» Articles » PMID: 15698835

Estrogen Receptor Beta Mediates Gender Differences in Ischemia/reperfusion Injury

Overview
Date 2005 Feb 9
PMID 15698835
Citations 80
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Under hypercontractile conditions associated with increased intracellular calcium, male hearts show enhanced ischemia/reperfusion injury compared to female hearts. Our aim in this study was to identify the specific estrogen receptor involved in this gender difference. Following brief treatment with isoproterenol, isolated mouse hearts were subjected to ischemia and reperfusion. Postischemic contractile function and infarct size were measured in wild-type (WT) male and female hearts, and female hearts lacking functional alpha estrogen receptor (alpha ERKO), or the beta estrogen receptor (beta ERKO). WT male hearts exhibited significantly less functional recovery and more necrosis than WT females. alpha ERKO female hearts exhibited ischemia/reperfusion injury similar to that observed in WT females, whereas beta ERKO females exhibited significantly less functional recovery than WT females and were similar to WT males. These data suggest that estrogen, through the beta-estrogen receptor, plays a role in the protection observed in the female heart. Furthermore, we identified genes that were differentially expressed in beta ERKO female hearts compared to alpha ERKO and WT female hearts, and found altered expression of a number of metabolism genes, which may be important in ischemic injury. We further showed that WT female hearts have increased ratio of carbohydrate to fatty acid metabolism relative to WT males.

Citing Articles

Sex Differences in Cardiac Tolerance to Oxygen Deprivation - 40 Years of Cardiovascular Research.

Ostadal B, Drahota Z, Hlavackova M, Ostadal P Physiol Res. 2024; 73(S2):S511-S525.

PMID: 39589300 PMC: 11627269.


Hearts apart: sex differences in cardiac remodeling in health and disease.

Martin T, Leinwand L J Clin Invest. 2024; 134(13).

PMID: 38949027 PMC: 11213513. DOI: 10.1172/JCI180074.


Reduced cardiac antioxidant defenses mediate increased susceptibility to workload-induced myocardial injury in males with genetic cardiomyopathy.

Vetter T, Parthiban P, Stevens J, Revelo X, Kohr M, Townsend D J Mol Cell Cardiol. 2024; 190:24-34.

PMID: 38527667 PMC: 11060907. DOI: 10.1016/j.yjmcc.2024.03.004.


Lethal Caspase-1/4-Dependent Injury Occurs in the First Minutes of Coronary Reperfusion and Requires Calpain Activity.

Yang X, Cohen M, Sayner S, Audia J, Downey J Int J Mol Sci. 2023; 24(4).

PMID: 36835212 PMC: 9960231. DOI: 10.3390/ijms24043801.


Hormonal therapies up-regulate MANF and overcome female susceptibility to immune checkpoint inhibitor myocarditis.

Zhang Y, Sun C, Li Y, Qin J, Amancherla K, Jing Y Sci Transl Med. 2022; 14(669):eabo1981.

PMID: 36322628 PMC: 9809130. DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.abo1981.