide and Reperfusion-Injury
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Optical metabolic imaging of irradiated rat heart exposed to ischemia-reperfusion injury.
Whole thoracic irradiation (WTI) is known to cause deterioration in cardiac function. Whether irradiation predisposes the heart to further ischemia and reperfusion (IR) injury is not well known. The aim of this study is to examine the susceptibility of rat hearts to IR injury following a single fraction of 15 Gy WTI and to investigate the role of mitochondrial metabolism in the differential susceptibility to IR injury. After day 35 of irradiation, ex vivo hearts from irradiated and nonirradiated rats (controls) were exposed to 25-min global ischemia followed by 60-min IR, or hearts were perfused without IR for the same protocol duration [time controls (TC)]. Online fluorometry of metabolic indices [redox state: reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH), oxidized flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD), and NADH/FAD redox ratio] and functional variables [systolic left ventricular pressure (LVP), diastolic LVP (diaLVP), coronary flow (CF), and heart rate were recorded in the beating heart; developed LVP (dLVP) and rate pressure product (RPP)] were derived. At the end of each experimental protocol, hearts were immediately snap frozen in liquid N2 for later three-dimensional imaging of the mitochondrial redox state using optical cryoimaging. Irradiation caused a delay in recovery of dLVP and RPP after IR when compared to nonirradiated hearts but recovered to the same level at the end of reperfusion. CF in the irradiated hearts recovered better than the control hearts after IR injury. Both fluorometry and 3-D cryoimaging showed that in WTI and control hearts, the redox ratio increased during ischemia (reduced) and decreased on reperfusion (oxidized) when compared to their respective TCs; however, there was no significant difference in the redox state between WTI and controls. In conclusion, our results show that although irradiation of rat hearts compromised baseline cardiovascular function, it did not alter cardiac mitochondrial redox state and induce greater susceptibility of these hearts to IR injury. Topics: Animals; Female; Flavin-Adenine Dinucleotide; Heart; Imaging, Three-Dimensional; Myocardium; NAD; Optical Imaging; Oxidation-Reduction; Rats; Rats, Wistar; Reperfusion Injury | 2018 |
Protection against cardiac injury by small Ca(2+)-sensitive K(+) channels identified in guinea pig cardiac inner mitochondrial membrane.
We tested if small conductance, Ca(2+)-sensitive K(+) channels (SK(Ca)) precondition hearts against ischemia reperfusion (IR) injury by improving mitochondrial (m) bioenergetics, if O(2)-derived free radicals are required to initiate protection via SK(Ca) channels, and, importantly, if SK(Ca) channels are present in cardiac cell inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM). NADH and FAD, superoxide (O(2)(-)), and m[Ca(2+)] were measured in guinea pig isolated hearts by fluorescence spectrophotometry. SK(Ca) and IK(Ca) channel opener DCEBIO (DCEB) was given for 10 min and ended 20 min before IR. Either TBAP, a dismutator of O(2)()(-), NS8593, an antagonist of SK(Ca) isoforms, or other K(Ca) and K(ATP) channel antagonists, were given before DCEB and before ischemia. DCEB treatment resulted in a 2-fold increase in LV pressure on reperfusion and a 2.5 fold decrease in infarct size vs. non-treated hearts associated with reduced O(2)(-) and m[Ca(2+)], and more normalized NADH and FAD during IR. Only NS8593 and TBAP antagonized protection by DCEB. Localization of SK(Ca) channels to mitochondria and IMM was evidenced by a) identification of purified mSK(Ca) protein by Western blotting, immuno-histochemical staining, confocal microscopy, and immuno-gold electron microscopy, b) 2-D gel electrophoresis and mass spectroscopy of IMM protein, c) [Ca(2+)]-dependence of mSK(Ca) channels in planar lipid bilayers, and d) matrix K(+) influx induced by DCEB and blocked by SK(Ca) antagonist UCL1684. This study shows that 1) SK(Ca) channels are located and functional in IMM, 2) mSK(Ca) channel opening by DCEB leads to protection that is O(2)(-) dependent, and 3) protection by DCEB is evident beginning during ischemia. Topics: Animals; Calmodulin; Flavin-Adenine Dinucleotide; Guinea Pigs; Heart Ventricles; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Immunohistochemistry; Isoelectric Focusing; Lipid Bilayers; Mitochondrial Membranes; Myocardium; NAD; Oxygen; Peptides; Potassium Channels; Protein Isoforms; Reperfusion Injury; Small-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channels; Spectrometry, Fluorescence | 2013 |
Optical imaging of tissue mitochondrial redox state in intact rat lungs in two models of pulmonary oxidative stress.
Ventilation with enhanced fractions of O(2) (hyperoxia) is a common and necessary treatment for hypoxemia in patients with lung failure, but prolonged exposure to hyperoxia causes lung injury. Ischemia-reperfusion (IR) injury of lung tissue is common in lung transplant or crush injury to the chest. These conditions are associated with apoptosis and decreased survival of lung tissue. The objective of this work is to use cryoimaging to evaluate the effect of exposure to hyperoxia and IR injury on lung tissue mitochondrial redox state in rats. The autofluorescent mitochondrial metabolic coenzymes nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) are electron carriers in ATP generation. These intrinsic fluorophores were imaged for rat lungs using low-temperature fluorescence imaging (cryoimaging). Perfused lungs from four groups of rats were studied: normoxia (control), control perfused with an mitochondrial complex IV inhibitor (potassium cyanide, KCN), rats exposed to hyperoxia (85% O(2)) for seven days, and from rats subjected to lung IR in vivo 24 hours prior to study. Each lung was sectioned sequentially in the transverse direction, and the images were used to reconstruct a three-dimensional (3-D) rendering. In KCN perfused lungs the respiratory chain was more reduced, whereas hyperoxic and IR lung tissue have a more oxidized respiratory chain than control lung tissue, consistent with previously measured mitochondrial dysfunction in both hyperoxic and IR lungs. Topics: Analysis of Variance; Animals; Calibration; Cold Temperature; Flavin-Adenine Dinucleotide; Histological Techniques; Hyperoxia; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Lung; Lung Injury; Male; Microscopy, Fluorescence; Mitochondria; Models, Biological; NAD; Oxidation-Reduction; Oxidative Stress; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Reperfusion Injury | 2012 |
Improved mitochondrial bioenergetics by anesthetic preconditioning during and after 2 hours of 27 degrees C ischemia in isolated hearts.
We examined if sevoflurane given before cold ischemia of intact hearts (anesthetic preconditioning, APC) affords additional protection by further improving mitochondrial energy balance and if this is abolished by a mitochondrial KATP blocker. NADH and FAD fluorescence was measured within the left ventricular wall of 5 groups of isolated guinea pig hearts: (1) hypothermia alone; (2) hypothermia+ischemia; (3) APC (4.1% sevoflurane)+cold ischemia; (4) 5-HD+cold ischemia, and (5) APC+5-HD+cold ischemia. Hearts were exposed to sevoflurane for 15 minutes followed by 15 minutes of washout at 37 degrees C before cooling, 2 hours of 27 degrees C ischemia, and 2 hours of 37 degrees C reperfusion. The KATP channel inhibitor 5-HD was perfused before and after sevoflurane. Ischemia caused a rapid increase in NADH and a decrease in FAD that waned over 2 hours. Warm reperfusion led to a decrease in NADH and an increase in FAD. APC attenuated the changes in NADH and FAD and further improved postischemic function and reduced infarct size. 5-HD blocked the cardioprotective effects of APC but not APC-induced alterations of NADH and FAD. Thus, APC improves redox balance and has additive cardioprotective effects with mild hypothermic ischemia. 5-HD blocks APC-induced cardioprotective effects but not improvements in mitochondrial bioenergetics. This suggests that mediation of protection by KATP channel opening during cold ischemia and reperfusion is downstream from the APC-induced improvement in redox state or that these changes in redox state are not attenuated by KATP channel antagonism. Topics: Anesthetics; Anesthetics, Inhalation; Animals; ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters; Blood Pressure; Coronary Circulation; Energy Metabolism; Flavin-Adenine Dinucleotide; Guinea Pigs; Heart Rate; In Vitro Techniques; Ischemic Preconditioning, Myocardial; KATP Channels; Methyl Ethers; Mitochondria, Heart; NAD; Oxidation-Reduction; Oxygen Consumption; Potassium Channels, Inwardly Rectifying; Reperfusion Injury; Sevoflurane; Ventricular Function, Left | 2005 |
Impairment of hepatic mitochondrial respiratory function following storage and orthotopic transplantation of rat livers.
Prolonged storage of organs for transplant results in tissue damage which may be compounded on reperfusion of the graft tissue. The effect of storage times was examined on hepatic mitochondrial oxygen consumption and activities of complexes I, II-III, IV, and V in mitochondria isolated from rat liver isografts stored for 25 min and 24 h pre- and posttransplantation. While Complex I activity was significantly (P < 0.05) inhibited under all the conditions studied, Complex II-III activity was only significantly (P < 0.05) reduced following transplantation of 24-h stored tissue. Complex IV activity remained unchanged under all the conditions studied. Although Complex V activity was significantly damaged within the first 25 min of ischemia, activity values were partially recovered to control levels following 3 h of reperfusion after transplantation. Prolonged (24 h) storage induced decreases in Complex V activity which were irrecoverable. Mitochondria subjected to 25 min ischemia alone also showed a significant (P < 0.01) decrease in NAD(+)-linked respiratory control indices due to a stimulated state 4 rate. The 24-h storage and transplantation brought about a significantly (P < 0.001) greater inhibition of respiratory control and state 3 respiration. FAD-linked respiration parameters were significantly (P < 0.05) affected in livers subjected to prolonged (24 h) storage or transplantation. These data suggest that a loss of membrane integrity coupled with an inhibition of Complexes I and V and an involvement of Complex II-III in 24-h stored hepatic transplants accounts for mitochondrial respiratory dysfunction in hepatic transplantation injury. No indication of Complex IV damage was found in this study. This study shows that damage to specific mitochondrial complexes occurs as a consequence of hypothermic ischemic injury. Topics: Adenosine Triphosphate; Animals; Cryopreservation; Electron Transport; Flavin-Adenine Dinucleotide; In Vitro Techniques; Liver; Liver Transplantation; Male; Mitochondria, Liver; NAD; Organ Preservation; Oxidative Phosphorylation; Oxygen Consumption; Rats; Rats, Inbred Lew; Reperfusion Injury | 1998 |
Core and penumbral nitric oxide synthase activity during cerebral ischemia and reperfusion.
The present studies examined the hypothesis that the distribution of cerebral injury after a focal ischemic insult is associated with the regional distribution of nitric oxide synthase (NOS) activity.. Based on previous studies that certain anatomically well-defined areas are prone to become either core or penumbra after middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO), we measured NOS activity in these areas from the right and left hemispheres in a spontaneously hypertensive rat filament model. Four groups were studied: (1) controls (immediate decapitation); (2) 1.5 hours of MCAO with no reperfusion (R0); (3) 1.5 hours of MCAO with 0.5 hour of reperfusion (R0.5); and (4) 1.5 hours of MCAO with 24 hours of reperfusion (R24). Three groups of corresponding isoflurane sham controls were also included: 1.5 (S1.5) or 2 (S2.0) hours of anesthesia and 1.5 hours of anesthesia+24 hours of observation (S24).. Control core NOS activity for combined right and left hemispheres was 129% greater than penumbral NOS activity (P<0.05). Combined core NOS activity was also greater (P<0.05) in the three sham groups: 208%, 122%, and 161%, respectively. In the three MCAO groups, ischemic and nonischemic core NOS remained higher than penumbral regions (P<0.05). However, NOS activity was lower in the ischemic than in the nonischemic core in all three groups: R0 (29% lower), R0.5 (48%), and R24 (86%) (P<0.05). Addition of cofactors (10 micromol/L tetrahydrobiopterin, 3 micromol/L flavin adenine dinucleotide, and 3 micromol/L flavin mononucleotide) increased NOS activity in all groups and lessened the decrease in ischemic core and penumbral NOS.. Greater NOS activity in core regions could explain in part the increased vulnerability of that region to ischemia and could theoretically contribute to the progression of the infarct over time. The data also suggest that NOS activity during ischemia and reperfusion could be influenced by the availability of cofactors. Topics: Anesthetics, Inhalation; Animals; Antioxidants; Arterial Occlusive Diseases; Biopterins; Brain Ischemia; Cerebral Arteries; Cricetinae; Flavin Mononucleotide; Flavin-Adenine Dinucleotide; Isoflurane; Male; Nitric Oxide Synthase; Nitric Oxide Synthase Type III; Rats; Rats, Inbred SHR; Reperfusion; Reperfusion Injury; Time Factors | 1998 |