(Circulation. 2008;117:3165-3167.)
© 2008 American Heart Association, Inc.
Editorial |
From the Division of Surgical Science, Department of Surgery, Columbia University Medical Center, New York, NY.
Correspondence to Dr Ann Marie Schmidt, Division of Surgical Science, Department of Surgery, Columbia University Medical Center, 630 W 168th St, P&S 17–401, New York, NY 10032. E-mail: ams11{at}columbia.edu
Key Words: Editorials infarction myocardium
| Introduction |
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Article p 3216
| RAGE is a Multiligand Receptor: Impact on Myocardial Infarction |
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Of note, the RAGE ligand family also exerts injurious effects in the diabetic heart. In diabetic mouse hearts, copious formation of AGEs is in place at baseline and is augmented by I/R in the isolated perfused heart.3 A major finding in that work is that in mice devoid of RAGE, both basal and I/R-stimulated increases in AGE formation were greatly reduced.3 These data underscore that RAGE, an activator of NADPH oxidase, both transduces the effects of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and contributes to AGE generation, likely via ROS, to stimulate a vicious cycle of cell stress.10
A salient feature of AGE-RAGE interaction in I/R was its impact on energy metabolism.3,4 ATP levels were significantly higher after I/R in RAGE-null, RAGE-signaling mutant, and sRAGE-treated wild-type mice versus controls,3,4 suggesting a link between AGE-RAGE and glycolytic metabolism, likely via ROS-mediated effects on GAPDH. Studies addressing metabolic consequences of non-AGE ligands interaction with RAGE will reveal if blockade of such interactions will improve metabolic viability of the ischemic heart.
| HMGB1-RAGE: Signaling to Harm or Healing in the I/R Heart? |
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Collectively, these findings suggesting that blockade of ligand-RAGE interaction or genetic deletion of RAGE impart cardioprotection stand in contrast to those illustrating that local administration of HMGB1 to the infarcted murine heart facilitated regeneration, at least in part by stimulating proliferation and differentiation of local cardiac c-kit+ cells.11 Limana and coauthors showed that RAGE was expressed in this population of cells, both basally and after infarction. To address these apparently discrepant results, we must first examine the study conditions. Andrassy and colleagues tested higher doses of HMGB1 (10 µg/mouse) delivered through the peritoneum 1 hour before infarction. Their infarction model was one in which 30 minutes of LAD coronary artery occlusion was followed by reperfusion.1 In the study by Limana and colleagues, in which HMGB1 exerted cardioprotective effects,11 permanent LAD occlusion was performed. Further, HMGB1, at much lower doses (200 ng/mouse) was administered locally to the injured myocardium beginning 4 hours after the infarction. These differing conditions raise the following considerations. First, intraperitoneal administration of HMGB1, acting at least in part via RAGE before infarction may have primed the organism—both temporally and systemically—and activated the host inflammatory response,12–13 which was then augmented by LAD coronary artery occlusion/reperfusion in the heart. Second, Limana and colleagues administered HMGB1 directly to the heart, thereby largely avoiding systemic inflammatory mechanisms, and third, Limana and colleagues did not reperfuse the injured heart shortly after ligation of the LAD coronary artery. Thus, the hearts of Limanas mice were spared the rapid production and release of ROS and inflammatory species in the reperfusion phase that greatly contribute to injury to the heart.
| HMGB1: Insights into Cellular Fate from In Vitro Analyses |
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What about other cell types within the heart? Rossini and colleagues suggested that HMGB1 exerts its proregenerative effects on fibroblasts.16 These authors showed that incubation of RAGE-expressing human cardiac fibroblasts with HMGB1 (especially at doses of 100 ng/mL or less) upregulated a host of proinflammatory species, such as vascular endothelial growth factor, Interferon-
, Interleukins-10, -1β, -4 and -9, and tumor necrosis factor
. Indeed, conditioned media from these cells stimulated the migration and proliferation of c-kit+ cardiac stem cells in a manner significantly more profound than that exerted by direct incubation of these stem cells with HMGB1.16 Thus, paracrine effects of HMGB1 stimulated by cardiac fibroblasts may override potentially negative effects on cardiomyocytes. However, it remains to be determined if local administration of HMGB1 to the injured heart would remain protective in ischemia and reperfusion injury after LAD infarction. In reperfusion, the ability of HMGB1 protein to survive and counteract the explosive release of prooxidative and proinflammatory factors into the heart during that period must be probed.
The Multiple Sides of RAGE-Dependent Inflammation: Harnessing Primal Responses to Heal the Heart
These considerations suggest that HMGB1/RAGE–dependent inflammation is a double-edged sword. What is the evidence? In addition to the present study,1 2 additional reports have suggested that in allo-immune responses in murine cardiac transplantation, HMGB1-mediated inflammation was highly detrimental to the allograft. Allotransplantation resulted in marked upregulation of both RAGE and HMGB1 (especially in inflammatory cells) in the allograft; blockade of ligand-RAGE interaction with sRAGE or direct blockade of HMGB1 (with rA-box) both increased allograft survival and suppressed the destructive allo-inflammatory response.17–18
The RAGE sword, however, clearly has a softer edge, because RAGE-dependent inflammatory mechanisms may exert beneficial responses. For example, RAGE is essential for effective T-lymphocyte priming reactions in vivo and in vitro.13 Further, in acute crush of the sciatic nerve in mice, administration of sRAGE, or F(ab')2 fragments of anti-RAGE, anti-S100/calgranulin or anti-amphoterin (ie, anti-HMGB1) immunoglobulin G significantly suppressed the regenerative response, as measured by functional and pathological end points.19 Deeper probing revealed that impairment of RAGE signaling in vivo in either, but especially both axonal and macrophage cellular components in the injured sciatic nerve greatly suppressed regeneration.20 Thus, multiple interacting RAGE-expressing cells bathed in RAGE ligands may contribute to these injury responses. In such complex environments, autocrine, paracrine, or combined effects of RAGE ligands in distinct cell types may signal to yield either injury or repair.
In conclusion, lessons learned from studies in which RAGE ligands or RAGE itself have been antagonized, or RAGE/RAGE signaling has been modulated in transgenic mice, reveal that settings exist in which RAGE ligands such as HMGB1 may exert salutary or detrimental effects. Exciting research efforts underway at this time, focused on harnessing the healing powers of RAGE, hold promise for tipping the balance of the primal attack responses of RAGE to its regeneration potential from the nervous system to the heart. Learning how to capture and prevail over the damaging primal effects of RAGE may lead us to new ways to transform RAGE into redemption.
| Acknowledgments |
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The authors have received grant support from the US Public Health Service and the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation.
Disclosures
Dr Schmidt receives research support from TransTech Pharma and is a member of their scientific advisory board. The other authors report no conflicts.
| Footnotes |
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| References |
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2. Aleshin A, Ananthakrishnan R, Li Q, Rosario R, Lu Y, Qu W, Song F, Bakr S, Szabolcs M, D'Agati V, Liu R, Homma S, Schmidt AM, Yan SF, Ramasamy R. RAGE modulates myocardial injury consequent to LAD infarction via impact on JNK and STAT signaling in a murine model. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2008; 294: H1823–H1832.
3. Bucciarelli LG, Ananthakrishnan R, Hwang YC, Kaneko M, Song F, Sell DR, Strauch C, Monnier VM, Yan SF, Schmidt AM, Ramasamy R. RAGE and modulation of ischemic injury in the diabetic myocardium. Diabetes. April 16, 2008. DOI: 10.2337/db07-0326. Available at: http://diabetes.diabetesjournals. org/cgi/reprint/db07-0326v1. Accessed June 4, 2008.
4. Bucciarelli LG, Kaneko M, Ananthakrishnan R, Harja E, Lee LK, Hwang YC, Lerner S, Bakr S, Li Q, Lu Y, Song F, Qu W, Gomez T, Zou YS, Yan SF, Schmidt AM, Ramasamy R. Receptor for advanced glycation end-products: key modulator of myocardial ischemic injury. Circulation. 2006; 113: 1226–1234.
5. Park JS, Svetkauskaite D, He Q, Kim JY, Strassheim D, Ishizaka A, Abraham E. Involvement of toll-like receptors 2 and 4 in cellular ativation by high mobility group box 1 protein. J Biol Chem. 2004; 279: 7370–7377.
6. Chang JS, Wendt T, Qu W, Kong L, Zou YS, Schmidt AM, Yan SF. Oxygen deprivation triggers upregulation of early growth response-1 by the receptor for advanced glycation end products. Circ Res. March 6, 2008. DOI: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.107.165308. Accessed June 4, 2008.
7. Tsoporis JN, Marks A, Haddad A, Dawood F, Liu PP, Parker TP. S100b expression modulates left ventricular remodeling after myocardial infarction in mice. Circulation. 2005; 111: 598–606.
8. Hofmann MA, Drury S, Fu C, Qu W, Taguchi A, Lu Y, Avila C, Kambham N, Bierhaus A, Nawroth P, Neurath MF, Slattery T, Beach D, McClary J, Nagashima M, Morser J, Stern D, Schmidt AM. RAGE mediates a novel proinflammatory axis: a central cell surface receptor for S100/calgranulin polypeptides. Cell. 1999; 97: 889–901.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
9. Ma W, Lee SE, Guo J, Qu W, Hudson BI, Schmidt AM, Barile GR. RAGE ligand upregulation of VEGF secretion in ARPE-19 cells. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2007; 48: 1355–1361.
10. Wautier MP, Chappey O, Corda S, Stern DM, Schmidt AM, Wautier JL. Activation of NADPH oxidase by AGEs links oxidant stress to altered gene expression via RAGE. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2001; 280: E685–E694.
11. Limana F, Grmani A, Zacheo A, Kajstura J, Di Carlo A, Borsellino G, Leoni O, Palumbo R, Battistini L, Rastaldo R, Müller S, Pompilio G, Anversa P, Bianchi M, Capogrossi MC. Exogenous high-mobility group box 1 protein induces myocardial regeneration after infarction via enhanced cardiac c-Kit+ cell proliferation and differentiation. Circ Res. 2005; 97: 73–83.[CrossRef]
12. Bianchi ME, Manfredi AA. High mobility group box 1 (HMGB1) protein at the crossroads between innat and adaptive immunity. Immunol Rev. 2007; 220: 35–46.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
13. Moser B, Desai DD, Downie MP, Chen Y, Yan SF, Herold K, Schmidt AM, Clynes R. Receptor for advanced glycation end products expression on T cells contributes to antigen-specific cellular expansion in vivo. J Immunol. 2007; 179: 8051–8058.
14. Tzeng HP, Fan J, Vallejo JG, Dong JW, Chen X, Houser SR, Mann DL. Negative inotropic effects of high-mobility group box 1 protein in isolated contracting cardiac myocytes. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2008; 294: H1490–H1496.
15. Huttunen HJ, Kuja-Panula J, Sorci G, Agneletti AL, Donato R, Rauvala H. Coregulation of neurite outgrowth and cell survival by amphoterin and s100 proteins through receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE) activation. J Biol Chem. 2000; 275: 40096–40105.
16. Rossini A, Zacheo A, Mocini D, Totta P, Facchiano A, Castoldi R, Sordini P, Pompilio G, Abeni D, Capogrossi MC, Germani A. HGMB1-stimulated human primary cardiac fibroblasts exert a paracrine action on human and murine cardiac stem cells. J Mol Cell Cardiol. 2008; 44: 683–693.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
17. Moser B, Szabolcs MJ, Ankersmit HJ, Lu Y, Qu W, Weinberg A, Herold KC, Schmidt AM. Blockade of RAGE suppresses alloimmune reactions in vitro and delays allograft rejection in murine heart transplantation. Am J Transplant. 2007; 7: 293–302.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
18. Huang Y, Yin H, Han J, Huang B, Xu J, Zheng F, Tan Z, Fang M, Rui L, Chen D, Wang S, Zheng X, Wang CY, Gong F. Extracellular HMGB1 functions as an innate immune-mediator implicated in murine cardiac allograft acute rejection. Am J Transplant. 2007; 7: 799–808.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
19. Rong LL, Trojaborg W, Qu W, Kostov K, Yan SD, Gooch C, Szabolcs M, Hays AP, Schmidt AM. Antagonism of RAGE suppresses nerve regeneration. FASEB J. 2004; 18: 1812–1817.
20. Rong LL, Yan SF, Wendt T, Hans D, Pachydaki S, Bucciarelli LG, Adebayo A, Qu W, Lu Y, Kostov K, Lalla E, Yan SD, Gooch C, Szabolcs M, Trojaborg W, Hays AP, Schmidt AM. RAGE modulates peripheral nerve regeneration via recruitment of both inflammatory and axonal outgrowth pathways. FASEB J. 2004; 18: 1818–1825.
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