2 results match your criteria: "East Tennessee State University and James H. Quillen Veterans Affairs Medical Center[Affiliation]"
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol
July 2002
Department of Pharmacology, James H. Quillen School of Medicine, East Tennessee State University and James H. Quillen Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Johnson City, Tennessee 37614, USA.
The present study was designed to explore the protective effects of melatonin and its analogs, 6-hydroxymelatonin and 8-methoxy-2-propionamidotetralin, on the survival of doxorubicin-treated mice and on doxorubicin-induced cardiac dysfunction, ultrastructural alterations, and apoptosis in mouse hearts. Whereas 60% of the mice treated with doxorubicin (25 mg/kg ip) died in 5 days, almost all the doxorubicin-treated mice survived when melatonin or 6-hydroxymelatonin (10 mg/l) was administered in their drinking water. Perfusion of mouse hearts with 5 microM doxorubicin for 60 min led to a 50% suppression of heart rate x left ventricular developed pressure and a 50% reduction of coronary flow.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol
May 2001
Cecile Cox Quillen Laboratory of Geriatrics, James H. Quillen School of Medicine, East Tennessee State University and James H. Quillen Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Johnson City, Tennessee 37614, USA.
To test whether the antiapoptotic protein Bcl-2 prevents apoptosis and injury of cardiomyocytes after ischemia-reperfusion (I/R), we generated a line of transgenic mice that carried a human Bcl-2 transgene under the control of a mouse alpha-myosin heavy chain promoter. High levels of human Bcl-2 transcripts and 26-kDa Bcl-2 protein were expressed in the hearts of transgenic mice. Functional recovery of the transgenic hearts significantly improved when they were perfused as Langendorff preparations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF