Association of neonatal hypoxia with lasting changes in left ventricular gene expression: An animal model

Abstract

ObjectiveInnovations in pediatric cardiovascular surgery have resulted in significant improvements in survival for children with congenital heart disease. In adults with such disease, however, surgical morbidity and mortality remain significant. We hypothesized that hypoxemia in early life causes lasting changes in gene expression in the developing heart and that such changes may persist into later life, affecting the physiology of the adult myocardium.MethodsMicroarray expression analyses were performed with left ventricular tissue from 10- and 90-day-old rats exposed to hypoxia (inspired oxygen fraction 0.12) for the first 10 days after birth then subsequently reared in ambient air and with tissue from age-matched rats reared entirely in ambient air. Changes in expression of selected genes were confirmed with real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. Left ventricular cardiomyocytes were isolated from adult animals in both groups, and cellular morphology and viability were compared.ResultsMicroarray analyses revealed significant changes in 1945 and 422 genes in neonates and adults, respectively. Changes in genes associated with adaptive vascular remodeling and energy homeostasis, as well as regulation of apoptosis, were confirmed by real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. The viability of cardiomyocytes isolated from hypoxic animals was significantly lower than in those from control animals (36.7% ± 13.3% vs 85.0% ± 2.9%, P = .024).ConclusionsNeonatal hypoxia is associated with significant changes in left ventricular gene expression in both neonatal and adult rats. This may have physiologic implications for the adult myocardium

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This paper was published in Elsevier - Publisher Connector .

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