Hesperetin protected against ischemia/hypoxia-induced myocardium injury by restoring oxidative balance, inhibiting apoptosis, improving mitochondrial function, and reducing Ca2+ influx.
Does hesperetin ameliorate ischemia/hypoxia-induced myocardium injury in cardiomyocytes?
Hesperetin protects against ischemia/hypoxia-induced myocardial injury by restoring oxidative balance, inhibiting apoptosis, improving mitochondrial function, and acting as an L-type Ca2+ channel inhibitor.
Abstract Ischemia/hypoxia (I/H)‐induced myocardial injury has a large burden worldwide. Hesperetin (HSP) has a cardioprotective effect, but the molecular mechanism underlying this is not clearly established. Here, we focused on the protective mechanisms of HSP against I/H‐induced myocardium injury. H9c2 cardiomyocytes were challenged with CoCl 2 for 22 h to imitate hypoxia after treatment groups received HSP for 4 h. The viability of H9c2 cardiomyocytes was evaluated, and cardiac function indices, reactive oxygen species, apoptosis, mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP), and intracellular Ca 2+ concentration (Ca 2+ i ) were measured. L‐type Ca 2+ current (I Ca‐L ), myocardial contraction, and Ca 2+ transients in isolated ventricular myocytes were also recorded. We found that HSP significantly increased the cell viability, and MMP while significantly decreasing cardiac impairment, oxidative stress, apoptosis, and Ca 2+ i caused by CoCl 2 . Furthermore, HSP markedly attenuated I Ca‐L , myocardial contraction, and Ca 2+ transients in a concentration‐dependent manner. Our findings suggest a protective mechanism of HSP on I/H‐induced myocardium injury by restoring oxidative balance, inhibiting apoptosis, improving mitochondrial function, and reducing Ca 2+ influx via L‐type Ca 2+ channels (LTCCs). These data provide a new direction for HSP applied research as a LTCC inhibitor against I/H‐induced myocardium injury.
Liu et al. (Sun,) conducted a other in Ischemia/hypoxia-induced myocardial injury. Hesperetin (HSP) vs. CoCl2 alone was evaluated on Cell viability, oxidative stress, apoptosis, mitochondrial function, and Ca2+ homeostasis. Hesperetin protected against ischemia/hypoxia-induced myocardium injury by restoring oxidative balance, inhibiting apoptosis, improving mitochondrial function, and reducing Ca2+ influx.