IUGR decreases cardiomyocyte endowment and alters cardiac metabolism in a sex- and cause-of-IUGR-specific manner.
K J BottingX Y LokeS ZhangJ B AndersenJ R NyengaardJanna L MorrisonPublished in: American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology (2018)
Intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) increases the risk of ischemic heart disease in adulthood. Studies in rats suggest cardiac vulnerability is more pronounced in males and in offspring that were exposed to hypoxia in utero. Therefore, we aimed to test the hypotheses that 1) IUGR adolescent males, but not females, have fewer cardiomyocytes and altered expression of cardiometabolic genes compared with controls; and 2) IUGR due to hypoxia has a greater effect on these parameters compared with IUGR due to nutrient restriction. IUGR was induced in guinea pigs by maternal hypoxia (MH; 10% O2, n = 9) or maternal nutrient restriction (MNR; ~30% reduction in food intake, n = 9) in the second half of pregnancy and compared with control ( n = 11). At 120 days of age, postmortem was performed and the left ventricle perfusion fixed for stereological determination of cardiomyocyte number or snap frozen to determine the abundance of cardiometabolic genes and proteins by quantitative RT-PCR and Western blotting, respectively. MH reduced the number of cardiomyocytes in female ( P < 0.05), but not male or MNR, adolescent offspring. Furthermore, IUGR males had decreased expression of genes responsible for fatty acid activation in the sarcoplasm ( FACS) and transport into the mitochondria ( AMPK-a2 and ACC; P < 0.05) and females exposed to MH had increased activation/phosphorylation of AMP-activated protein kinase-α ( P < 0.05). We postulate that the changes in cardiomyocyte endowment and cardiac gene expression observed in the present study are a direct result of in utero programming, as offspring at this age did not suffer from obesity, hypertension, or left ventricular hypertrophy.
Keyphrases
- left ventricular
- protein kinase
- high glucose
- gene expression
- endothelial cells
- high fat diet
- poor prognosis
- genome wide
- fatty acid
- young adults
- mental health
- pregnancy outcomes
- type diabetes
- metabolic syndrome
- heart failure
- insulin resistance
- blood pressure
- high resolution
- depressive symptoms
- skeletal muscle
- birth weight
- south africa
- magnetic resonance
- hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- mitral valve
- binding protein
- computed tomography
- genome wide identification
- acute coronary syndrome
- cell death
- diabetic rats
- coronary artery
- body mass index
- transcatheter aortic valve replacement
- pulmonary arterial hypertension
- high fat diet induced
- contrast enhanced
- solid phase extraction
- aortic valve