Vascular protection afforded by zinc supplementation in human coronary artery smooth muscle cells mediated by NRF2 signaling under hypoxia/reoxygenation.

Redox Biol

King's British Heart Foundation Centre of Research Excellence, School of Cardiovascular and Metabolic Medicine & Sciences, Faculty of Life Sciences & Medicine, King's College London, 150 Stamford Street, London, SE1 9NH, UK. Electronic address:

Published: August 2023

Zinc (Zn) has antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and anti-proliferative actions, with Zn dysregulation associated with coronary ischemia/reperfusion injury and smooth muscle cell dysfunction. As the majority of studies concerning Zn have been conducted under non-physiological hyperoxic conditions, we compare the effects of Zn chelation or supplementation on total intracellular Zn content, antioxidant NRF2 targeted gene transcription and hypoxia/reoxygenation-induced reactive oxygen species generation in human coronary artery smooth muscle cells (HCASMC) pre-adapted to hyperoxia (18 kPa O) or normoxia (5 kPa O). Expression of the smooth muscle marker SM22-α was unaffected by lowering pericellular O, whereas calponin-1 was significantly upregulated in cells under 5 kPa O, indicating a more physiological contractile phenotype under 5 kPa O. Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry established that Zn supplementation (10 μM ZnCl + 0.5 μM pyrithione) significantly increased total Zn content in HCASMC under 18 but not 5 kPa O. Zn supplementation increased metallothionein mRNA expression and NRF2 nuclear accumulation in cells under 18 or 5 kPa O. Notably, NRF2 regulated HO-1 and NQO1 mRNA expression in response to Zn supplementation was only upregulated in cells under 18 but not 5 kPa. Furthermore, whilst hypoxia increased intracellular glutathione (GSH) in cells pre-adapted to 18 but not 5 kPa O, reoxygenation had negligible effects on GSH or total Zn content. Reoxygenation-induced superoxide generation in cells under 18 kPa O was abrogated by PEG-superoxide dismutase but not by PEG-catalase, and Zn supplementation, but not Zn chelation, attenuated reoxygenation-induced superoxide generation in cells under 18 but not 5kPaO, consistent with a lower redox stress under physiological normoxia. Our findings highlight that culture of HCASMC under physiological normoxia recapitulates an in vivo contractile phenotype and that effects of Zn on NRF2 signaling are altered by oxygen tension.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10363453PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2023.102777DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

smooth muscle
16
cells 5 kpa
12
human coronary
8
coronary artery
8
artery smooth
8
cells
8
muscle cells
8
nrf2 signaling
8
upregulated cells
8
contractile phenotype
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!