The novel iron chelator, 2-pyridylcarboxaldehyde 2-thiophenecarboxyl hydrazone, reduces catecholamine-mediated myocardial toxicity.
Chem Res Toxicol
; 22(1): 208-17, 2009 Jan.
Article
en En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-19172757
Iron (Fe) chelators are used clinically for the treatment of Fe overload disease. Iron also plays a role in the pathology of many other conditions, and these potentially include the cardiotoxicity induced by catecholamines such as isoprenaline (ISO). The current study examined the potential of Fe chelators to prevent ISO cardiotoxicity. This was done as like other catecholamines, ISO contains the classical catechol moiety that binds Fe and may form redox-active and cytotoxic Fe complexes. Studies in vitro used the cardiomyocyte cell line, H9c2, which was treated with ISO in the presence or absence of the chelator, desferrioxamine (DFO), or the lipophilic ligand, 2-pyridylcarboxaldehyde 2-thiophenecarboxyl hydrazone (PCTH). Both of these chelators were not cardiotoxic and significantly reduced ISO cardiotoxicity in vitro. However, PCTH was far more effective than DFO, with the latter showing activity only at a high, clinically unachievable concentration. Further studies in vitro showed that interaction of ISO with Fe(II)/(III) did not increase cytotoxic radical generation, suggesting that this mechanism was not involved. Studies in vivo were initiated using rats pretreated intravenously with DFO or PCTH before subcutaneous administration of ISO (100 mg/kg). DFO at a clinically used dose (50 mg/kg) failed to reduce catecholamine cardiotoxicity, while PCTH at an equimolar dose totally prevented catecholamine-induced mortality and reduced cardiotoxicity. This study demonstrates that PCTH reduced ISO-induced cardiotoxicity in vitro and in vivo, demonstrating that Fe plays a role, in part, in the pathology observed.
Buscar en Google
Banco de datos:
MEDLINE
Asunto principal:
Tiofenos
/
Quelantes del Hierro
/
Miocitos Cardíacos
/
Isoproterenol
Límite:
Animals
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Chem Res Toxicol
Asunto de la revista:
TOXICOLOGIA
Año:
2009
Tipo del documento:
Article
País de afiliación:
República Checa