Journal of molecular and cellular cardiology
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J. Mol. Cell. Cardiol. · Oct 2005
Lysozyme binding to endocardial endothelium mediates myocardial depression by the nitric oxide guanosine 3',5' monophosphate pathway in sepsis.
Inflammatory mediators have been implicated as a cause of reversible myocardial depression in septic shock. We previously reported that the release of lysozyme-c (Lmz-S) from leukocytes from the spleen or other organs contributes to myocardial dysfunction in Escherichia coli septic shock in dogs by binding to a cardiac membrane glycoprotein. However, the mechanism by which Lzm-S causes this depression has not been elucidated. ⋯ A guanylyl cyclase inhibitor (ODQ) and a PKG inhibitor (Rp-8-Br-cGMP) also attenuated Lzm-S's depressant effect as did chemical denudation of the endocardial endothelium (EE) with Triton X-100 (0.5%). In EE tissue, we further showed that Lzm-S caused NO release with use of 4,5 diaminofluorescein, a fluorescent dye that binds to NO. The present study shows that the binding of Lzm-S to EE generates NO, and that NO then activates the myocardial guanosine 3',5' monophosphate pathway leading to cardiac depression in sepsis.