Selection of endurance capabilities and the trade-off between pressure and volume in the evolution of the human heart.
Robert E ShaveDaniel E LiebermanAimee L DraneMarcel G BrownAlan M BatterhamSteven WorthingtonRebeca AtenciaYedra FeltrerJennifer NearyRory B WeinerMeagan M WasfyAaron L BaggishPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2019)
Chimpanzees and gorillas, when not inactive, engage primarily in short bursts of resistance physical activity (RPA), such as climbing and fighting, that creates pressure stress on the cardiovascular system. In contrast, to initially hunt and gather and later to farm, it is thought that preindustrial human survival was dependent on lifelong moderate-intensity endurance physical activity (EPA), which creates a cardiovascular volume stress. Although derived musculoskeletal and thermoregulatory adaptations for EPA in humans have been documented, it is unknown if selection acted similarly on the heart. To test this hypothesis, we compared left ventricular (LV) structure and function across semiwild sanctuary chimpanzees, gorillas, and a sample of humans exposed to markedly different physical activity patterns. We show the human LV possesses derived features that help augment cardiac output (CO) thereby enabling EPA. However, the human LV also demonstrates phenotypic plasticity and, hence, variability, across a wide range of habitual physical activity. We show that the human LV's propensity to remodel differentially in response to chronic pressure or volume stimuli associated with intense RPA and EPA as well as physical inactivity represents an evolutionary trade-off with potential implications for contemporary cardiovascular health. Specifically, the human LV trades off pressure adaptations for volume capabilities and converges on a chimpanzee-like phenotype in response to physical inactivity or sustained pressure loading. Consequently, the derived LV and lifelong low blood pressure (BP) appear to be partly sustained by regular moderate-intensity EPA whose decline in postindustrial societies likely contributes to the modern epidemic of hypertensive heart disease.
Keyphrases
- physical activity
- endothelial cells
- high intensity
- blood pressure
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- left ventricular
- heart failure
- pluripotent stem cells
- body mass index
- skeletal muscle
- mental health
- pulmonary hypertension
- aortic valve
- body composition
- coronary artery disease
- heart rate
- weight loss
- contrast enhanced
- stress induced
- blood glucose