Cardioprotective Effects of Recombinant Human Extracellular-Superoxide Dismutase Type C in Rat Isolated Heart Subjected to Ischemia and Reperfusion

Abstract
The cardioprotective effect of recombinant human extracellular-superoxide dismutase type C (rh-EC-SOD C) was studied in isolated perfused rat heart subjected to left coronary artery ligation for 30 or 60 min followed by 30-min reperfusion. A comparison was made with the effects of bovine CuZn-SOD. Reperfusion after 30-min coronary artery ligation was associated with a release of creatine kinase (CK) into the coronary effluent (71 +/- 5.2 IU/30 min), which was markedly reduced (39 +/- 5.5 IU/30 min) in hearts perfused with rh-EC-SOD C (28 mg/L). CuZn-SOD (4 or 20 mg/l) or a lower concentration of rh-EC-SOD C (5.6 mg/l) did not significantly attenuate CK outflow during reperfusion, however. In both vehicle- and SOD-treated hearts, the left ventricular developed pressure (LVDP) and the coronary flow recovered to 80-90% of baseline at the end of the reperfusion period. Increasing the ischemic period from 30 to 60 min caused a much more pronounced cardiac injury measured after 30-min reperfusion. In the hearts that received vehicle, recovery of LVDP (in percentage of baseline values) at the end of reperfusion was 58 +/- 2%, which was increased to 84 +/- 3 and 83 +/- 5% after treatment with rh-EC-SOD C (28 mg/L) and CuZn-SOD (20 mg/L), respectively. The corresponding values for recovery in coronary flow were 54 +/- 3% (vehicle), 69 +/- 4% (rh-EC-SOD C), and 74 +/- 3% (CuZn-SOD).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)