Cardioprotection of Ischemia/Reperfusion Injury by Cholesterol-Dependent MG53-Mediated Membrane Repair

Xianhua Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Wenjun Xie(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yi Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Peihui Lin(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Liang Han(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Peidong Han(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yanru Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zheng Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Guangju Ji(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ming Zheng(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Noah Weisleder(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Rui‐Ping Xiao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Hiroshi Takeshima(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jianjie Ma(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Heping Cheng(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Circulation Research
May 14, 2010
Cited by 169

Abstract

RATIONALE: Unrepaired cardiomyocyte membrane injury causes irreplaceable cell loss, leading to myocardial fibrosis and eventually heart failure. However, the cellular and molecular mechanisms of cardiac membrane repair are largely unknown. MG53, a newly identified striated muscle-specific protein, is involved in skeletal muscle membrane repair. But the role of MG53 in the heart has not been determined. OBJECTIVE: We sought to investigate whether MG53 mediates membrane repair in cardiomyocytes and, if so, the cellular and molecular mechanism underlying MG53-mediated membrane repair in cardiomyocytes. Moreover, we determined possible cardioprotective effect of MG53-mediated membrane repair. METHODS AND RESULTS: We demonstrated that MG53 is crucial to the emergency membrane repair response in cardiomyocytes and protects the heart from stress-induced loss of cardiomyocytes. Disruption of the sarcolemmal membrane by mechanical, electric, chemical, or metabolic insults caused rapid and robust translocation of MG53 toward the injury sites. Ablation of MG53 prevented sarcolemmal resealing after infrared laser-induced membrane damage in intact heart, and exacerbated mitochondrial dysfunction and loss of cardiomyocytes during ischemia/reperfusion injury. Unexpectedly, the MG53-mediated cardiac membrane repair was mediated by a cholesterol-dependent mechanism: depletion of membrane cholesterol abolished, and its recovery restored injury-induced membrane translocation of MG53. The redox status of MG53 did not affect initiation of MG53 translocation, whereas MG53 oxidation conferred stability to the membrane repair patch. CONCLUSIONS: Thus, cholesterol-dependent MG53-mediated membrane repair is a vital, heretofore unappreciated cardioprotective mechanism against a multitude of insults and may bear important therapeutic implications.


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