Dynamic Remodeling From Reversible Ischemia and Sudden Cardiac Arrest

NIH RePORTER · VA · I01 · · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

 DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Dynamic Remodeling from Reversible Ischemia and Sudden Cardiac Arrest Sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) from ventricular fibrillation (VF) is a major public health problem affecting Veterans and the majority of victims have severe, asymptomatic coronary artery disease. Many patients developing VF have no evidence of a myocardial infarction and the link between ischemia and SCA remains unclear. Our completed work in swine with chronic hibernating myocardium has demonstrated that reversible ischemia leads to intrinsic myocardial adaptations that protect myocytes from injury yet increase vulnerability of the heart to spontaneous VF. Chronic telemetry has failed to identify ST changes indicative of ischemia but has re- vealed QT shortening and elevated left ventricular (LV) end-diastolic pressure during sympathetic activation immediately preceding VF. This differs from survivors and is not present the week before SCA. Limited myo- cardial proteomic profiling has demonstrated reductions in multiple glycolytic enzymes that contrast with their upregulation in survivors with hibernating myocardium. These changes could promote lethal ventricular ar- rhythmias by reducing glycolytically derived ATP, opening ATP-dependent potassium channels (resulting in QT shortening) and reducing SR calcium ATPase activity (elevating cytosolic calcium and LV end-diastolic pres- sure). Our central hypothesis is that ischemia-induced adaptations resulting from the progression of a coronary stenosis leads to dynamic molecular remodeling that transiently increases the vulnerability to VT/VF during sympathetic activation. We will initially determine whether there is a functional impairment of glycolysis (reduced enzyme activity and PET FDG uptake) in swine rescued from SCA with an ICD. Candi- date plasma biomarkers will be evaluated to identify if they are differentially elevated prior to SCA. These stud- ies will be complimented with discovery-based proteomic approaches employing quantitative label-free ion cur- rent-based LC/MS profiling of tissue and blood. This will allow us to more completely identify additional myo- cardial mechanisms that are impaired as well as identify novel circulating plasma biomarkers that are elevated in animals developing VT/VF vs. survivors. We will accomplish this by addressing two Specific Aims: Specific Aim 1 - Using an implantable cardiac defibrillator to abort SCA, determine whether there is differential ischemia-induced protein remodeling in comparison to animals that survive with hibernating myocardium. Hypothesis 1A - The activity of myocardial glycolytic enzymes is upregulated in survivors but down- regulated at the time that VT/VF develops. Hypothesis 1B - Reductions in glycolytic proteins and enzyme activity will be accompanied by reductions in FDG uptake vs. increased uptake in survivors with hibernating myocardium. Hypothesis 1C - Discovery-based label free ion current-based LC/MS tiss...

Key facts

NIH application ID
9912062
Project number
5I01BX002659-05
Recipient
VA WESTERN NEW YORK HEALTHCARE SYSTEM
Principal Investigator
John M Canty
Activity code
I01
Funding institute
VA
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
Award type
5
Project period
2016-01-01 → 2020-06-30