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Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 290: R27-R33, 2006. First published September 8, 2005; doi:10.1152/ajpregu.00452.2005
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TRANSLATIONAL PHYSIOLOGY

Endogenous estrogen mediates a higher threshold for endotoxin-induced myocardial protection in females

Jeffrey M. Pitcher,1 Meijing Wang,1,2 Ben M. Tsai,1 Ajay Kher,1,2 Nicholas T. Nelson,1 and Daniel R. Meldrum1,2,3

1Department of Surgery, 3Department of Cellular and Integrative Physiology, and 2Center for Immunobiology, Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis, Indiana

Submitted 28 June 2005 ; accepted in final form 30 August 2005

ABSTRACT

Myocardial endotoxin tolerance may be induced in both males and females; however, it remains unknown whether there are mechanistic and threshold differences between the sexes. We hypothesized that endogenous estrogen mediates a higher threshold for endotoxin (ETX)-induced protection in females. Adult proestrus and ovariectomized (OVX) female rats were preconditioned (PC) with intraperitoneal injections of 125 (PC+125) or 500 (PC+500) µg/kg Salmonella typhimurium LPS (ETX) or normal saline (PC–). Twenty-four hours later, injury dose ETX (500 µg/kg) was injected. After 6 h, myocardial function was measured via Langendorff. p38 MAPK and JNK activation and TNF-{alpha}, IL-1, and IL-6 expression were evaluated. ETX injury significantly decreased left ventricular developed pressure in PC– groups vs. controls. PC+500 regimen protected against ETX injury, resulting in normal cardiac function. PC+125 regimen protected OVX but not proestrus females, which had diminished myocardial function. Activated JNK and TNF-{alpha} increased in PC– but were diminished in PC+500 animals. Importantly, activated JNK and TNF increased in PC+125 proestrus females, whereas PC+125 OVX females displayed decreases in these molecules. There were no differences in p38 MAPK activation or expression of IL-1 or IL-6. These results demonstrate that proestrus females require a higher stimulus (PC+500) to achieve myocardial protection against ETX injury. Removal of endogenous estrogen (OVX) lowered the preconditioning threshold (PC+125), resulting in protection after lesser injury. Additionally, myocardial JNK and TNF expression was decreased in OVX PC+125 females, which correlated with myocardial function differences. Therefore, we conclude that endogenous estrogen mediates a higher threshold for ETX tolerance in female myocardium.

tolerance; gender; acute injury



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: D. R. Meldrum, 545 Barnhill Dr., Emerson 215, Indiana Univ. Medical Center, Indianapolis, IN 46202 (e-mail: dmeldrum{at}iupui.edu)




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