International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jul 2023)

Exposure to Stress Alters Cardiac Gene Expression and Exacerbates Myocardial Ischemic Injury in the Female Murine Heart

  • Hemangini A. Dhaibar,
  • Lilly Kamberov,
  • Natalie G. Carroll,
  • Shripa Amatya,
  • Dario Cosic,
  • Oscar Gomez-Torres,
  • Shantel Vital,
  • Farzane Sivandzade,
  • Aditya Bhalerao,
  • Salvatore Mancuso,
  • Xinggui Shen,
  • Hyung Nam,
  • A. Wayne Orr,
  • Tanja Dudenbostel,
  • Steven R. Bailey,
  • Christopher G. Kevil,
  • Luca Cucullo,
  • Diana Cruz-Topete

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms241310994
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 13
p. 10994

Abstract

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Mental stress is a risk factor for myocardial infarction in women. The central hypothesis of this study is that restraint stress induces sex-specific changes in gene expression in the heart, which leads to an intensified response to ischemia/reperfusion injury due to the development of a pro-oxidative environment in female hearts. We challenged male and female C57BL/6 mice in a restraint stress model to mimic the effects of mental stress. Exposure to restraint stress led to sex differences in the expression of genes involved in cardiac hypertrophy, inflammation, and iron-dependent cell death (ferroptosis). Among those genes, we identified tumor protein p53 and cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1A (p21), which have established controversial roles in ferroptosis. The exacerbated response to I/R injury in restraint-stressed females correlated with downregulation of p53 and nuclear factor erythroid 2–related factor 2 (Nrf2, a master regulator of the antioxidant response system-ARE). S-female hearts also showed increased superoxide levels, lipid peroxidation, and prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 2 (Ptgs2) expression (a hallmark of ferroptosis) compared with those of their male counterparts. Our study is the first to test the sex-specific impact of restraint stress on the heart in the setting of I/R and its outcome.

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