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1.
Physiol Rep ; 5(19)2017 Oct.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29038363

RÉSUMÉ

Authors have showed that obesity implicates cardiac dysfunction associated with myocardial L-type calcium channels (LTCCs) activity impairments, as well as moderate exercise training (MET) seems to be an important therapeutic tool. We tested the hypothesis that MET promotes improvements on LTCCS activity and protein expression at obesity induced by unsaturated high-fat diets, which could represent a protective effects against development of cardiovascular damage. Male Wistar rats were randomized in control (C, n = 40), which received a standard diet and obese (Ob; n = 40), which received high-fat diet. After 20 weeks, the animals were assigned at four groups: control (C; n = 12); control submitted to exercise training (ET; n = 14); obese (Ob; n = 10); and obese submitted to exercise training (ObET; n = 11). ET (5 days/week during 12 weeks) began in the 21th week and consisted of treadmill running that was progressively increased to reach 60 min. Final body weight (FBW), body fat (BF), adiposity index (AI), comorbidities, and hormones were evaluated. Cardiac remodeling was assessed by morphological and isolated papillary muscles function. LTCCs activity was determined using specific blocker, while protein expression of LTCCs was evaluated by Western blot. Unsaturated high-fat diet promoted obesity during all experimental protocol. MET controlled obesity process by decreasing of FBW, BF, and AI. Obesity implicated to LTCCs protein expression reduction and MET was not effective to prevent this condition. ET was efficient to promote several improvements to body composition and metabolic parameters; however, it was not able to prevent or reverse the downregulation of LTCCs protein expression at obese rats.


Sujet(s)
Canaux calciques de type L/métabolisme , Activité motrice , Myocarde/métabolisme , Obésité/métabolisme , Conditionnement physique d'animal/méthodes , Remodelage ventriculaire , Animaux , Canaux calciques de type L/génétique , Alimentation riche en graisse/effets indésirables , Mâle , Obésité/étiologie , Obésité/anatomopathologie , Rats , Rat Wistar
2.
Physiol Rep ; 4(17)2016 09.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27582064

RÉSUMÉ

Obesity is a worldwide pandemic associated with high incidence of cardiovascular disease. The mechanisms by which the obesity leads cardiac dysfunction are not fully elucidated and few studies have evaluated the relationship between obesity and proteins involved in myocardial ß-adrenergic (ßA) system. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the cardiac function and ßA pathway components in myocardium of obese rats. Male Wistar rats were distributed into two groups: control (n = 17; standard diet) and obese (n = 17; saturated high-fat diet) fed for 33 weeks. Nutritional profile and comorbidities were assessed. Cardiac structure and function was evaluated by macroscopic postmortem, echocardiographic and isolated papillary muscle analyzes. Myocardial protein expression of ß1- and ß2-adrenergic receptors, Gαs protein, adenylate cyclase (AC) and protein kinase A (PKA) was performed by Western blot. Cardiac cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) levels and PKA activity were assessed by ELISA Obese rats showed increased adiposity index (P < 0.001) and several comorbidities as hypertension, glucose intolerance, insulin resistance, and dyslipidemia compared with control rats. Echocardiographic assessment revealed increased left atrium diameter (C: 4.98 ± 0.38 vs. Ob: 5.47 ± 0.53, P = 0.024) and posterior wall shortening velocity (C: 37.1 ± 3.6 vs. Ob: 41.8 ± 3.8, P = 0.007) in obese group. Papillary muscle evaluation indicated that baseline data and myocardial responsiveness to isoproterenol stimulation were similar between the groups. Protein expression of myocardial AC was higher in obese group than in the control (C: 1.00 ± 0.21 vs. Ob: 1.25 ± 0.10, P = 0.025), whereas the other components were unchanged. These results suggest that saturated high-fat diet-induced obesity was not effective in triggering cardiac dysfunction and impair the beta-adrenergic signaling.


Sujet(s)
Adenylate Cyclase/métabolisme , Agonistes bêta-adrénergiques/métabolisme , Alimentation riche en graisse/effets indésirables , Myocarde/métabolisme , Obésité/métabolisme , Récepteurs bêta-adrénergiques/métabolisme , Animaux , Troubles du rythme cardiaque/étiologie , Troubles du rythme cardiaque/métabolisme , Autopsie , Alimentation riche en graisse/méthodes , Coeur/physiopathologie , Isoprénaline/pharmacologie , Mâle , Modèles animaux , Modèles cardiovasculaires , Myocarde/anatomopathologie , Obésité/étiologie , Muscles papillaires/métabolisme , Muscles papillaires/anatomopathologie , Muscles papillaires/physiopathologie , Rats , Rat Wistar , Sympathomimétiques/pharmacologie
3.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol ; 309(10): H1629-41, 2015 Nov 15.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26408546

RÉSUMÉ

Exercise training (ET) has beneficial effects on the myocardium in heart failure (HF) patients and in animal models of induced cardiac hypertrophy and failure. We hypothesized that if microRNAs (miRNAs) respond to changes following cardiac stress, then myocardial profiling of these miRNAs may reveal cardio-protective mechanisms of aerobic ET in HF. We used ascending aortic stenosis (AS) inducing HF in Wistar rats. Controls were sham-operated animals. At 18 wk after surgery, rats with cardiac dysfunction were randomized to 10 wk of aerobic ET (HF-ET) or to a heart failure sedentary group (HF-S). ET attenuated cardiac remodeling as well as clinical and pathological signs of HF with maintenance of systolic and diastolic function when compared with that of the HF-S. Global miRNA expression profiling of the cardiac tissue revealed 53 miRNAs exclusively dysregulated in animals in the HF-ET, but only 11 miRNAs were exclusively dysregulated in the HF-S. Out of 23 miRNAs that were differentially regulated in both groups, 17 miRNAs exhibited particularly high increases in expression, including miR-598, miR-429, miR-224, miR-425, and miR-221. From the initial set of deregulated miRNAs, 14 miRNAs with validated targets expressed in cardiac tissue that respond robustly to ET in HF were used to construct miRNA-mRNA regulatory networks that revealed a set of 203 miRNA-target genes involved in programmed cell death, TGF-ß signaling, cellular metabolic processes, cytokine signaling, and cell morphogenesis. Our findings reveal that ET attenuates cardiac abnormalities during HF by regulating cardiac miRNAs with a potential role in cardio-protective mechanisms through multiple effects on gene expression.


Sujet(s)
Remodelage auriculaire/génétique , Régulation de l'expression des gènes , Défaillance cardiaque/génétique , microARN/génétique , Conditionnement physique d'animal , Mode de vie sédentaire , Remodelage ventriculaire/génétique , Animaux , Sténose aortique , Apoptose , Cytokines , Modèles animaux de maladie humaine , Morphogenèse , Rats , Rat Wistar , Réaction de polymérisation en chaine en temps réel , Transduction du signal
4.
J Appl Physiol (1985) ; 117(6): 669-78, 2014 Sep 15.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24970855

RÉSUMÉ

Few studies have evaluated the relationship between the duration of obesity, cardiac function, and the proteins involved in myocardial calcium (Ca(2+)) handling. We hypothesized that long-term obesity promotes cardiac dysfunction due to a reduction of expression and/or phosphorylation of myocardial Ca(2+)-handling proteins. Thirty-day-old male Wistar rats were distributed into two groups (n = 10 each): control (C; standard diet) and obese (Ob; high-fat diet) for 30 wk. Morphological and histological analyses were assessed. Left ventricular cardiac function was assessed in vivo by echocardiographic evaluation and in vitro by papillary muscle. Cardiac protein expression of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca(2+)-ATPase (SERCA2a), calsequestrin, L-type Ca(2+) channel, and phospholamban (PLB), as well as PLB serine-16 phosphorylation (pPLB Ser(16)) and PLB threonine-17 phosphorylation (pPLB Thr(17)) were determined by Western blot. The adiposity index was higher (82%) in Ob rats than in C rats. Obesity promoted cardiac hypertrophy without alterations in interstitial collagen levels. Ob rats had increased endocardial and midwall fractional shortening, posterior wall shortening velocity, and A-wave compared with C rats. Cardiac index, early-to-late diastolic mitral inflow ratio, and isovolumetric relaxation time were lower in Ob than in C. The Ob muscles developed similar baseline data and myocardial responsiveness to increased extracellular Ca(2+). Obesity caused a reduction in cardiac pPLB Ser(16) and the pPLB Ser(16)/PLB ratio in Ob rats. Long-term obesity promotes alterations in diastolic function, most likely due to the reduction of pPLB Ser(16), but does not impair the myocardial Ca(2+) entry and recapture to SR.


Sujet(s)
Protéines de liaison au calcium/métabolisme , Calcium/métabolisme , Cardiopathies/physiopathologie , Coeur/physiopathologie , Obésité/métabolisme , Obésité/physiopathologie , Sérine/métabolisme , Animaux , Pression sanguine , Canaux calciques de type L/métabolisme , Diastole , Cardiopathies/imagerie diagnostique , Cardiopathies/étiologie , Mâle , Myocarde/anatomopathologie , Obésité/complications , Muscles papillaires/anatomopathologie , Muscles papillaires/physiopathologie , Phosphorylation , Rats , Rat Wistar , Sarcoplasmic Reticulum Calcium-Transporting ATPases/métabolisme , Échographie
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