Riboflavin-mediated reduction of oxidant injury, rejection, and vasculopathy after cardiac allotransplantation
Autor: | Hui Liao, David J. Pinsky, Hiroaki Harada, Koichiro Iwanaga, Sunitha Yanamadala, Yasushi Yoshikawa, Donald E. Hultquist, Scott H. Visovatti, Tomomi Hasegawa |
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Rok vydání: | 2007 |
Předmět: |
Graft Rejection
Male medicine.medical_treatment Riboflavin Ischemia Coronary Disease Pharmacology Lipid peroxidation chemistry.chemical_compound Mice medicine Animals Transplantation Homologous Transplantation business.industry Immunosuppression medicine.disease Malondialdehyde Oxidants Mice Inbred C57BL B vitamins Disease Models Animal Oxidative Stress chemistry Reperfusion Injury Immunology Vitamin B Complex Disease Progression Mice Inbred CBA Heart Transplantation Lipid Peroxidation business Allotransplantation |
Zdroj: | Transplantation. 83(6) |
ISSN: | 0041-1337 |
Popis: | Background Riboflavin is a well-known nutritional supplement that has been shown to exhibit antioxidant properties and protect tissue from oxidative damage. We hypothesized that riboflavin given during cardiac ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) might reduce subsequent acute rejection, after allotransplantation, and coronary allograft vasculopathy (CAV). Methods A murine heterotopic cardiac transplantation model was used to test whether riboflavin improves I/R injury and acute/chronic rejection. Results Riboflavin significantly reduced oxidant production and inflammatory mediator production induced by I/R injury, as evidenced by decreased levels of malondialdehyde, myeloperoxidase activity, and tumor necrosis factor alpha. Administration of riboflavin also improved graft survival and suppressed T-cell infiltration and donor-reactive alloantibody formation during the early period after allotransplantation. A murine long-term cardiac allograft model using immunosuppression (preoperative anti-murine CD4 and anti-CD8) was employed to investigate the effect of riboflavin against CAV at 60 days. Riboflavin-treated grafts exhibited a significant decrease in the severity of coronary artery luminal occlusion as compared with saline-treated grafts (17.4+/-1.8% vs. 43.5+/-5.6%, P=0.0012). However, there was no significant effect of riboflavin to reduce donor-reactive alloantibodies in this chronic model. Conclusions These data indicate that riboflavin improves early I/R injury and reduces the development of CAV, most likely due to alloantigen-independent effects such as reduced early graft oxidant stress. Riboflavin administered in the setting of cardiac allograft transplantation appears to be a powerful means to reduce early graft lipid peroxidation, leukocytic infiltration, and cytokine production as well as to suppress the late development of cardiac allograft vasculopathy. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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