Swimming causes myosin adaptations in the rat cardiac isograft

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Abstract

To investigate the contributions of humoral and hemodynamic factors to cardiac adaptations associated with chronic exercise, female Fischer 344 rats were subjected to chronic swimming, infrarenal cardiac transplantation, or both. Swimming resulted in hypertrophy (11-12%) of the in situ hearts in both the unoperated and operated animals compared with the matched sedentary controls. The cardiac isograft exhibited atrophy (32-35%), which was not attenuated by swimming. The cardiac isograft was also associated with a decrease in the percent of V1 myosin isoenzyme, which was attenuated by swimming (45 ± 5% versus 66 ± 6%). Swimming also increased the percent of this isomyosin in the in situ hearts of operated rats. These data suggest that hemodynamic load and/or neural innervation are necessary for hypertrophy associated with chronic conditioning by swimming, whereas myosin isoenzyme control is significantly mediated by humoral factors.

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Advani, S. V., Geenen, D., Malhotra, A., Factor, S. M., & Scheuer, J. (1990). Swimming causes myosin adaptations in the rat cardiac isograft. Circulation Research, 67(3), 780–783. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.RES.67.3.780

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