Retracted: Possible Role of Interaction between PPARα and Cyclophilin D in Cardioprotection of AMPK against In Vivo Ischemia-Reperfusion in Rats
Hindawi
PPAR Research
Volume 2019, Article ID 9760941, 1 page
https://doi.org/10.1155/2019/9760941
Retraction
Retracted: Possible Role of Interaction between
PPAR𝛼 and Cyclophilin D in Cardioprotection of AMPK against
In Vivo Ischemia-Reperfusion in Rats
PPAR Research
Received 13 March 2019; Accepted 13 March 2019; Published 15 July 2019
Copyright © 2019 PPAR Research. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License,
which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
PPAR Research has retracted the article titled “Possible Role
of Interaction between PPAR𝛼 and Cyclophilin D in Cardioprotection of AMPK against In Vivo Ischemia-Reperfusion
in Rats” [1] due to errors found in the scientific content of
the article. We consulted our Editorial Board who believed
that myocardial ischemia-reperfusion (IR) for only 24 hours
should not induce an increase in the heart weight-to-body
weight ratio because cardiac hypertrophy takes 1-2 weeks,
though the authors argued that the increase was due to an
inflammatory response, which disappears after 2-3 days. The
board queried what is meant when a 100% infarct area/total
area ratio is reported for IR hearts, when the tetrazolium
chloride (TTC) staining in Figure 1 shows a small area
of infarct: the authors explained that the infarct size was
normalized to the IR group as 100%. The TTC images are
of low technical quality: some hearts have 8 slices and others
have 10, making the results difficult to analyze. The infarcts in
all groups are minor and TTC staining is minimal; many of
the hearts have little ischemic injury and the board found the
normalization misleading. Although the authors provided
the underlying data and images, the board recommended
retraction. The authors disagree with this decision.
For the Western blot results, the board argued that
PPARalpha antibodies are difficult to use and robust results
are surprising; the authors said they tested the specificity.
The interaction of a cytosolic protein cyclophilin D with
PPARalpha, a nuclear protein, is possible but does not make
sense for the proposed mechanism. The identity of the band
said to be PPARalpha is questionable: the phosphorylated
PPARalpha is from a different blot (and thus a different
sample) than the total PPARalpha and the GAPDH control.
The AMPK blots have the same problem. Some of the images
do not correspond to the underlying images.
The quantification of the co-immunoprecipitation (CoIP) is questionable: the IgG lane is spliced into the image.
As with the Western blots, using the PPARalpha antibody in this immunoprecipitation should have been quite
difficult. The authors said Co-IP was performed using a
“reverse approach”: IP with PPARalpha antibody followed
by immunoblotting with CyP-D antibody and vice versa;
IP with CyP-D antibody followed by immunoblotting with
PPARalpha antibody.
The echocardiographic function data provided is incomplete: many parameters are shown in some mice, but not
others. Ejection fraction values are given, but the volume
measures needed to calculate this are not. There are several
errors in the standard error calculations, because the “n”
includes animals that were not assessed for the given parameters.
Finally, the board found it surprising that calciuminduced mitochondrial swelling was largely blocked in the
drug-treated group.
References
[1] G. Barreto-Torres and S. Javadov, “Possible role of interaction
between PPAR𝛼 and cyclophilin D in cardioprotection of
AMPK against in vivo ischemia-reperfusion in rats,” PPAR
Research, vol. 2016, Article ID 9282087, 12 pages, 2016.
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