Increased systolic load causes adverse remodeling of fetal aortic and mitral valves.
Frederick A TibayanSamantha LoueySonnet S JonkerHerbert EspinozaNatasha ChattergoonFanglei YouKent L ThornburgGeorge GiraudPublished in: American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology (2015)
While abnormal hemodynamic forces alter fetal myocardial growth, little is known about whether such insults affect fetal cardiac valve development. We hypothesized that chronically elevated systolic load would detrimentally alter fetal valve growth. Chronically instrumented fetal sheep received either a continuous infusion of adult sheep plasma to increase fetal blood pressure, or a lactated Ringer's infusion as a volume control beginning on day 126 ± 4 of gestation. After 8 days, mean arterial pressure was higher in the plasma infusion group (63.0 mmHg vs. 41.8 mmHg, P < 0.05). Mitral annular septal-lateral diameter (11.9 mm vs. 9.1 mm, P < 0.05), anterior leaflet length (7.7 mm vs. 6.4 mm, P < 0.05), and posterior leaflet length (P2; 4.0 mm vs. 3.0 mm, P < 0.05) were greater in the elevated load group. mRNA levels of Notch-1, TGF-β2, Wnt-2b, BMP-1, and versican were suppressed in aortic and mitral valve leaflets; elastin and α1 type I collagen mRNA levels were suppressed in the aortic valves only. We conclude that sustained elevated arterial pressure load on the fetal heart valve leads to anatomic remodeling and, surprisingly, suppression of signaling and extracellular matrix genes that are important to valve development. These novel findings have important implications on the developmental origins of valve disease and may have long-term consequences on valve function and durability.
Keyphrases
- mitral valve
- aortic valve
- left ventricular
- aortic stenosis
- blood pressure
- left atrial
- transcatheter aortic valve replacement
- aortic valve replacement
- heart failure
- hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- transcatheter aortic valve implantation
- extracellular matrix
- low dose
- preterm infants
- mesenchymal stem cells
- coronary artery
- coronary artery disease
- minimally invasive
- signaling pathway
- atrial fibrillation
- ejection fraction
- weight loss
- dna methylation
- bone marrow
- genome wide
- pulmonary arterial hypertension
- optical coherence tomography