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  • Title: Hydrogen peroxide-induced oxidative stress to the mammalian heart-muscle cell (cardiomyocyte): nonperoxidative purine and pyrimidine nucleotide depletion.
    Author: Janero DR, Hreniuk D, Sharif HM.
    Journal: J Cell Physiol; 1993 Jun; 155(3):494-504. PubMed ID: 8491789.
    Abstract:
    Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) overload may contribute to cardiac ischemia-reperfusion injury. We report utilization of a previously described cardiomyocyte model (J. Cell. Physiol., 149:347, 1991) to assess the effect of H2O2-induced oxidative stress on heart-muscle purine and pyrimidine nucleotides and high-energy phosphates (ATP, phosphocreatine). Oxidative stress induced by bolus H2O2 elicited the loss of cardiomyocyte purine and pyrimidine nucleotides, leading to eventual de-energization upon total ATP and phosphocreatine depletion. The rate and extent of ATP and phosphocreatine loss were dependent on the degree of oxidative stress within the range of 50 microM to 1.0 mM H2O2. At the highest H2O2 concentration, 5 min was sufficient to elicit appreciable cardiomyocyte high-energy phosphate loss, the extent of which could be limited by prompt elimination of H2O2 from the culture medium. Only H2O2 dismutation completely prevented ATP loss during H2O2-induced oxidative stress, whereas various free-radical scavengers and metal chelators afforded no significant ATP preservation. Exogenously-supplied catabolic substrates and glycolytic or tricarboxylic acid-cycle intermediates did not ameliorate the observed ATP and phosphocreatine depletion, suggesting that cardiomyocyte de-energization during H2O2-induced oxidative stress reflected defects in substrate utilization/energy conservation. Compromise of cardiomyocyte nucleotide and phosphocreatine pools during H2O2-induced oxidative stress was completely dissociated from membrane peroxidative damage and maintenance of cell integrity. Cardiomyocyte de-energization in response to H2O2 overload may constitute a distinct nonperoxidative mode of injury by which cardiomyocyte energy balance could be chronically compromised in the post-ischemic heart.
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