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Original Article

Hypoxia Increases Superoxide Anion Production from Bovine Coronary Microvessels, But Not Cardiac Myocytes, via Increased Xanthine Oxidase

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Pages 231-236 | Published online: 10 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Objective: To determine if 30 min of hypoxia (Po2 8–10 Torr) affects basal, mitochondrial, or xanthine oxidase-derived lucigenin-detectable superoxide anion (O2.-) production by intact isolated bovine coronary microvessels and myocytes.

Methods: O2.- was quantitated by lucigenin-elicited chemiluminescence. Antimycin A (10 μM) and hypoxanthine (0.1 mM) were employed to increase O2.- from mitochondria and xanthine oxidase, respectively.

Results: Chemiluminescence from microvessels and myocytes was enhanced (∼ twofold, P < 0.05, n = 8–10) by inhibition of Cu,Zn-SOD via pretreatment with diethyldithiocarbamate (10 mM, 30 min) and was decreased (P < 0.05, n = 8–10) by an intracellular scavenger of O2.- (10 mM Tiron), but not by added SOD (3 μM, n = 8–10). In the presence of SOD inhibition, hypoxia produced a hypoxanthine-dependent (n = 8–10) twofold increase in chemiluminescence (P < 0.05, n = 10) in microvessels but not in myocytes. Other combinations of hypoxia, antimycin, or hypoxanthine did not significantly alter chemiluminescence.

Conclusions: Lucigenin appears to detect a basal intracellular source of O2.- in both microvessels and myocytes that is not derived from mitochondria or xanthine oxidase. Exposure to hypoxia does not appreciably increase basal O2.- in vessels or myocytes, but if exogenous hypoxanthine is supplied, microvessels show an increase in O2.- production presumably derived from xanthine oxidase.

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