Newborn hypoxia/anoxia inhibits cardiomyocyte proliferation and decreases cardiomyocyte endowment in the developing heart: Role of endothelin-1

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Abstract

In the developing heart, cardiomyocytes undergo terminal differentiation during a critical window around birth. Hypoxia is a major stress to preterm infants, yet its effect on the development and maturation of the heart remains unknown. We tested the hypothesis in a rat model that newborn anoxia accelerates cardiomyocyte terminal differentiation and results in reduced cardiomyocyte endowment in the developing heart via an endothelin-1-dependent mechanism. Newborn rats were exposed to anoxia twice daily from postnatal day 1 to 3, and hearts were isolated and studied at postnatal day 4(P4), 7(P7), and 14 (P14). Anoxia significantly increased HIF-1α protein expression and pre-proET-1 mRNA abundance in P4 neonatal hearts. Cardiomyocyte proliferation was significantly decreased by anoxia in P4 and P7, resulting in a significant reduction of cardiomyocyte number per heart weight in the P14 neonates. Furthermore, the expression of cyclin D2 was significantly decreased due to anoxia, while p27 expression was increased. Anoxia has no significant effect on cardiomyocyte binucleation or myocyte size. Consistently, prenatal hypoxia significantly decreased cardiomyocyte proliferation but had no effect on binucleation in the fetal heart. Newborn administration of PD156707, an ETA-receptor antagonist, significantly increased cardiomyocyte proliferation at P4 and cell size at P7, resulting in an increase in the heart to body weight ratio in P7 neonates. In addition, PD156707 abrogated the anoxia-mediated effects. The results suggest that hypoxia and anoxia via activation of endothelin-1 at the critical window of heart development inhibits cardiomyocyte proliferation and decreases myocyte endowment in the developing heart, which may negatively impact cardiac function later in life.

Figures

  • Fig 1. Effect of newborn anoxia on prepro-ET-1 mRNA in the neonatal heart.Hearts were isolated from day 4 neonatal rats treated with control or anoxia. mRNA abundance of prepro-ET-1 was determined by real-time RT-PCR. Data are means ± SEM. * P< 0.05, anoxia vs. control. n = 3–5.
  • Fig 2. Effect of newborn anoxia on HIF-1α protein abundance in the neonatal heart. Hearts were isolated from day 4 neonatal rats treated with control or anoxia. Protein abundance of HIF-1αwas determined byWestern immunoblotting. Data are means ± SEM. * P< 0.05, anoxia vs. control. n = 4.
  • Fig 3. Effect of newborn anoxia and PD156707 on proliferation and binucleation of neonatal cardiomyocytes.Cardiomyocytes were isolated from P4, P7, and P14 neonatal rats that were treated with
  • Fig 4. Effect of newborn anoxia on cyclin D2 and p27 protein expression in the cardiomyocyte.Hearts were isolated from day 4 neonatal rats treated with control or anoxia in the presence (n = 6–7) or absence (n =
  • Fig 5. Effect of newborn anoxia and PD156707 on number of cardiomyocytes per heart weight.Cardiomyocytes were isolated from day 4, 7, and 14 neonatal rats that were treated with control or anoxia, in the absence or presence of PD156707. Hearts were weighed and cardiomyocytes counted by hemacytometer. Data are expressed as cardiomyocyte number/g heart weight, and are means ± SEM. * P< 0.05, anoxia vs. control. † P< 0.05, -PD156707 vs. +PD156707. PD: PD156707; n: animal numbers.
  • Fig 7. Effect of newborn anoxia and PD156707 on heart to body weight ratio of neonatal rats. Body and heart weights were taken from day 4, 7, and 14 neonatal rats that were treated with control or anoxia, in the absence or presence of PD156707. Data are means ± SEM. † P< 0.05, -PD156707 vs. +PD156707. PD: PD156707; n: animal numbers.
  • Table 1. Effect of newborn anoxia and PD156707 on body and heart weight of neonatal rats.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Paradis, A. N., Gay, M. S., Wilson, C. G., & Zhang, L. (2015). Newborn hypoxia/anoxia inhibits cardiomyocyte proliferation and decreases cardiomyocyte endowment in the developing heart: Role of endothelin-1. PLoS ONE, 10(2). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116600

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