Conclusion
Collectively, chronic pain-enhanced carbonyl stress promotes myocardial ischemic intolerance by SIRT1 carbonylative inactivation and impairment of LKB1-AMPK interaction. ALDH2 activation and prevention of protein carbonylation may be a potential therapeutic target for myocardial ischemic vulnerability in chronic pain patients. Our results newly provided overlapping cellular mechanisms of chronic pain and myocardial dysfunction interplay.
Methods
Chronic pain was induced by chronic compression of the dorsal root ganglion (CCD). After 2 weeks CCD, aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH2) KO or wild-type (WT) littermate mice were then subjected to in vivo MI/R.
Results
In CCD-WT mice, heightened nociception paralleled circulating aldehyde (4-HNE) accumulation and cardiac protein carbonylation. Mechanistically, CCD-induced 4-HNE overload provoked cardiac Sirtuin 1 (SIRT1) carbonylative inactivation and inhibited Liver kinase B1 (LKB1) - AMP-activated protein kinase (LKB1-AMPK) interaction, which resulted in exacerbated MI/R injury and higher mortality compared with non-CCD WT mice. ALDH2 deficiency further aggravated CCD-induced susceptibility to MI/R injury. Exogenous 4-HNE exposure in peripheral tissue mimicked chronic pain-induced aldehyde overload, elicited sustained allodynia and increased MI/R injury. However, cardiac-specific ALDH2 upregulation by AAV9-cTNT-mediated gene delivery significantly ameliorated chronic pain-induced SIRT1 carbonylative inactivation and decreased MI/R injury (minor infarct size, less apoptosis, and improved cardiac function).
