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Targeting IL-36 improves age-related coronary microcirculatory dysfunction and attenuates myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury in mice
Juma El-Awaisi, … , Nigel E. Drury, Neena Kalia
Juma El-Awaisi, … , Nigel E. Drury, Neena Kalia
Published February 3, 2022
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2022;7(5):e155236. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.155236.
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Research Article Aging Inflammation

Targeting IL-36 improves age-related coronary microcirculatory dysfunction and attenuates myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury in mice

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Abstract

Following myocardial infarction (MI), elderly patients have a poorer prognosis than younger patients, which may be linked to increased coronary microvessel susceptibility to injury. Interleukin-36 (IL-36), a newly discovered proinflammatory member of the IL-1 superfamily, may mediate this injury, but its role in the injured heart is currently not known. We first demonstrated the presence of IL-36(α/β) and its receptor (IL-36R) in ischemia/reperfusion-injured (IR-injured) mouse hearts and, interestingly, noted that expression of both increased with aging. An intravital model for imaging the adult and aged IR-injured beating heart in real time in vivo was used to demonstrate heightened basal and injury-induced neutrophil recruitment, and poorer blood flow, in the aged coronary microcirculation when compared with adult hearts. An IL-36R antagonist (IL-36Ra) decreased neutrophil recruitment, improved blood flow, and reduced infarct size in both adult and aged mice. This may be mechanistically explained by attenuated endothelial oxidative damage and VCAM-1 expression in IL-36Ra–treated mice. Our findings of an enhanced age-related coronary microcirculatory dysfunction in reperfused hearts may explain the poorer outcomes in elderly patients following MI. Since targeting the IL-36/IL-36R pathway was vasculoprotective in aged hearts, it may potentially be a therapy for treating MI in the elderly population.

Authors

Juma El-Awaisi, Dean P.J. Kavanagh, Marco R. Rink, Chris J. Weston, Nigel E. Drury, Neena Kalia

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Figure 7

Age increases neutrophil presence within the deeper layers of the healthy and IR-injured myocardium.

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Age increases neutrophil presence within the deeper layers of the health...
(A) The left ventricle was vibratome sectioned into four 300 μm sections and imaged using a multiphoton microscope. Representative Z-stack multiphoton images of neutrophils (green) in the 4 layers of the left ventricle taken from the outermost layer closest to the epicardium (first row), outer myocardial layer (second row), inner myocardial layer (third row), and innermost layer closest to the endocardium (fourth row). Quantitative analysis of the multiphoton data at various depths for (B) adherent neutrophils and corresponding (C) AUC for adherent neutrophils. Adult sham — n = 4/group; adult IRI — n = 5/group; aged sham — n = 4/group; aged IRI — n = 4/group. *P = 0.0325, ****P < 0.0001 as determined using a 1-way ANOVA followed by a Tukey’s post hoc test.

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