Copyright
©2011 Baishideng Publishing Group Co.
World J Cardiol. May 26, 2011; 3(5): 144-152
Published online May 26, 2011. doi: 10.4330/wjc.v3.i5.144
Published online May 26, 2011. doi: 10.4330/wjc.v3.i5.144
Models | Dose of rosiglitazone | Major findings | Interpretation | Ref. |
Cultured neonatal rat cardiomyocytes | 5 μmol/L; pretreated for 30 min before stimulation with Ang II (1 μmol/L) for 48 h | Inhibited Ang II-induced upregulation of skeletal α-actin and ANP genes, and prevent an increase in cell surface area | Rosiglitazone involved in the inhibition of cardiac hypertrophy | [27] |
Isolated and cultured neonatal rat ventricular myocytes | 1, 5, 10 μmol/L; pretreated for 48 h | Accelerated Ca2+ transient decay rates | Cardioprotective effects of rosiglitazone may be mediated via NF-κB | [43] |
Increased SERCA2 mRNA levels | ||||
Upregulation of IL-6 secretion | ||||
Enhanced TNF-α- and lipopolysaccharide-induced NF-κB-dependent transcription | ||||
Isolated and cultured adult rat ventricular myocytes | 10-8-10-5 mol; pretreated for 24 h | Did not increase protein synthesis | Rosiglitazone did not directly induce cardiomyocyte hypertrophy in cardiomyocytes | [30] |
Did not attenuate hypertrophic response to noradrenaline, phorbol-12-myristate13-acetate and endothelin-1 | ||||
Cultured neonatal rat ventricular myocytes | 10 μmol/L; pretreated for 24 h | Inhibited the endothelin-1-induced increase in protein synthesis, surface area, calcineurin enzymatic activity, and protein expression | Rosiglitazone inhibited endothelin-1-induced cardiac hypertrophy via calcineurin/nuclear factor of activated T-cells pathway | [29] |
Inhibited the nuclear translocation of NFATc4 | ||||
Enhanced the association between PPARγ and calcineurin/nuclear factor of activated T-cells | ||||
Cultured rat cardiomyoblast cell line H9c2(2-1) | 100 μmol/L; pretreated for 24 h | Increased expression of heme oxygenase 1 | Rosiglitazone had cardioprotective effects against oxidative stress | [40] |
Increased cell viability under oxidative stress induced by H2O2 | ||||
Cultured neonatal rat cardiac fibroblasts | 0.1, 1, 10 μmol/L pretreated for 48 h | Inhibited cardiac fibroblast proliferation | Rosiglitazone could prevent myocardial fibrosis | [37] |
Increased connective tissue growth factor expression | ||||
Decreased nitric oxide production induced by advanced glycation endproducts | ||||
Cultured neonatal rat ventricular myocytes | 1 μmol/L; pretreated for 30 min prior to H2O2 treatment | Decrease cell apoptosis | Rosiglitazone protected cells from oxidative stress through upregulating Bcl-2 expression | [42] |
Increase Bcl-2 protein content | ||||
Cultured neonatal rat cardiac myocytes | 0.1, 1, 3, 10, 30 μmol/L; pretreated for 30 min before hypoxia | Decreased cytoplasmic accumulation of histone-associated DNA fragments | Rosiglitazone protected cardiac myocytes against I/R injury by facilitating Akt rephosphorylation | [35] |
Increased reoxygenation-induced rephosphorylation of Akt | ||||
Did not alter phosphorylation of the MAP kinases ERK1/2 and c-Jun N-terminal kinase | ||||
Fatty Zucker rats | 7-7.5 μmol/L per kilogram po; 9-12 wk | Decreased systolic blood pressure | Rosiglitazone prevented the development of HT and endothelial dysfunction associated with insulin resistance | [45] |
Decreased fasting hyperinsulinemia | ||||
Improved mesenteric arteries contraction and relaxation | ||||
Rats with I/R injury | 3 mg/kg per day po; pretreated for d; 1 and 3 mg/kg iv given during I/R | Improved left ventricular systolic pressure, dP/dtmax and dP/dtmin | Rosiglitazone decreased infarct size and improved contractile dysfunction during I/R possibly via inhibition of the inflammatory response | [46] |
Reduced neutrophils and macrophages accumulation | ||||
Reduced the infarct size | ||||
Downregulation of CD11b/CD18 | ||||
Upregulation of L-selectin on neutrophils and monocytes | ||||
Fatty Zucker rats with I/R injury (Ex vivo model) | 3 mg/kg po; 7 or 14 d prior to isolated perfuse heart study | Normalized the insulin resistance | Rosiglitazone protected obese rat heart from I/R injury | [44] |
Restored GLUT4 protein levels | ||||
Improved contractile function | ||||
Prevented greater loss of ATP | ||||
I/R injury in isolated perfused normal and STZ- induced diabetic rat hearts (Ex vivo model) | 1 μmol/L given prior to ischemia; 10 μmol/kg per day po after STZ injection for 4 wk | Inhibited activating protein-1 DNA-binding activity | Rosiglitazone attenuated postischemic myocardial injury in isolated rat heart | [34] |
Inhibited of Jun NH2-terminal kinase phosphorylation | ||||
Reduced lactate levels and lactate dehydrogenase activity | ||||
Sprague-Dawley rats | 5 mg/kg per day po; 7 d | Reduced systolic blood pressure | Rosiglitazone prevented the development of hypertension and endothelial dysfunction | [31] |
Reduced vascular DNA synthesis, expression of cyclin D1 and cdk4, AT1 receptors, vascular cell adhesion molecule-1, and platelet and endothelial cell adhesion molecule, and NF-κB activity | ||||
T2DM mice | 3 mg/kg per day po; 7 d | Did not affect serum glucose and insulin | Rosiglitazone enhanced nitric oxide mediation of coronary arteriolar dilations via attenuating oxidative stress in T2DM mice | [28] |
Increased serum 8-isoprostane and dihydroethydine-detectable superoxide production | ||||
Enhanced catalase and reduced NAD(P)H oxidase activity | ||||
Did not affect SOD activity | ||||
Hypercholesterolemic New Zealand rabbits with I/R injury | 3 mg/kg per day po; 5 wk prior to I/R | Attenuated postischemic myocardial nitrative stress | Rosiglitazone attenuated arteriosclerosis and prevented I/R-induced myocardial apoptosis | [38] |
Restored a beneficial balance between pro- and anti-apoptotic MAPK signaling | ||||
Reduced postischemic myocardial apoptosis | ||||
Improved cardiac functional recovery | ||||
Zucker diabetic fatty rats with I/R injury | 3 mg/kg per day po; 8 d prior to I/R | Reduced blood glucose, triglycerides, and free fatty acids levels | Rosiglitazone protected heart against I/R injury | [26] |
Enhanced cardiac glucose oxidation | ||||
Increased Akt phosphorylation (Akt-pS473) and its downstream targets (glycogen synthase kinase-3β and FKHR-pS256) (forkhead transcription factor) | ||||
Reduced apoptotic cardiomyocytes and myocardial infarct size | ||||
Sprague-Dawley rats with I/R injury | 3 mg/kg per day po; 7 d prior to I/R | Reduced infarct size | Rosiglitazone attenuated myocardial I/R injury possibly via increase expression of AT2 and inhibition of p42/44 MAPK | [41] |
Decreased myocardial expression of AT1 receptors | ||||
Increased AT2 mRNA and protein expression | ||||
Inhibited p42/44 MAPK | ||||
Did not alter Akt1 expression | ||||
Sprague-Dawley rats with I/R injury | 3 mg/kg per day po for 8 wk prior to I/R | Improved left ventricular dP/dtmax and dP/dtmin | Rosiglitazone had a beneficial effect on post-infarct ventricular remodeling, but had a neutral effect on mortality | [32] |
Inhibited myocardial angiotensin II and aldosterone | ||||
No significant effects on myocardial AT1 and AT2 mRNA | ||||
WT and eNOS knockout mice with I/R injury | 3 mg/kg ip; retreated for 45 min prior to I/R | WT mice: increased the recovery of left ventricular function and coronary flow following ischemia | Rosiglitazone protected the heart against I/R injury via nitric oxide by phosphorylation of eNOS | [48] |
eNOS knockout mice: suppressed the recovery of myocardial function following ischemia | ||||
Isolated perfused hearts from T2DM mice | 23 mg/kg per day po; pretreated for 5 wk | Normalized plasma glucose and lipid concentrations | Rosiglitazone improved cardiac efficiency and ventricular function | [50] |
Restored rates of cardiac glucose and fatty acid oxidation | ||||
Improved cardiac efficiency due to decrease in unloaded myocardial oxygen consumption | ||||
Improved functional recovery after low-flow ischemia | ||||
WT and APN knockdown/knockout mice with myocardial infarction | 20 mg/kg per day po; pretreated 72 h prior to MI and continuously treated until 7 and 14 d | Improved the postischemic survival rate of WT mice at 14 d of treatment | APN was crucial for cardioprotective effects of rosiglitazone in myocardial infarction | [57] |
Increased adipocyte APN expression | ||||
Elevated plasma APN levels | ||||
Reduced infarct size | ||||
Decreased apoptosis and oxidative stress | ||||
Improved cardiac function | ||||
Hypercholesterolemic rats | 4 mg/kg per day po; pretreated for 5 mo | Reduced Ang II level | Rosiglitazone protected the heart against cardiac hypertrophy via improved lipid profile, reduced Ang-II and increase AT2 expression | [54] |
Upregulated AT2 | ||||
Improved lipid metabolism | ||||
Mice with I/R injury | 3 mg/kg per day po; pretreated for 14 d prior to I/R | Reduced ratio of infarct size to ischemic area (area at risk) | Cardioprotective effects of rosiglitazone against I/R injury were mediated via a PI3K/Akt/GSK-3α-dependent pathway | [59] |
Reduced the occurrence ventricular fibrillation | ||||
Attenuated cardiac apoptosis | ||||
Increased levels of p-Akt and p-GSK-3α | ||||
T2DM patients (n = 21) | 4 mg/d; 6 mo | Weight loss (first 12 wk) | Rosiglitazone amplified some of the positive benefits of lifestyle intervention | [55] |
Decreased waist circumference | ||||
Decreased systolic and diastolic blood pressure | ||||
Reduced HbA1c | ||||
Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study in T2DM (n = 357) | 4 or 8 mg/d; 26 wk | Reduced C-reactive protein, matrix metalloproteinase-9 and white blood cell levels | Rosiglitazone had beneficial effects on overall cardiovascular risk | [49] |
Did not alter interleukin-6 level | ||||
Randomized, double-blind in CAD patients without diabetes (n = 40, control = 44) | 4 mg/d for 8 wk ollowed by 8 mg/d for 4 wk | Reduced E-selectin | Rosiglitazone reduces markers of endothelial cell activation and levels of acute-phase reactants in CAD patients without DM | [56] |
Reduced von Willebrand | ||||
Reduced C-reactive protein & fibrinogen | ||||
Reduced homeostasis model of insulin resistance index | ||||
Elevation of LDL and triglyceride level | ||||
Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study in T2DM with CAD patients (n = 54) | 4-8 mg/d; 16 wk | Improved glycemic control and whole-body insulin sensitivity | Rosiglitazone facilitated myocardial glucose storage and utilization in T2DM with CAD patients | [36] |
Increased myocardial glucose uptake in both ischemic and non-ischemic regions | ||||
Randomized controlled trial in patients with impaired glucose tolerance (n = 2365, control = 2634) | 8 mg/d; 3 yr | Facilitated normoglycemic | Rosiglitazone reduced incidence of T2DM and increased normoglycemia | [47] |
Did not alter cardiovascular event | ||||
Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial in patients with T2DM (n = 70, control =16) | 8 mg/d; 6 mo | Decreased plasma glucose and HbA1c with a trend to decrease HOMA index | Rosiglitazone improved endothelial function and C-reactive protein in patients with T2DM | [51] |
Decreased C-peptide and fasting insulin | ||||
Reduced C-reactive protein | ||||
Improved endothelium-dependent dilation | ||||
Randomized, controlled trial in patient with T2DM with CAD (Rosiglitazone; n = 25) | 4 mg/d; 12 wk | Decreased insulin resistance | Rosiglitazone prevented arteriosclerosis by normalizing metabolic disorders and reducing chronic inflammation of the vascular system | [58] |
Decreased pulse wave velocity | ||||
Reduced plasma levels of C-reactive protein and monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 | ||||
Prospective and cross-sectional study in T2DM (Rosiglitazone; n = 22, metformin/rosiglitazone; n = 100) | Treated with rosiglitazone 6 mo | Decreased endotoxin | Lower endotoxin and higher adiponectin in the groups treated with rosiglitazone may be responsible for the improved insulin sensitivity | [39] |
Increased adiponectin levels | ||||
Comprehensive meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials (n = 42922, control = 45483) | Results of 164 trials with duration > 4 wk | The OR for all-cause and cardiovascular mortality with rosiglitazone was 0.93 and 0.94, respectively | Rosiglitazone did not increase risk of MI or cardiovascular mortality | [52] |
The OR for nonfatal MI and heart failure with rosiglitazone was 1.14 (0.9-1.45) and 1.69 (1.21-2.36), respectively | ||||
The risk of heart failure was higher when rosiglitazone was administered as add-on therapy to insulin |
Model | Dose of rosiglitazone | Major findings | Interpretation | Ref. |
Isolated and cultured vascular smooth muscle cells | 1-10 μmol/L; incubated for 24 h | Induced cell death in a concentration-dependent manner | Rosiglitazone induced apoptotic cell death through an ERK1/2-independent pathway | [17] |
Increased caspase 3 activity and the cytoplasmic histone-associated DNA fragmentation | ||||
PD98059 (MAPKK inhibitor) did not abolish rosiglitazone induced ERK1/2 activation (proapoptotic effects) | ||||
Rats with I/R injury | 3 mg/kg per day po; pretreated for 14 d prior to I/R | Did not reduce left ventricular infarct size or hypertrophy | Rosiglitazone did not prevent left ventricular remodeling, but was associated with increased mortality after myocardial infarction | [21] |
Increased mortality rate | ||||
Improved ejection fraction and prevented an increase left ventricular end diastolic pressure | ||||
Swine with I/R injury | 3 mg/kg per day po; pretreated for 8 d prior to I/R | Increased expression of PPARγ | Rosiglitazone had no cardioprotective effects in a swine model of myocardial I/R injury | [25] |
Had no effect on myocardial contractile function | ||||
Did not alter substrate uptake and proinflammatory cytokines expression | ||||
PPARγ-knockout (CM-PGKO) mouse | 10 mg/kg per day po; 4 wk | Increased phosphorylation of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase | Rosiglitazone caused cardiac hypertrophy at least partially independent of PPARγ in cardiomyocytes | [15] |
Induced phosphorylation of extracellular signal-related kinase 1/2 | ||||
Did not affect phosphorylation of c-Jun N-terminal kinases | ||||
Induced cardiac hypertrophy | ||||
Wild type and PPARγ overexpression mice | 10 mg/kg per day po; 15 d | Increased lipid accumulation | Rosiglitazone and PPARγ overexpression could be harmful to cardiac function | [24] |
Increased size of the heart | ||||
Decreased fractional shortening | ||||
Increased CD36 expression | ||||
Swine with I/R injury | 0.1, 1.0 10 mg/kg iv; pretreated for 60 min | Attenuated MAP shortening during ischemia by blocking cardiac KATP channels | Rosiglitazone promoted onset of ventricular fibrillation during cardiac ischemia | [20] |
Increased propensity for ventricular fibrillation during myocardial ischemia | ||||
Sprague-Dawley rats | 15 mg/kg per day po; 21 d | Induced eccentric heart hypertrophy associated with increased expression of ANP, BNP, collagen I and III and fibronectin | Rosiglitazone induced cardiac hypertrophy via the mTOR pathway | [16] |
Reduced heart rate and increased stroke volume | ||||
Increased heart glycogen content, myofibrillar protein content and turnover | ||||
Reduced glycogen phosphorylase expression and activity | ||||
Meta-analysis in T2DM (n = 15 565, control = 12 282) | Received rosiglitazone more than 24 wk | Increased the risk of myocardial infarction | Rosiglitazone increased in the risk of myocardial infarction and borderline increased in risk of cardiovascular death | [11] |
Increased cardiovascular death incidence | ||||
RECORD study (n = 4447) | Received rosiglitazone with mean follow-up time of 3.75 yr | Increased the risk of heart failure | Rosiglitazone increased risk of heart failure, but did not increase the risk of cardiovascular death or all cause mortality | [18] |
RECORD study (n = 4447) | Received rosiglitazone with mean follow-up time of 5.5 yr | Increased the risk of heart failure | Rosiglitazone increased risk of heart failure | [65] |
Suggestion of contraindication for rosiglitazone to be used in patients developing symptomatic heart failure | ||||
Case-control analysis of a retrospective cohort study (n = 159 026) | Treated with TZDs at least 1 yr | Increased risk of heart failure | Rosiglitazone was associated with risk of heart failure, acute myocardial infarction, and mortality | [19] |
Increased mortality | ||||
Increased risk of acute myocardial infarction | ||||
Retrospective, double-blind, randomized clinical studies with rosiglitazone (n = 14 237) | Received rosiglitazone 24-52 wk | Increased heart failure incidence | Rosiglitazone increased the risk of heart failure and myocardial infarction | [13] |
Increased events of myocardial ischemia | ||||
A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials (n = 6421, control = 7870) | Received rosiglitazone at least 12 mo | Increased risk of myocardial infarction and heart failure | Rosiglitazone increased risk of myocardial infarction and heart failure, without increased risk of cardiovascular mortality | [23] |
No increased risk of cardiovascular mortality |
- Citation: Palee S, Chattipakorn S, Phrommintikul A, Chattipakorn N. PPARγ activator, rosiglitazone: Is it beneficial or harmful to the cardiovascular system? World J Cardiol 2011; 3(5): 144-152
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1949-8462/full/v3/i5/144.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4330/wjc.v3.i5.144