CD47 deficiency protects cardiomyocytes against hypoxia/reoxygenation injury by rescuing autophagic clearance

  • Authors:
    • Yong Li
    • Kun Zhao
    • Pengyu Zong
    • Heling Fu
    • Yuan Zheng
    • Dan Bao
    • Yuan Yin
    • Qin Chen
    • Lu Lu
    • Youjin Dai
    • Daorong Hou
    • Xiangqing Kong
  • View Affiliations

  • Published online on: April 25, 2019     https://doi.org/10.3892/mmr.2019.10199
  • Pages: 5453-5463
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Abstract

To assess the effect of cluster of differentiation (CD47) downregulation on autophagy in hypoxia/reoxygenation (H/R)‑treated H9c2 cardiomyocytes. H9c2 cells were maintained in normoxic conditions (95% air, 5% CO2, 37˚C) without CD47 antibodies, Si‑CD47 or chloroquine (CQ) treatment; H9c2 cells in the H/R group were subjected to 24 h of hypoxia (1% O2, 94% N2, 5% CO2, 37˚C) followed by 12 h of reoxygenation (95% air, 5% CO2, 37˚C). All assays were controlled, triplicated and repeated on three separately initiated cultures. The biochemical parameters in the medium supernatant were measured to evaluate the oxidative stress in cardiomyocytes. The Annexin V‑fluorescein isothiocyanate assay was used to detect the apoptotic rate in the H9c2 cells. Transmission electron microscope, immunofluorescent staining and western blot analysis were performed to detect the effect of the CD47 antibody on autophagic flux in H/R‑treated H9c2 cardiomyocytes. The cardiomyocytic oxidative stress and apoptotic rate decreased and autophagic clearance increased after CD47 downregulation. H/R triggered cell autophagy, autophagosome accumulation and apoptosis in H9c2 cell lines. However, these effects can be attenuated by CD47 downregulation. This study demonstrates its clinical implications in ischemia/reperfusion injury treatment.

Introduction

Ischemic heart disease is a leading cause of mortality in a number of countries, especially the United States (1,2). Despite the advances in therapeutic strategy over the past decade, such as percutaneous coronary intervention, antiplatelet and antithrombotic therapies and angioplasty, ischemic heart disease remains prevalent and a major culprit for heart failure (3,4).

One therapeutic strategy for this disease is controlling ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury (5,6), that can activate autophagy and consequent cell apoptosis (7). When the ischemic myocardium is re-perfused with oxygen and substrate-rich blood, I/R injury develops to further damage the heart (4). Therefore, an increasing number of studies have been carried out to investigate the myocytic autophagy and apoptosis induced by I/R injury (810).

CD47 signal controls second messengers, such as calcium, cAMP and cGMP. In vascular cells, CD47 inhibits the production and effector pathways of nitric oxide (NO). Therefore, CD47 signaling can regulate blood flow, platelet homeostasis and angiogenesis (11,12). Studies have demonstrated that reducing or blocking CD47 can profoundly protect cells and tissues from apoptosis induced by I/R injury (1119) or radiation injury through activating autophagic flux (2022). But so far, the effect of CD47 downregulation on myocytic autophagy induced by I/R injury remains unclear.

A hypoxia/reoxygenation (H/R) in vitro model is appropriate for exploring the molecular mechanisms and functions of autophagy during myocardial ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) (23). In this study, using the H9c2 cell line to model I/R injury induced cardiomyocyte apoptosis, the effect of CD47 on cellular I/R injury and autophagy was investigated.

Materials and methods

H9c2 cell culture

The H9c2 cells (ventricular myocardiocyte, rat in origin; Cell Bank of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, China) were seeded in 6-well plates (2×104 cells/cm2) and cultured in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (Sigma-Aldrich; Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany) containing 10% (v/v) fetal bovine serum (Gibco; Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc., Waltham, MA, USA) and 100 mmol/l penicillin-streptomycin in a humidified atmosphere (95% air and 5% CO2, 37°C). The medium was replenished every two days.

H/R in H9c2

Cardiomyocyte hypoxia was induced by exposing the cells to 1% O2, 94% N2 and 5% CO2 for 24 h in a modular incubator (Model 3131; Forma Scientific; Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.). Then the cells were reoxygenated (95% air, 5% CO2, 37°C) for 12 h (24). Cells under normoxia were used as a control throughout the experiments. All experiments were repeated three times.

Transfection

H9c2 cells were digested to form a single-cell suspension and plated in 6-well plates until the cells entered the logarithmic growth phase. When the cell density reached ~80%, 20 nM short interfering (Si)-CD47 or a scrambled Si-RNA (Si-NC) was transfected into the cells using Lipofectamine 2000 (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.) according to the manufacturer's protocols. The sequences of siRNAs are: Si-CD47, 5′-AGAUUUGACUUUACUAAGCAG-3′ and Si-NC, 5′-UUCUCCGAACGUGUCACGUTT-3′. After 24 h of transfection, the mRNA expression of CD47 was determined by reverse transcription-quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR).

Experiment design

A total of two experiments were performed. In experiment 1, H9c2 cells were assigned to 5 groups. i) Control group: H9c2 cells were maintained under normoxic conditions without the CD47 antibody (cat. no. sc-53050; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc., Dallas, TX, USA) or CQ treatment; ii) H/R group: H9c2 cells were subjected to 24 h of hypoxia followed by 12 h of reoxygenation (24); iii) CD47 group: H9c2 cells were treated with the CD47 antibody (7 µg/ml for 2 h) and incubated under normoxic conditions (25); iv) H/R+CD47 group: H9c2 cells treated with the CD47 antibody were subjected to 24 h of hypoxia followed by 12 h of reoxygenation; v) H/R+CD47+CQ group: H9c2 cells treated with CD47 antibody (7 µg/ml for 2 h) and CQ (10 mmol/l for 1 h; C6628; Sigma-Aldrich; Merck KGaA) were subjected to 24 h of hypoxia followed by 12 h of reoxygenation. CQ was used to inhibit lysosomal acidification and autophagosome-lysosome fusion (26). H9c2 cells were treated with CD47 and CQ for the indicated times as described previously (25,26). In experiment 2, H9c2 cells were assigned to 3 groups: i) Si-NC+H/R: H9c2 cells treated with Si-NC were subjected to 24 h of hypoxia followed by 12 h of reoxygenation; ii) Si-CD47: H9c2 cells treated with SiCD47; iii) Si-CD47+H/R: H9c2 cells treated with Si-CD47 were subjected to 24 h of hypoxia followed by 12 h of reoxygenation. All experiments were repeated three times.

Determination of cell injury

Using commercially available kits for malondialdehyde (MDA; cat. no. A003-1), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH; cat. no. A020-2), creatinine kinase-muscle/brain (CK-MB; cat. no. H197) and superoxide dismutase (SOD; cat. no. A001-1; Nanjing Jiancheng Bioengineering Institute, Nanjing, China), the biochemical parameters of the medium supernatant and H9c2 cells were measured.

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) staining

To evaluate cell production of ROS, the slides of cells were incubated with 10 µmol/l dihydroethidium (DHE; D-23107; Invitrogen, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.) in PBS in the dark for exactly 30 min at room temperature. Then, the sections were rinsed twice with cold PBS and imaged at 490–560 nm using an Olympus microscope (1–71, Olympus Corporation) immediately.

Determination of cellular apoptosis

To detect the apoptosis rate of the H9C2 cells, we used an Annexin V-fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) Assay kit (cat. no. 556547; BD Biosciences; Becton, Dickinson and Company, Franklin Lakes, NJ, USA). Briefly, the granulosa cells were washed twice with cold PBS which was removed afterwards from the cell pellet. The cells were resuspended in 500 µl of binding buffer. Then 5 µl of Annexin V-FITC and 5 µl of PI staining solution was added. The cells were vortexed, incubated for 15 min in the dark and detected by flow cytometer (BD FACSCalibur; BD Biosciences; Becton, Dickinson and Company). The mean fluorescent intensity of the annexin V/PI double staining in the myocytes was analyzed using FlowJo software version 10.4.2 (FlowJo LLC). The proportion of apoptotic cells (mortality) was defined as the percentage of Annexin V+-FITC+ cells (n=9 per group).

Electron microscopy

For transmission electron microscope (TEM) examination, cells were digested and centrifuged (800 × g for 5 min at 25°C) to form cell pellets, and fixed in 2.5% glutaraldehyde for 48 h at 4°C, postfixed in 0.5% osmium tetroxide, dehydrated and embedded in epoxy resin. Ultrathin sections (90 nm thick) were made and examined using transmission electron microscope (Tecnai G2 Spirit Bio TWIN; FEI Ltd.) at accelerating voltage 80 kV and ×10,000 magnification. Electron micrographs (five fields of view per cell) were randomly examined (five cells at four corners and in the middle were selected) for each experiment (n=9 per group).

Immunofluorescent staining

For immunofluorescent staining, H9c2 were rinsed in Dulbecco's PBS (DPBS) for 5 min at room temperature, then fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde in DPBS at 25°C for 10 min. After being washed with DPBS, the cells were permeabilized in 1% Triton X-100 for 1 h and eventually blocked in 10% goat serum (blocking solution, cat. no. 16210072; Gibco; Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.) for 1 h at room temperature to inhibit nonspecific binding. Primary antibodies included CD47 (cat. no. sc-53050; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.), Beclin-1 (cat. no. sc-48341; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.), SQSTM1/p62 (p62; cat. no. 23214; Cell Signal Technology, Inc., USA) and Vimentin (cat. no. 5741; Cell Signal Technology, Inc.). All the cells were treated with primary antibodies in the blocking solution for 24 h at 4°C. Subsequently, the cells were rinsed in 1X DPBS and incubated with secondary antibodies in the blocking solution for 1 h at 4°C. Alexa Fluor 546 goat anti-mouse lgG (H+L) (1:200; cat. no. A11030; Invitrogen; Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.) and donkey anti-rabbit-CY3 (1:200; cat. no. A21206; Molecular Probes; Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.) were used as secondary antibodies. The cells were then washed and stained with DAPI (Fluoroshield with DAPI, F6057; Gibco; Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.). The stained cells were examined using confocal images system (710; Zeiss AG, Oberkochen Germany). All the sections were incubated with the antibodies at the same concentration and under the same condition. The tissue section images were captures at 490–560 nm with an Olympus microscope (1–71; Olympus Corporation) and semi-quantified with Image Pro Plus 6.0 software (Media Cybernetics, Inc.). The integrated optical density (IOD) was collected for each photograph. A total of five fields in each slice (five slides per animal) were randomly selected for blinded measurements (n=6 per group). The images were quantified by the immunoreactive area (IA) in µm2 and the IOD. The staining intensity (SI) for each image was calculated as SI=IOD/IA and the mean with standard deviation was obtained for each series.

RT-qPCR

RT-qPCR was performed according to previously described methods (27). Following 48 h of transfection with Si-CD47 or SiNC, total RNA from H9C2 cells was extracted using TRIzol reagent (B5704-1; Takara Biotechnology, Co., Ltd., Dalian, China). Then, 1 µg of total RNA was reverse transcribed to cDNA at 37°C for 15 min and 85°C for 5 sec using PrimeScript™ RT reagent kit (cat. no. RR037A; Takara Biotechnology, Co., Ltd.). Subsequently, PCR was performed using a Light Cycler PCR QC kit (Roche Applied Science) and 7300 Real-Time PCR System (LC96; Roche Applied Science). In the 25 µl reaction system, 300 nmol/l primers were added. The thermo cycling conditions were: 2 min at 50°C and 10 min at 95°C, followed by 40 cycles of 15 sec at 95°C and 1 min at 60°C. The primers were as follows: CD47 (NM_019195.2) forward: 5′-AGAGAATCATTCTGCTGCTGGTTGC-3′, reverse: 5′-TGGTGAAAGAGGTCATTCCAAAAGC-3′; GAPDH (NM_017008.4), forward: 5′-CTGGAGAAACCTGCCAAGTATG-3′, reverse: 5′-GGTGGAAGAATGGGAGTTGCT-3′. The housekeeping gene GAPDH was used as an internal reference. GraphPad Prism 5 software (GraphPad Software, Inc.) was used for chart production.

Western blot analysis

The cells were harvested in RIPA lysis buffer (Bioteke Corporation, Beijing, China) containing 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride. Protein concentration was measured using the Bio-Rad method. Samples (20 mg protein) were separated by 10% SDS-PAGE and transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane. The membrane was blocked with 5% non-fat milk in TBST buffer (100 mM NaCl, 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 0.1% Tween-20) at 25°C for 1 h, incubated with the primary antibodies against LC3 (1:1,000, cat. no. 4108; Cell Signal Technology, Inc.), Beclin-1 (1:1,000, cat. no. sc-48341; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.), p62 (1:1,000, 23214; Cell Signal Technology, Inc.), LAMP2 (1:1,000, cat. no. sc-71492; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.), cleaved caspase-3 (1:1,000, cat. no. 9664; Cell Signal Technology, Inc.), cleaved caspase-9 (1:1,000, cat. no. 7237; Cell Signal Technology, Inc.) and GAPDH (1:1,000, cat. no. sc-166574, Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.) at 4°C overnight, and re-incubated with goat anti-rabbit IgG HRP-conjugated secondary antibodies (1:5,000, cat. no. sc-2004; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.) or goat anti-mouse IgG HRP-conjugated secondary antibodies (1:5,000, cat. no. sc-2005; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.). Then, the membranes were washed three times in TBST. The blots were imaged using the ChemiDoc XRS+ Molecular Imager (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc.) with the Pierce ECL Western Blotting Substrate (cat. no. 32209; Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.) and analyzed using image analysis software (ImageJ 1.42; National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA). The housekeeping protein GAPDH was used as the internal control. The western blotting quantification was corrected to GAPDH expression prior to normalization.

Statistical analysis

All data were presented as the mean ± standard error and analyzed using SPSS 13.0 (SPSS, Inc.). One-way analysis of variance was used to determine statistical significance. Bonferroni post hoc test was introduced as needed. P<0.05 was considered to indicate a statistically significant difference. All experiments were repeated three times.

Results

CD47 protects cardiomyocytes against H/R-induced oxidative stress and apoptosis in cardiomyocytes

The effects of the CD47 antibody on cardiomyocyte function and oxidative stress levels in H9c2 cells are presented in Fig. 1A-D. There was no significant difference in LDH, CK-MB, MDA and SOD levels between the control and CD47 groups. Compared with the control group, H/R treatment significantly increased LDH, CK-MB and MDA levels and significantly decreased SOD activity in the culture media in the H/R group (P<0.01). Compared with the H/R group, CD47 antibody treatment significantly decreased LDH, CK-MB and MDA levels and enhanced SOD activity in H/R+CD47 group (P<0.01). Compared with the control group, the autophagy inhibitor CQ significantly increased LDH, CK-MB and MDA levels and weakened SOD activity in H/R+CD47+CQ group (P<0.01).

To assess the effects of CD47 deficiency on ROS production, intracellular generation of the ROS moiety O2 was visualized with the fluoroprobe DHE (Fig. 1E). The superoxide anion oxidizes DHE to a novel product that binds to DNA, leading to enhanced fluorescence. In this assay, confocal microscopy demonstrated that cell slides from the H/R group exhibited widespread and significant increases in DHE fluorescence compared with those from the control group (P<0.01; Fig. 1F) and CD47 antibody treatment in the H/R+CD47 group significantly decreased ROS fluorescence intensity compared with H/R alone (P<0.01). However, the autophagy inhibitor CQ significantly increased the ROS fluorescence intensity in the H/R+CD47+CQ group (P<0.01).

Annexin V/PI double staining was used to assess the apoptotic rate of the H9c2 cells (Fig. 1G). There was no significant difference in apoptotic rates between the control and CD47 groups (Fig. 1H). Compared with the control group, H/R treatment significantly increased the apoptotic rate in the H/R group (P<0.01). Compared with the H/R group, CD47 antibody treatment significantly decreased the apoptotic rate in the H/R+CD47 group (P<0.01). Compared with the control group, the autophagy inhibitor CQ significantly increased the apoptotic rate in the H/R+CD47+CQ group (P<0.05).

CD47 suppresses the accumulation of autophagosomes in H/R-treated cardiomyocytes

TEM results demonstrated that there was no significant difference in apoptotic rates between the control and CD47 groups (Fig. 2A and B). Compared with the control group, H/R treatment significantly increased autophagic vesicle number in the H/R group (P<0.01). Compared with the H/R group, CD47 treatment significantly decreased the autophagic vesicle number in the H/R+CD47 group (P<0.01). Compared with the control group, the autophagy inhibitor CQ significantly increased the autophagic vesicle number in the H/R+CD47+CQ group (P<0.01).

CD47 inhibits the accumulation of protein aggregates in H/R-treated cardiomyocytes

As presented in Fig. 3, there was no significant difference in Beclin-1 and Vimentin expression between the control and CD47 groups. Compared with the control group, CD47 treatment significantly decreased CD47 fluorescence intensity in the CD47 group (P<0.01). Compared with the control group, H/R treatment significantly increased CD47, Beclin-1 and Vimentin expression in the H/R group (P<0.01). Compared with the H/R group, CD47 antibody treatment in the H/R+CD47 group significantly decreased CD47, Beclin-1 and Vimentin expression (P<0.05 and P<0.01, respectively). Compared with the control group, the autophagy inhibitor CQ significantly increased Beclin-1 and Vimentin expression in the H/R+CD47+CQ group (P<0.01).

CD47 protects cardiomyocytes against H/R injury through rescuing impaired autophagy flux

As presented in Fig. 4, the expression levels of LC3-II, Beclin-1, p62, LAMP2, Cleaved caspase-3 and cleaved caspase-9 exhibited no significant difference between the control and CD47 groups. Compared with the control group, H/R treatment significantly increased LC3-II, Beclin-1, p62, cleaved caspase-3 and cleaved caspase-9 protein levels and significantly decreased LAMP2 protein level in the H/R group (P<0.01). Compared with the H/R group, CD47 treatment significantly decreased LC3-II, Beclin-1, p62 protein, cleaved caspase-3 and cleaved caspase-9 levels and significantly increased LAMP2 protein level in the H/R+CD47 group (P<0.01). However, compared with the control group, the autophagy inhibitor CQ significantly increased LC3-II, Beclin-1, p62 protein, cleaved caspase-3 and cleaved caspase-9 levels and decreased LAMP2 protein level in the H/R+CD47+CQ group (P<0.01 and P<0.05, respectively).

Downregulating CD47 expression inhibits H/R-induced oxidative stress and apoptosis in cardiomyocytes

To investigate the action of CD47 in H9C2 cells, CD47 expression was knocked-down using RNA interference technology (Si-CD47), along with a non-targeting Si-NC that was constructed to use as a negative control in all assays. The interference efficiency of Si-CD47 on H9c2 expression is demonstrated in Fig. 5A. Compared with the Si-NC, Si-CD47 exerted significantly increased efficiency in knocking down CD47 mRNA expression (P<0.01; an inhibition rate of 62%). Western blotting results (Fig. 5B and C) indicated that the protein expression of CD47 in the Si-CD47 group was decreased compared with in the Si-NC group (P<0.01).

The effects of si-CD47 on cardiomyocytic function and oxidative stress levels in H9c2 are presented in Fig. 6A-D. Compared with the Si-CD47 group, H/R treatment significantly increased LDH, CK-MB and MDA levels and significantly decreased SOD activity in H9C2 cells in the Si-NC+H/R group (P<0.01). Compared with the Si-NC+H/R group, CD47 downregulation decreased LDH, CK-MB and MDA levels and increased SOD activity in the Si-CD47+H/R group (P<0.01). Annexin V/PI double staining was used to assess the apoptotic rate in the H9c2 cells (Fig. 6E). Compared with the Si-CD47 group, H/R treatment significantly increased the apoptotic rate in the Si-NC+H/R group (P<0.01; Fig. 6F). Compared with the H/R group, CD47 downregulation significantly decreased the apoptotic rate in the Si-CD47+H/R group (P<0.01).

CD47 protects cardiomyocytes against H/R injury through rescuing impaired autophagy flux

As presented in Fig. 7, H/R treatment significantly increased LC3-II, Beclin-1, p62, cleaved caspase-3 and cleaved caspase-9 protein levels and significantly decreased LAMP2 protein level in the Si-NC+H/R group compared with the Si-CD47 group (P<0.01). Compared with the Si-NC+H/R group, CD47 downregulation group significantly decreased LC3-II, Beclin-1, p62 protein, cleaved caspase-3 and cleaved caspase-9 levels and significantly increased LAMP2 protein level in Si-CD47+H/R (P<0.01).

Discussion

CD47 deficiency has been reported to protect normal cells and tissues from I/R injury-induced apoptosis (11,12,2840). However, the molecular mechanism behind this protection remains obscure. In the present study, CD47 downregulation protected cardiomyocytes against H/R injury in H9c2 cells, an effect largely attributed to the inhibition of autophagy. It was demonstrated that more obvious cardiomyocyte function damage, oxidative stress, protein aggregation, cardiomyocyte apoptosis and autophagy inhibition appeared in untreated H/R H9c2 cells, and that all these changes were decreased by CD47 downregulation through autophagy promotion; moreover, the autophagosome-lysosome fusion inhibitor CQ reversed the effect of CD47 treatment.

Oxidative stress and apoptosis are two major mechanisms involved in cardiomyocyte injury following hypoxia and I/R (3133). Autophagy regulates intracellular homeostasis and cardiomyocytic survival. Mounting evidence supports the idea that ROS and autophagosome accumulation induce autophagy (3436). Autophagosome accumulation hampers the clearance of damaged intracellular organelles and proteins, resulting in overproduction of ROS (37). Oxidative stress serves a central role in myocardial I/R injury (38,39). During injury, the blood supply is re-established in the ischemic myocardium and superabundant oxygen free radicals are generated to trigger oxidative stress and aggravate myocardium I/R injury (40). Through autophagy protein aggregates and damaged organelles are removed from the cytoplasm (3,41). Once autophagy is disrupted, the resultant autophagosome accumulation increases ROS production and mitochondrial permeability, a process ending in cell death (6). As demonstrated in the present study, this process can be attenuated by CD47 antibody or Si-CD47 pretreatment. The results of the present study indicate that CD47 downregulation can inhibit apoptosis by the oxidative stress pathway.

I/R injury in H9c2 cells is a complex biochemical cascade that is initiated after ischemia and is exacerbated after the return of blood flow. I/R causes both cardiomyocytic death and autophagy in H9c2 cells (41). Autophagy has a dual role in cell development during heart ischemia and reperfusion (42). Autophagy maintains the homeostasis of cellular ATP and ensures cell survival in the ischemic heart (43). However, excessive autophagy can cause cell death during reperfusion (44). In the present study, both H/R-induced apoptosis and autophagy in H9c2 cells were attenuated by CD47 downregulation through increasing autophagosome procession. However, the lysosomal acidification inhibitor CQ prevents autophagosome-lysosome fusion (44) and can neutralize the effect of CD47 antibody treatment.

Autophagy is regulated by several proteins, including LC3-II, Beclin-1, p62 and LAMP2 (4548). Therefore, the present study examined the levels of these autophagy-associated proteins in myocytes during H/R. In mammalian cells, LC3-II becomes membrane-bounding and easy to localize on autophagosomes (49), which in turn makes LC3-II an ideal autophagosomal marker (50). In the present study, the increase of LC3-II expression was associated with reduced cardiomyocytic viability during H/R, suggesting that autophagy during the reperfusion phase may be detrimental for myocytes. Notably, CD47 antibody or Si-CD47 treatment downregulated the expression of LC3-II and increased the survival rate of H9c2 cells, indicating that CD47 downregulation can promote cell survival through inhibiting the excessive autophagy induced by H/R.

To further explore the role of CD47 in autophagic flux, the expression of p62 and Beclin-1, which link ubiquitinated aggregates for destruction within autophagosomes, get degraded upon autophagosome processing and increased in I/R-treated hearts, were assessed (49,51). The p62 protein was degraded, indicating that CD47 signaling normally limits cell survival by preventing autophagic flux. Otherwise, Beclin-1, an early-autophagy-related gene (45), activates autophagy during reperfusion and promotes cardiomyocytic apoptosis (3). Downregulating Beclin-1 expression in myocytes can inhibit I/R-induced autophagy and increase cell survival rate (52). Bcl-2 can bind to Beclin-1 to form a Bcl-2-Beclin-1 complex that prevents Beclin-1 from assembling the pre-autophagosomal structure, a process that inhibits autophagy and apoptosis (53,54). Bcl-2 is a potent anti-apoptotic protein (55) and inducing its partner Beclin-1 by loss of CD47 may be a master regulator of the fate decision between apoptotic cell death and protective autophagy. The present study identified Beclin-1 as another target of CD47 signaling pathway.

Another finding of this study was the rapid decline in LAMP2 abundance in the H/R group and the improvement of autophagosome processing by upregulating LAMP2 in the CD47 treatment groups. However, CQ can disrupt the effect of CD47 by inhibiting autophagosome processing. Both ischemia and reperfusion induce the decline of LAMP2, a lysosome membrane protein that participates in autophagosome-lysosome fusion (47,48). This decline can be accelerated by ROS generation (49). LAMP2 knockdown impairs autophagy in ventricular myocytes of adult rats and causes cell apoptosis at a level comparable to that achieved by 3-Methyladenine, another autophagy inhibitor (56). Ablation of LAMP2 (57) or loss of the LAMP2 (58) protein in Danon disease (59), which is characterized by autophagosome accumulation in myocardium and cardiomyopathy (58), can cause extensive myocardial fibrosis (60), suggesting that autophagosome accumulation induced by inhibition of autophagic flux is a pathogenic mechanism responsible for H/R injury in cardiomyocytes.

In conclusion, the CD47 antibody or Si-CD47 can protect cardiomyocytes against H/R injury through increasing autophagic flux and autophagic clearance. CD47 deficiency may offer a potential therapeutic approach for preventing myocardial I/R injury, which should be tested with in vivo experiments.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Dr Wei Sun and Dr Peng Li (Department of Cardiology, The First Affiliated Hospital of Nanjing Medical University) for their technical assistance.

Funding

The present study was supported by the Natural Science Foundation of China (grant no. 81627802).

Availability of data and materials

The datasets used and/or analyzed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

Authors' contributions

DH designed the study and drafted the manuscript. YL and KZ undertook cell culture and characterization. PZ, HF and YZ helped perform the experiments regarding molecular biological technique. DB and QC helped to perform TEM and immunofluorescence staining. YY, LL and YD assisted with the biochemical index detection. XK provided constructive suggestions on experimental design, performed the data analysis and revised the manuscript. All authors reviewed the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Ethics approval and consent to participate

All experiments with animals were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) of the Nanjing Medical University and the methods were carried out in accordance with the approved guidelines.

Patient consent for publication

Not applicable.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

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June-2019
Volume 19 Issue 6

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Spandidos Publications style
Li Y, Zhao K, Zong P, Fu H, Zheng Y, Bao D, Yin Y, Chen Q, Lu L, Dai Y, Dai Y, et al: CD47 deficiency protects cardiomyocytes against hypoxia/reoxygenation injury by rescuing autophagic clearance. Mol Med Rep 19: 5453-5463, 2019.
APA
Li, Y., Zhao, K., Zong, P., Fu, H., Zheng, Y., Bao, D. ... Kong, X. (2019). CD47 deficiency protects cardiomyocytes against hypoxia/reoxygenation injury by rescuing autophagic clearance. Molecular Medicine Reports, 19, 5453-5463. https://doi.org/10.3892/mmr.2019.10199
MLA
Li, Y., Zhao, K., Zong, P., Fu, H., Zheng, Y., Bao, D., Yin, Y., Chen, Q., Lu, L., Dai, Y., Hou, D., Kong, X."CD47 deficiency protects cardiomyocytes against hypoxia/reoxygenation injury by rescuing autophagic clearance". Molecular Medicine Reports 19.6 (2019): 5453-5463.
Chicago
Li, Y., Zhao, K., Zong, P., Fu, H., Zheng, Y., Bao, D., Yin, Y., Chen, Q., Lu, L., Dai, Y., Hou, D., Kong, X."CD47 deficiency protects cardiomyocytes against hypoxia/reoxygenation injury by rescuing autophagic clearance". Molecular Medicine Reports 19, no. 6 (2019): 5453-5463. https://doi.org/10.3892/mmr.2019.10199