Para acceder a los documentos con el texto completo, por favor, siga el siguiente enlace: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/146384

Intermittent hypoxia mimicking sleep apnea increases passive stiffness of myocardial extracellular matrix. A multiscale study
Farré, Núria; Otero, Jordi; Falcones, Bryan; Torres, Marta; Jorba, Ignasi; Gozal, David; Almendros López, Isaac; Farré Ventura, Ramon; Navajas Navarro, Daniel
Background: Tissue hypoxia-reoxygenation characterizes obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), a very prevalent respiratory disease associated with increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Experimental studies indicate that intermittent hypoxia (IH) mimicking OSA induces oxidative stress and inflammation in heart tissue at the cell and molecular levels. However, it remains unclear whether IH modifies the passive stiffness of the cardiac tissue extracellular matrix (ECM). Aim: To investigate multiscale changes of stiffness induced by chronic IH in the ECM of left ventricular (LV) myocardium in a murine model of OSA. Methods: Two-month and 18-month old mice (N = 10 each) were subjected to IH (20% O2 40 s-6% O2 20 s) for 6 weeks (6 h/day). Corresponding control groups for each age were kept under normoxia. Fresh LV myocardial strips (∼7 mm × 1 mm × 1 mm) were prepared, and their ECM was obtained by decellularization. Myocardium ECM macroscale mechanics were measured by performing uniaxial stress-strain tensile tests. Strip macroscale stiffness was assessed as the stress value (σ) measured at 0.2 strain and Young's modulus (EM) computed at 0.2 strain by fitting Fung's constitutive model to the stress-strain relationship. ECM stiffness was characterized at the microscale as the Young's modulus (Em) measured in decellularized tissue slices (∼12 μm tick) by atomic force microscopy. Results: Intermittent hypoxia induced a ∼1.5-fold increase in σ (p < 0.001) and a ∼2.5-fold increase in EM (p < 0.001) of young mice as compared with normoxic controls. In contrast, no significant differences emerged in Em among IH-exposed and normoxic mice. Moreover, the mechanical effects of IH on myocardial ECM were similar in young and aged mice. Conclusion: The marked IH-induced increases in macroscale stiffness of LV myocardium ECM suggests that the ECM plays a role in the cardiac dysfunction induced by OSA. Furthermore, absence of any significant effects of IH on the microscale ECM stiffness suggests that the significant increases in macroscale stiffening are primarily mediated by 3D structural ECM remodeling.
-Síndromes d'apnea del son
-Malalties coronàries
-Ventricles cardíacs
-Sleep apnea syndromes
-Coronary diseases
-Ventricle of heart
cc-by (c) Farré, Núria et al., 2018
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es
Artículo
Artículo - Versión publicada
Frontiers Media
         

Mostrar el registro completo del ítem

Documentos relacionados

Otros documentos del mismo autor/a

Farré, Núria; Otero, Jorge; Falcones, Bryan; Torres, Marta; Jorba, Ignasi; Gozal, David; Almendros López, Isaac; Farré Ventura, Ramon; Navajas Navarro, Daniel
Farré, Núria; Jorba, Ignasi; Torres, Marta; Falcones, Bryan; Martí Almor, Julio; Farré Ventura, Ramon; Almendros López, Isaac; Navajas Navarro, Daniel
Farré, Núria; Jorba, Ignasi; Torres, Marta; Falcones, Bryan; Martí Almor, Julio; Farré Ventura, Ramon; Almendros López, Isaac; Navajas Navarro, Daniel
Menal, Maria Jose; Jorba, Ignasi; Torres, Marta; Montserrat, Josep M.; Gozal, David; Colell, Anna; Pinol Ripoll, Gerard; Navajas Navarro, Daniel; Almendros López, Isaac; Farré Ventura, Ramon
Menal, Maria Jose; Jorba, Ignasi; Torres, Marta; Montserrat, Josep M.; Gozal, David; Colell, Anna; Pinol Ripoll, Gerard; Navajas Navarro, Daniel; Almendros López, Isaac; Farré Ventura, Ramon