(Open access funding provided by Semmelweis University)
(ÚNKP-20-3-I-SE-1)
Nemzeti szívprogram(NVKP_16-1–2016-0017) Támogató: NKFIH
(2020-4.1.1.-TKP2020)
National Research, Development and Innovation Office (NKFIH) of Hungary(K134939)
Background: Reduced cardiovascular risk in premenopausal women has been the focus
of research in recent decades. Previous hypothesis-driven experiments have highlighted
the role of sex hormones on distinct inflammatory responses, mitochondrial proteins,
extracellular remodeling and estrogen-mediated cardioprotective signaling pathways
related to post-ischemic recovery, which were associated with better cardiac functional
outcomes in females. We aimed to investigate the early, sex-specific functional and
proteomic changes following myocardial ischemia in an unbiased approach. Methods:
Ischemia was induced in male (M-Isch) and female (F-Isch) rats with sc. injection
of isoproterenol (85 mg/kg) daily for 2 days, while controls (M-Co, F-Co) received
sc. saline solution. At 48 h after the first injection pressure-volume analysis was
carried out to assess left ventricular function. FFPE tissue slides were scanned and
analyzed digitally, while myocardial proteins were quantified by liquid chromatography-tandem
mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) using isobaric labeling. Concentrations of circulating
steroid hormones were measured with LC-MS/MS. Feature selection (PLS and PLS-DA) was
used to examine associations among functional, proteomic and hormonal datasets. Results:
Induction of ischemia resulted in 38% vs 17% mortality in M-Isch and F-Isch respectively.
The extent of ischemic damage to surviving rats was comparable between the sexes.
Systolic dysfunction was more pronounced in males, while females developed a more
severe impairment of diastolic function. 2224 proteins were quantified, with 520 showing
sex-specific differential regulation. Our analysis identified transcriptional, cytoskeletal,
contractile, and mitochondrial proteins, molecular chaperones and the extracellular
matrix as sources of disparity between the sexes. Bioinformatics highlighted possible
associations of estrogens and their metabolites with early functional and proteomic
alterations. Conclusions: Our study has highlighted sex-specific alterations in systolic
and diastolic function shortly after ischemia, and provided a comprehensive look at
the underlying proteomic changes and the influence of estrogens and their metabolites.
According to our bioinformatic analysis, inflammatory, mitochondrial, chaperone, cytoskeletal,
extracellular and matricellular proteins are major sources of intersex disparity,
and may be promising targets for early sex-specific pharmacologic interventions.