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Title: Cardiotoxic Effects of the Antineoplastic Doxorubicin in a Model of Metabolic Syndrome: Oxidative Stress and Transporter Expression in the Heart. Author: Ogonowski N, Rukavina Mikusic NL, Kouyoumdzian NM, Choi MR, Fellet A, Balaszczuk AM, Celuch SM. Journal: J Cardiovasc Pharmacol; 2021 Dec 01; 78(6):784-791. PubMed ID: 34524257. Abstract: The aim of the present work was to examine whether metabolic syndrome-like conditions in rats with fructose (F) overload modify the cardiotoxic effects induced by doxorubicin (DOX) and whether the treatment altered the expression of P-gp, breast cancer resistance protein, and organic cation/carnitine transporters in the heart. Male Sprague-Dawley rats received either tap water (control group [C]; n = 16) or water with F 10% wt/vol (n = 16) during 8 weeks. Three days before being killed, the animals received a single dose of DOX (6 mg/kg, ip, md) (C-DOX and F-DOX groups) or vehicle (VEH; ISS 1 mL/kg BW; ip) (C-VEH and F-VEH groups) (n = 8 per group). F overload enhanced thiobarbituric acid-reactive substance levels in the left ventricle, and DOX injection further increased those values. DOX did not alter thiobarbituric acid-reactive substance production in C animals. DOX caused a decrease of 30% in the ejection fraction and a nearly 40% reduction in the fractional shortening in F animals, but not in C rats. Cardiac tissue levels of P-gp decreased by about 30% in F rats compared with the C groups. DOX did not modify cardiac P-gp expression. Breast cancer resistance protein and organic cation/carnitine transporter (OCTN 1/2/3) protein levels did not change with either F or DOX. It is suggested that DOX could cause greater cardiotoxicity in rats receiving F, probably due to enhanced cardiac lipid peroxidation and lower expression of cardiac P-gp. These results support the hypothesis that the cardiotoxicity of DOX could be increased under metabolic syndrome-like conditions or in other health disorders that involve cardiovascular risk factors.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]