Cargando…

Characterizing Autophagy in the Cold Ischemic Injury of Small Bowel Grafts: Evidence from Rat Jejunum

Cold ischemic injury to the intestine during preservation remains an unresolved issue in transplantation medicine. Autophagy, a cytoplasmic protein degradation pathway, is essential for metabolic adaptation to starvation, hypoxia, and ischemia. It has been implicated in the cold ischemia (CI) of oth...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Caleb, Ibitamuno, Erlitz, Luca, Telek, Vivien, Vecsernyés, Mónika, Sétáló, György, Hardi, Péter, Takács, Ildikó, Jancsó, Gábor, Nagy, Tibor
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8234201/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34204418
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/metabo11060396
_version_ 1783714028833472512
author Caleb, Ibitamuno
Erlitz, Luca
Telek, Vivien
Vecsernyés, Mónika
Sétáló, György
Hardi, Péter
Takács, Ildikó
Jancsó, Gábor
Nagy, Tibor
author_facet Caleb, Ibitamuno
Erlitz, Luca
Telek, Vivien
Vecsernyés, Mónika
Sétáló, György
Hardi, Péter
Takács, Ildikó
Jancsó, Gábor
Nagy, Tibor
author_sort Caleb, Ibitamuno
collection PubMed
description Cold ischemic injury to the intestine during preservation remains an unresolved issue in transplantation medicine. Autophagy, a cytoplasmic protein degradation pathway, is essential for metabolic adaptation to starvation, hypoxia, and ischemia. It has been implicated in the cold ischemia (CI) of other transplantable organs. This study determines the changes in intestinal autophagy evoked by cold storage and explores the effects of autophagy on ischemic grafts. Cold preservation was simulated by placing the small intestines of Wistar rats in an IGL-1 (Institute George Lopez) solution at 4 °C for varying periods (3, 6, 9, and 12 h). The extent of graft preservation injury (mucosal and cellular injury) and changes in autophagy were measured after each CI time. Subsequently, we determined the differences in apoptosis and preservation injury after activating autophagy with rapamycin or inhibiting it with 3-methyladenine. The results revealed that ischemic injury and autophagy were induced by cold storage. Autophagy peaked at 3 h and subsequently declined. After 12 h of storage, autophagic expression was reduced significantly. Additionally, enhanced intestinal autophagy by rapamycin was associated with less tissue, cellular, and apoptotic damage during and after the 12-h long preservation. After reperfusion, grafts with enhanced autophagy still presented with less injury. Inhibiting autophagy exhibited the opposite trend. These findings demonstrate intestinal autophagy changes in cold preservation. Furthermore, enhanced autophagy was protective against cold ischemia–reperfusion damage of the small bowels.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8234201
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-82342012021-06-27 Characterizing Autophagy in the Cold Ischemic Injury of Small Bowel Grafts: Evidence from Rat Jejunum Caleb, Ibitamuno Erlitz, Luca Telek, Vivien Vecsernyés, Mónika Sétáló, György Hardi, Péter Takács, Ildikó Jancsó, Gábor Nagy, Tibor Metabolites Article Cold ischemic injury to the intestine during preservation remains an unresolved issue in transplantation medicine. Autophagy, a cytoplasmic protein degradation pathway, is essential for metabolic adaptation to starvation, hypoxia, and ischemia. It has been implicated in the cold ischemia (CI) of other transplantable organs. This study determines the changes in intestinal autophagy evoked by cold storage and explores the effects of autophagy on ischemic grafts. Cold preservation was simulated by placing the small intestines of Wistar rats in an IGL-1 (Institute George Lopez) solution at 4 °C for varying periods (3, 6, 9, and 12 h). The extent of graft preservation injury (mucosal and cellular injury) and changes in autophagy were measured after each CI time. Subsequently, we determined the differences in apoptosis and preservation injury after activating autophagy with rapamycin or inhibiting it with 3-methyladenine. The results revealed that ischemic injury and autophagy were induced by cold storage. Autophagy peaked at 3 h and subsequently declined. After 12 h of storage, autophagic expression was reduced significantly. Additionally, enhanced intestinal autophagy by rapamycin was associated with less tissue, cellular, and apoptotic damage during and after the 12-h long preservation. After reperfusion, grafts with enhanced autophagy still presented with less injury. Inhibiting autophagy exhibited the opposite trend. These findings demonstrate intestinal autophagy changes in cold preservation. Furthermore, enhanced autophagy was protective against cold ischemia–reperfusion damage of the small bowels. MDPI 2021-06-17 /pmc/articles/PMC8234201/ /pubmed/34204418 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/metabo11060396 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Caleb, Ibitamuno
Erlitz, Luca
Telek, Vivien
Vecsernyés, Mónika
Sétáló, György
Hardi, Péter
Takács, Ildikó
Jancsó, Gábor
Nagy, Tibor
Characterizing Autophagy in the Cold Ischemic Injury of Small Bowel Grafts: Evidence from Rat Jejunum
title Characterizing Autophagy in the Cold Ischemic Injury of Small Bowel Grafts: Evidence from Rat Jejunum
title_full Characterizing Autophagy in the Cold Ischemic Injury of Small Bowel Grafts: Evidence from Rat Jejunum
title_fullStr Characterizing Autophagy in the Cold Ischemic Injury of Small Bowel Grafts: Evidence from Rat Jejunum
title_full_unstemmed Characterizing Autophagy in the Cold Ischemic Injury of Small Bowel Grafts: Evidence from Rat Jejunum
title_short Characterizing Autophagy in the Cold Ischemic Injury of Small Bowel Grafts: Evidence from Rat Jejunum
title_sort characterizing autophagy in the cold ischemic injury of small bowel grafts: evidence from rat jejunum
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8234201/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34204418
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/metabo11060396
work_keys_str_mv AT calebibitamuno characterizingautophagyinthecoldischemicinjuryofsmallbowelgraftsevidencefromratjejunum
AT erlitzluca characterizingautophagyinthecoldischemicinjuryofsmallbowelgraftsevidencefromratjejunum
AT telekvivien characterizingautophagyinthecoldischemicinjuryofsmallbowelgraftsevidencefromratjejunum
AT vecsernyesmonika characterizingautophagyinthecoldischemicinjuryofsmallbowelgraftsevidencefromratjejunum
AT setalogyorgy characterizingautophagyinthecoldischemicinjuryofsmallbowelgraftsevidencefromratjejunum
AT hardipeter characterizingautophagyinthecoldischemicinjuryofsmallbowelgraftsevidencefromratjejunum
AT takacsildiko characterizingautophagyinthecoldischemicinjuryofsmallbowelgraftsevidencefromratjejunum
AT jancsogabor characterizingautophagyinthecoldischemicinjuryofsmallbowelgraftsevidencefromratjejunum
AT nagytibor characterizingautophagyinthecoldischemicinjuryofsmallbowelgraftsevidencefromratjejunum