呼吸阿拉斯加黑鱼(Dallia pectoralis)重塑心室Ca2+循环与慢性缺氧淹没,以维持心室收缩力

IF 2.1 Q3 PHYSIOLOGY
Holly A. Shiels , Ed White , Christine S. Couturier , Diarmid Hall , Shannon Royal , Gina L.J. Galli , Jonathan A.W. Stecyk
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引用次数: 2

摘要

阿拉斯加黑鱼(Dallia pectoralis)是北纬地区特有的兼性空气呼吸动物,冬季在寒冷缺氧的冰层下仍然活跃。为了了解细胞Ca2+循环的变化,使心脏在低温低氧水中发挥作用,我们将阿拉斯加黑鱼驯化为低温(5°C)常氧或低温缺氧(2.1-4.2 kPa;没有空气通道)5-8周。然后,我们评估了驯化条件对分离心室肌细胞胞内Ca2+瞬态(Δ[Ca2+]i)和等长收缩心室条收缩性能的影响。在正常缺氧、急性缺氧和5°C再充氧条件下,在不同的收缩频率(0.2-0.6 Hz)下进行测量。结果表明,缺氧适应的阿拉斯加黑鱼通过重塑细胞Δ[Ca2+]i来补偿缺氧对兴奋-收缩耦合的抑制作用,以维持心室收缩力。当在0.2 Hz的常氧环境下测量时,与常氧环境下的心室肌细胞相比,缺氧环境下的心室肌细胞的Δ[Ca2+]i峰值幅度大3.8倍,上升速度快4.1倍。在组织水平上,缺氧驯化动物制备的最大发育力是缺氧驯化动物制备的最大发育力的2.1倍。然而,缺氧适应的肌细胞和肌条在缺氧条件下可达到的最大收缩频率低于正常缺氧动物的制备。此外,缺氧适应的心室肌细胞和肌条在再氧后仍不能高频收缩。总的来说,研究结果表明,缺氧改变了阿拉斯加黑鱼心肌细胞Ca2+循环的各个方面,并且在缺氧期间可能会导致心率升高,这可能会影响体内的心输出量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The air-breathing Alaska blackfish (Dallia pectoralis) remodels ventricular Ca2+ cycling with chronic hypoxic submergence to maintain ventricular contractility

The Alaska blackfish (Dallia pectoralis) is a facultative air-breather endemic to northern latitudes where it remains active in winter under ice cover in cold hypoxic waters. To understand the changes in cellular Ca2+ cycling that allow the heart to function in cold hypoxic water, we acclimated Alaska blackfish to cold (5 °C) normoxia or cold hypoxia (2.1–4.2 kPa; no air access) for 5–8 weeks. We then assessed the impact of the acclimation conditions on intracellular Ca2+ transients (Δ[Ca2+]i) of isolated ventricular myocytes and contractile performance of isometrically-contracting ventricular strips. Measurements were obtained at various contractile frequencies (0.2–0.6 Hz) in normoxia, during acute exposure to hypoxia, and reoxygenation at 5 °C. The results show that hypoxia-acclimated Alaska blackfish compensate against the depressive effects of hypoxia on excitation-contraction coupling by remodelling cellular Δ[Ca2+]i to maintain ventricular contractility. When measured at 0.2 Hz in normoxia, hypoxia-acclimated ventricular myocytes had a 3.8-fold larger Δ[Ca2+]i peak amplitude with a 4.1-fold faster rate of rise, compared to normoxia-acclimated ventricular myocytes. At the tissue level, maximal developed force was 2.1-fold greater in preparations from hypoxia-acclimated animals. However, maximal attainable contraction frequencies in hypoxia were lower in hypoxia-acclimated myocytes and strips than preparations from normoxic animals. Moreover, the inability of hypoxia-acclimated ventricular myocytes and strips to contract at high frequency persisted upon reoxygenation. Overall, the findings indicate that hypoxia alters aspects of Alaska blackfish cardiac myocyte Ca2+ cycling, and that there may be consequences for heart rate elevation during hypoxia, which may impact cardiac output in vivo.

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