Antioxidant Treatment Improves Cardiac Dysfunction in a Murine Model of Premature Aging

2016 
Bmal1-(brain and muscle ARNT-like protein-1) deficient (Bmal1) mice prematurely age because of an increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. These mice also show a decline in cardiac function with age. We investigated whether an antioxidant treatment can ameliorate the declining cardiac function in prematurely aged Bmal1 mice. Male Bmal1 and wild-type (Bmal1) mice were exposed for 15 weeks to a high fat and high cholesterol diet with or without the antioxidant 4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidin-1-oxyl (TEMPOL; 5 mmol/L; in drinking water during the last 10 weeks). Echocardiographic analysis revealed that TEMPOL treatment of Bmal1 mice normalized cardiac function, as evidenced by a decrease in left ventricular diastolic and systolic internal diameters, and by an increase in fractional shortening and ejection fraction. The antioxidant did not affect cardiac function in Bmal1 mice. Although TEMPOL did not influence cardiac ROS levels in Bmal1 mice, it significantly protected Bmal1 cardiac telomeres from oxidation, as evidenced by a reduction in the telomere damage score (0.11 ± 0.012% vs. 0.16 ± 0.015%; P = 0.028). Thus, antioxidant treatment normalized cardiac function of Bmal1 mice, probably in part by scavenging ROS.
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