International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jul 2021)

The Sodium-Glucose Cotransporter-2 Inhibitor Canagliflozin Alleviates Endothelial Dysfunction Following <i>In Vitro</i> Vascular Ischemia/Reperfusion Injury in Rats

  • Sevil Korkmaz-Icöz,
  • Cenk Kocer,
  • Alex A. Sayour,
  • Patricia Kraft,
  • Mona I. Benker,
  • Sophia Abulizi,
  • Adrian-Iustin Georgevici,
  • Paige Brlecic,
  • Tamás Radovits,
  • Sivakkanan Loganathan,
  • Matthias Karck,
  • Gábor Szabó

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22157774
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 15
p. 7774

Abstract

Read online

Vascular ischemia/reperfusion injury (IRI) contributes to graft failure and adverse clinical outcomes following coronary artery bypass grafting. Sodium-glucose-cotransporter (SGLT)-2-inhibitors have been shown to protect against myocardial IRI, irrespective of diabetes. We hypothesized that adding canagliflozin (CANA) (an SGLT-2-inhibitor) to saline protects vascular grafts from IRI. Aortic rings from non-diabetic rats were isolated and immediately mounted in organ bath chambers (control, n = 9–10 rats) or underwent cold ischemic preservation in saline, supplemented either with a DMSO vehicle (IR, n = 8–10 rats) or 50µM CANA (IR + CANA, n = 9–11 rats). Vascular function was measured, the expression of 88 genes using PCR-array was analyzed, and feature selection using machine learning was applied. Impaired maximal vasorelaxation to acetylcholine in the IR-group compared to controls was significantly ameliorated by CANA (IR 31.7 ± 3.2% vs. IR + CANA 51.9 ± 2.5%, p Ccl2, Ccl3, Ccl4, CxCr4, Fos, Icam1, Il10, Il1a and Il1b have been found to have the highest interaction. Compared to controls, IR significantly upregulated the mRNA expressions of Il1a and Il6, which were reduced by 1.5- and 1.75-fold with CANA, respectively. CANA significantly prevented the upregulation of Cd40, downregulated NoxO1 gene expression, decreased ICAM-1 and nitrotyrosine, and increased PECAM-1 immunoreactivity. CANA alleviates endothelial dysfunction following IRI.

Keywords