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Department of Pharmacology, University of South Alabama School of Medicine, Mobile, Alabama 36688
Cellular sodium excess is cytotoxic
because it increases both the intracellular osmotic load and
intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i). Because sodium levels rise during
hypoxia, it is thought to contribute to hypoxic injury. Thus the
present study tested the hypothesis that taurine-linked reductions in
[Na+]i reduce hypoxia-induced cell injury.
Taurine depletion was achieved by exposing isolated neonatal
cardiomyocytes to medium containing the taurine analog
-Alanine. As
predicted, the
-Alanine-treated cell exhibited less hypoxia-induced
necrosis and apoptosis than the control, as evidenced by less
swelling, shrinkage, TdT-mediated dUTP nick end labeling staining, and
accumulation of trypan blue. After 1 h of chemical hypoxia,
[Na+]i was 3.5-fold greater in the control
than the taurine-deficient cell. Although more taurine was lost from
the control cell than from the
-Alanine-treated cell during hypoxia,
the combined taurine and sodium osmotic load was lower in the
-Alanine-treated cell. Taurine deficiency also reduced the degree of
hypoxia-induced calcium overload. Thus the observed resistance against
hypoxia-induced necrosis and apoptosis is probably related to
an improvement in sodium and calcium handling.
cardiomyocytes; metabolic inhibition; osmolality; osmotic stress; necrosis
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