|
|
|
|||
| Home Help Feedback Subscriptions Archive Search Table of Contents | ||||
First published online June 15, 2006
Journal of Experimental Biology 209, 2442-2451 (2006)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2006
doi: 10.1242/jeb.02237
The role of adrenergic stimulation in maintaining maximum cardiac performance in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) during hypoxia, hyperkalemia and acidosis at 10°C
1 Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, 6270 University
Blvd., Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada
2 Zoophysiology, Gothenburg University, Gothenberg, Sweden
3 Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC V5A 1S6,
Canada
4 Faculty of Land and Food Systems and Department of Zoology, University of
British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: hanson{at}zoology.ubc.ca)
Accepted 22 March 2006
| Summary |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Key words: acidosis, adrenaline, exercise, heart, hyperkalemia, hypoxia, maximum cardiac performance, Oncorhynchus mykiss, PvO2, rainbow trout, teleost
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
) during and after intense exercise.
Therefore, to properly evaluate the detrimental effects of such changes in the
extracellular environment in the context of fish exercise, one needs to know
their combined effects on maximum cardiac performance. To the best of our
knowledge, no one has yet examined the combined effects of exercise-induced
hypoxia, hyperkalemia and acidosis on maximum cardiac performance.
What has been well studied in this regard are the negative inotropic and
chronotropic effects of acidosis alone on both isolated cardiac muscle strips
(Gesser and Jorgensen, 1982
;
Gesser et al., 1982
;
Kalinin and Gesser, 2002
) and
working perfused heart preparations
(Farrell and Milligan, 1986
;
Farrell et al., 1986
;
Farrell et al., 1988
). A 60%
decrease was observed in isometric force of rainbow trout ventricular strips
exposed to hypercapnic acidosis (pH 6.9)
(Kalinin and Gesser, 2002
),
whereas a
10% decrease in maximum cardiac power output
(POmax) was observed
(Farrell et al., 1986
), with
hypercapnic acidosis (pH 7.4) in perfused rainbow trout hearts, a consequence
of declines in both heart rate (fH) and contractile force.
It is thought that acidosis exerts its detrimental effects by competitively
interfering with calcium-troponin binding
(Williamson et al., 1976
;
Fabiato and Fabiato, 1978
;
Gesser and Jorgensen, 1982
)
and effectively reducing the myocardial intracellular Ca2+
concentration.
Adrenergic stimulation can protect cardiac performance and counteract the
acidosis-induced chronotropic and inotropic effects in both perfused hearts
(Farrell et al., 1983
;
Farrell and Milligan, 1986
;
Farrell et al., 1986
) and
isolated cardiac muscle strips (Gesser and
Jorgensen, 1982
; Gesser et
al., 1982
). An acidosis of pH 7.4 significantly reduced both
and PO of perfused sea raven
and ocean pout hearts; however, cardiac performance was fully restored when
the acidosis was given in conjunction with 1 µmol l1
adrenaline (AD) (Farrell et al.,
1983
). Concurrent adrenergic stimulation (100 µmol
l1 AD) also maintained cardiac performance in isolated
cardiac muscle strips, whereas acidotic cardiac muscle strips not exposed to
AD exhibited a 30% decline in contractile force
(Gesser et al., 1982
).
Adrenergic stimulation counteracts the acidotic impairment of calcium-troponin
binding by increasing myocardial Ca2+ influx via the
L-type Ca2+ channels (Shiels
and Farrell, 1997
; Vornanen,
1998
). Adrenergic stimulation also activates erythrocyte
Na+/H+ exchange
(Tang et al., 1988
;
Perry and Gilmour, 1996
) which
helps restore plasma and erythrocyte pH during exercise-induced acidosis
(McDonald et al., 1989
).
The detrimental effects of hyperkalemia on cardiac performance in rainbow
trout are known but less thoroughly studied. Hyperkalemia (10 mmol
l1 and 12.5 mmol l1 K+) reduces
the contractive force of isolated heart strips by
50%
(Kalinin and Gesser, 2002
) to
100% (Nielsen and Gesser,
2001
). Hyperkalemia reduces the resting membrane potential of
myocardial cells (Chapman and Rodrigo,
1987
; Hove-Madsen and Gesser,
1989
), which in turn decreases the duration of the myocardial
action potential, and thus the strength of myocardial contractions
(Chapman and Rodrigo, 1987
).
Additionally, hyperkalemia in mammals (K+>5.5 mmol
l1) has been shown to result in ventricular arrhythmia
(Kes, 2001
).
Similarly to acidosis, the negative inotropic effects of hyperkalemia can
be alleviated by adrenergic stimulation. Concurrent adrenergic stimulation (10
µmol l1 AD) of isolated cardiac muscle completely
eliminated a 50% decrease in contraction force associated with 10 mmol
l1 K+
(Kalinin and Gesser, 2002
),
and the complete loss of contractile force associated with 12.5 mmol
l1 K+
(Nielsen and Gesser, 2001
).
Since the effects of hyperkalemia on cardiac performance have only been
examined on paced, isolated cardiac muscle strips, little is known about the
chronotropic effects of hyperkalemic exposure. Consequently, one of the aims
of this study is to quantify both inotropic and chronotropic effects of
hyperkalemia in a perfused heart preparation.
The third important change in the extracellular environment of the trout
heart during exercise is the venous oxygen tension
(PvO2). During intense exercise, and as
skeletal muscle oxygen demand increases, venous oxygen tension is reduced by
50% (Kiceniuk and Jones,
1977
). This reduces the oxygen gradient (driving diffusion of
oxygen from the cardiac circulation to the myocardial tissues) at a time when
myocardial oxygen consumption is concurrently increasing in proportion to the
increased cardiac work during swimming
(Farrell, 1985
;
Graham and Farrell, 1990
).
Hence, oxygen supply to approximately 70% of the ventricle becomes precarious
at a time when it is most needed, despite the fact that coronary blood flow to
the remaining myocardium increases during exercise
(Axelsson and Farrell, 1993
;
Gamperl et al., 1994a
;
Gamperl et al., 1995
). Severe
hypoxia (
1.6 kPa) decreases the isometric force of isolated cardiac muscle
strips by 6090% (Gesser,
1977
; Gesser et al.,
1982
; Overgaard and Gesser,
2004
). Isolated perfused hearts can perform routine physiological
workloads at 3.3 kPa, but this level of hypoxia decreases
max and
POmax by
50% and
80%, respectively
(Farrell et al., 1989
), which
seems a rather high threshold given that PvO2
decreases to around 2 kPa during prolonged swimming
(Farrell and Clutterham,
2003
). Clearly, the exact threshold will be determined by both the
cardiac workload and the extracellular conditions experienced by the heart.
With regard to the former, perfused trout hearts can generate a routine
cardiac output even under near anoxic conditions provided the workload is
sub-physiological (Arthur et al.,
1992
; Overgaard et al.,
2004a
). Therefore, to properly evaluate the effects of hypoxia it
is necessary to examine maximum cardiac performance, which is now possible in
trout using in situ heart preparations. In addition, although it has
been theorized that a limited myocardial oxygen supply restricts exercise
performance (Farrell, 2002
),
no studies have yet considered the combined effects of hypoxia, acidosis, and
hyperkalemia that are known to occur in vivo. Consequently, this
study was designed to examine the effects of various levels of hypoxia on
maximum cardiac performance under conditions simulating exercise in
vivo. Hypoxia was studied alone and in conjunction with hyperkalemia (5
mmol l1), acidosis (pH 7.5) and elevated catecholamines. We
tested the hypothesis that adrenaline is critical in maintaining maximum
cardiac performance under these conditions, which were intended to simulate
those during and immediately after intense activity.
| Materials and methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Surgical procedures
Fish were anaesthetized in an oxygenated solution of buffered tricaine
methane sulfonate (MS-222) (0.1 g l1 MS222 & 0.1 g
l1 NaHCO3), weighed and placed on an operating
table where their gills were continuously irrigated with chilled, oxygenated
anaesthetic (0.05 g l1 MS-222) buffered with 0.05 g
l1 NaHCO3. They were then injected with 1 ml
kg1 of heparinized saline (100 i.u. ml1)
via the caudal vessels. An in situ perfused heart
preparation was prepared (Farrell et al.,
1986
; Farrell et al.,
1989
). Briefly, a shallow lengthwise incision was made from the
anal opening to an area just posterior to the pectoral girdle and a stainless
steel input cannula was introduced into the sinus venosus via a
hepatic vein. Perfusion of the heart, via the input cannula, was
immediately commenced with chilled freshwater trout saline (composition below)
containing 5.0 nmol l1 adrenaline (arenaline bitartrate
salt; AD) and 10 i.u. heparin ml1. A stainless steel output
cannula was then secured into the ventral aorta at a point confluent with the
bulbus arteriosus, and purse string sutures were used to occlude both ducts of
Cuvier and destroy the cardiac branches of the vagus nerve. In addition, the
spine was severed. The total time to prepare the perfused heart preparation
was 1520 min. All experimental procedures complied with the policies of
the University Animal Care Committees of both Simon Fraser University and the
University of British Columbia.
Following surgery, the fish was transferred to a temperature-controlled,
physiological saline bath (124.1 mmol l1 NaCl, 2.5 mmol
l1 KCl, 11.9 mmol l1 NaHCO3,
2.0 mmol l1 CaCl2-2H2O, 0.2 mmol
l1 NaH2PO4.H2O, 3.4 mmol
l1 Na2HPO4, 0.9 mmol
l1 MgSO4.7H2O; all chemicals were from
Sigma-Aldrich, Oakville, ON, Canada). The input cannula was immediately
connected to an adjustable, constant-pressure reservoir, and the output
cannula was connected to a separate constant pressure head set at 4.9 kPa to
mimic resting in vivo ventral aortic blood pressure. The height of
the input pressure reservoir was adjusted to set routine cardiac output
(
) at approximately 17.0 ml
min1 kg1
(Kiceniuk and Jones, 1977
).
Input (Pin) and output (Pout) pressure
were measured through saline-filled side arms (PE50 tubing) connected to
disposable pressure transducers (DPT 6100; Smiths Medical, Kirchseeon,
Germany). Cardiac outflow was continuously measured through the output line
with an in-line electromagnetic flow probe (SWF-4; Zepada Instruments,
Seattle, WA, USA) that had been previously calibrated with known flow rates of
perfusate. The experimental solutions (both the perfusate and the saline bath)
were contained in water-jacketed glassware so that the temperature could be
maintained at 10°C (Brinkman Instruments Inc., Mississauga, ON, Canada).
Hearts were allowed to equilibrate for 510 min while receiving normoxic
perfusate (see below) before the experiment commenced. The coronary
circulation was not perfused in this preparation.
Test conditions
Cardiac performance was assessed under several different protocols using
the test conditions defined below. A tonic level of adrenergic stimulation (5
nmol l1 AD), consistent with that found in resting rainbow
trout (Milligan et al., 1989
),
was used in all situations except when the protective effect of AD was being
evaluated. In this latter situation, 500 nmol l1 of AD was
used in order to ensure maximum adrenergic stimulation, as studies in rainbow
trout have reported post-exercise [AD] as high as 212±89 nmol
l1 (Butler et al.,
1986
).
Control (normoxic) condition
All preparations started under this condition. Freshwater trout saline
(124.1 mmol l1 NaCl, 2.5 mmol l1 KCl, 0.9
mmol l1 MgSO4.7H2O, 2.5 mmol
l1 CaCl2.2H2O, D-glucose 5.6 mmol
l1, 11.9 mmol l1 NaHCO3) was
gassed with 0.5% CO2 (balance air) to achieve a pH of 7.9 and an
oxygen level of 20.0 kPa. Therefore, preliminary experiments (N=8;
data not shown) were performed to show no significant difference in maximum
cardiac performance between hyperoxic hearts (95.5% O2, 0.5%
CO2) and hearts perfused with air, which was the control level of
oxygen for all experiments.
Hyperkalemia
The composition of the hyperkalemic perfusate was the same as the control
perfusate except that additional KCl was added to increase the [K+]
to either 5.0 mmol l1 or 7.5 mmol l1.
Acidosis
To achieve a pH of 7.5, the concentration of NaHCO3 in the
control perfusate was decreased to 10.1 mmol l1 and the
solution was equilibrated with a gas mixture containing 1.0% CO2
(balance air).
Hypoxia
Control perfusate was made hypoxic by equilibrating it with 0.5%
CO2 and an amount of oxygen corresponding to the desired level of
hypoxia (balance nitrogen). The hypoxia levels used in kPa were 20, 12.6, 10,
6.7, 5.0, 3.3, 2.7, 2.0 and 1.3. Premixed, calibrated gases (Praxair,
Vancouver, BC, Canada) and Wostoff gas pumps (M303/a-F; Bochum, Germany) were
used to generate gas mixtures.
Hyperkalemia and acidosis
Acidotic perfusate (to achieve a pH of 7.5), was made hyperkalemic by
increasing the [K+] to either 5.0 mmol l1 or 7.5
mmol l1.
Hyperkalemia, acidosis and hypoxia
A hyperkalemic (5.0 nmol l1), acidotic (pH 7.5) perfusate
(as above) was gassed with a mixture of 1.0% CO2 and various
concentrations of O2 (balance nitrogen) in order to achieve
particular levels of hypoxia as specified for the hypoxic perfusate.
Experimental protocols
Maximum cardiac performance was repeatedly assessed under 35
conditions. By initially measuring both maximum cardiac output
(
max) and maximum cardiac
power output (POmax) under normoxic, control conditions
each heart acted as its own control. To determine
max,
Pin was gradually increased in increments of
0.05 kPa
until cardiac output reached a plateau (usually around 0.4 kPa). To assess
POmax, Pin was left at its maximum and
Pout was increased in a stepwise fashion in
0.5 kPa
increments until PO reached a plateau. After
POmax was determined, Pout and
Pin were returned to resting levels and the heart was
allowed to recover (
5 min) before being exposed to the next perfusate.
Hearts were exposed to each perfusate for a total of 15 min; this time period
ensured continued viability of the photosensitive AD (which was renewed with
each change in perfusate) while remaining physiologically relevant, as
PvO2 can take more than 20 min to return to
normal following exhaustive exercise
(Farrell and Clutterham,
2003
). Under some extreme conditions individual hearts did not
perform for 15 min, succumbing to a cardiac collapse (i.e. cardiac output
approached zero). These hearts were terminated early, the duration noted and
normoxic conditions restored. Hearts that were unable to complete both cardiac
performance tests were considered to have failed under that test condition.
The following sets of protocols were used, each with its own order and
combination of test conditions.
Series I (hyperkalemia alone)
The main purpose of this series (N=9) was to define a level of
hyperkalemia that was physiologically relevant but did not result in
irreversible cardiac failure under normoxic conditions. Exercise in
vivo increases plasma K+ to
5.0 mmol l1
(Thomas et al., 1987
) but
previous studies done on isolated cardiac muscle strips have tested higher
concentrations of 5.012.5 mmol l1. The order of the
test conditions was: (1) control, (2) 5 mmol l1
K+ (3) 7.5 mmol l1 K+ (4) control and
(5) 7.5 mmol l1 K+ with 500 nmol
l1 AD.
Series II (acidosis and hyperkalemia)
The purpose of series II was to quantify under normoxic conditions (a) the
effects of a combined hyperkalemic, acidotic exposure on maximum cardiac
performance, and (b) the ameliorative effects of adrenaline. Several levels of
hyperkalemia were tested in order to determine the tolerance threshold for
these conditions. Individual hearts (N=8) were tested under the
following conditions (1) control, (2) 5.0 mmol l1
K+, pH 7.5, (3) control, (4) 5.0 mmol l1
K+ and pH 7.5 with 500 nmol l1 AD, and (5) 7.5
mmol l1 K+ and pH 7.5 with 500 nmol
l1 AD. In addition, three preliminary preparations were
tested using 7.5 mmol l1 K+ and 5 nmol
l1 AD at a pH of 7.5 directly after the first control step.
However, this exposure resulted in an almost immediate decrease in cardiac
output leading to a rapid (<5 min), irrecoverable cardiac collapse. In view
of this, 5.0 mmol l1 K+ was used for all
subsequent combined hyperkalemic exposures.
Series III
The purpose of series III was to determine the hypoxic thresholds for
maximum cardiac performance for hypoxia alone and in conjunction with
hyperkalemic (5.0 mmol l1) acidosis (pH 7.5). The levels of
respiratory acidosis and hyperkalemia chosen mimic those found in the plasma
of exercising rainbow trout in vivo
(Milligan and Wood, 1987
;
Nielsen and Lykkeboe, 1992
).
Hearts were exposed to the following sequence of test conditions (1) control
(normoxia), (2) hypoxia, (3) control, (4) hypoxia, 5.0 mmol
l1 K+ and pH 7.5 with 5 nmol l1
AD and (5) hypoxia, 5.0 mmol l1 K+ and pH 7.5
with 500 nmol l1 AD. The specific hypoxia levels used were
12.6 kPa (N=6 fish), 10 kPa (N=10 fish), 6.7 kPa
(N=6 fish) and 5.0 kPa (N=3 fish). At lower oxygen tensions
the combined hypoxic, hyperkalemic, acidotic exposure with 5.0 nmol
l1 AD (step 4) resulted in myocardial failure. As this
appeared to be specifically related to the absence of maximal adrenergic
stimulation, the protocol was modified for series IV and V to permit further
exploration of the hypoxic thresholds.
Series IV
To preclude the problem of a heart receiving tonic [AD] not being able to
tolerate the hyperkalemic, acidotic test condition at
PvO2 levels below 6.7 kPa, series IV studied
hypoxic thresholds with an abbreviated series of test conditions. The
following sequence of perfusates was used: (1) control (normoxia), (2)
hypoxia, (3) control and (4) hypoxia, 5.0 mmol l1
K+ and pH 7.5 with 500 nmol l1 AD. The specific
oxygen tensions were 5.0 kPa (N=7 fish), 3.3 kPa (N=8 fish),
2.7 kPa (N=8 fish) and 2.0 kPa (N=3 fish).
Series V
Because series IV revealed that hearts receiving only tonic adrenergic
stimulation could not tolerate hypoxia alone below 2.7 kPa, hearts in series V
were subjected to a further abbreviated experimental protocol: (1) control,
(2) hypoxia, 5.0 mmol l1 K+ and pH 7.5 with 500
nmol l1 AD and (3) control. The hypoxia levels tested were
2.7 kPa (N=6 fish), 2.0 kPa (N=6 fish) and 1.3 kPa
(N=4 fish). These test conditions best simulate the changes in venous
blood pH, [K+], PvO2 and [AD] seen
in vivo during intense activity and recovery.
Calculations and statistical analysis
All experimental data was collected using data acquisition software
(Labview version 5.1, National Instruments, Austin, TX, USA), which allowed
for real-time measurements of fH, Pin,
Pout,
and
PO. Statistical differences within test groups were determined by
one-way repeated measures analysis of variance (ANOVA). When warranted, the
Holm-Sidak procedure was used for post hoc multiple comparisons.
Sigma Stat (3.0; SPSS Inc., San Rafael, CA, USA) was used for all statistical
analysis. For statistical comparisons P=0.05.
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
max and
POmax with 5.0 mmol l1 K+ was
caused by a 25% decease in fH and a 10% decrease in
maximum stroke volume (Vs). Similarly, the 60% reduction in
max and
POmax with 7.5 mmol l1
K+ was caused by a 45% decrease in fH and a 25%
decrease in maximum Vs. A noticeable arrhythmia also developed near
the end of the 7.5 mmol l1 K+ exposure. Despite
these effects of hyperkalemia, maximum cardiac performance was fully restored
when hearts were returned to control conditions
(Fig. 1). Maximal adrenergic
stimulation significantly improved maximum cardiac performance of hyperkalemic
(7.5 mmol l1 K+) hearts, with increases in both
max and
POmax to within 20% (P<0.05) of their original
performance under control conditions (Fig.
1).
|
Hyperkalemia combined with acidosis
The results for 5 mmol l1 hyperkalemia alone, and in
combination with acidosis (pH 7.5), are presented in
Fig. 2. Hyperkalemia and
acidosis significantly decreased (P<0.05) both
max
(65.9±6.0%) and POmax
(55.2±14.6%) from control, and to a greater (2030%)
degree when compared to 5.0 mmol l1 K+ alone. The
additional 2030% decrease in
max was mainly due to a
further decrease (62.0±6.6%, P<0.05) in
fH as maximum Vs was still only depressed by 10%
(9.73±4.8%, P>0.05). The combined hyperkalemic, acidotic
condition also resulted in a pronounced cardiac arrhythmia. Nevertheless,
hearts fully recovered when returned to control conditions (not shown). In
contrast, exposure to acidosis and 7.5 mmol l1 K+
resulted in rapid, irrecoverable cardiac collapse (associated with severe
cardiac arrhythmia). Maximal adrenergic stimulation completely prevented the
debilitating effect of 5 mmol l1 K+ and acidosis,
allowing the hearts to perform at control levels of
max and
POmax (Fig.
2). Moreover, concurrent maximum adrenergic stimulation allowed
hearts to perform under the previously lethal conditions of 7.5 mmol
l1 K+ and acidosis, but with both
max and
POmax
35% lower than control (P<0.05;
Fig. 2).
|
Hypoxic thresholds without hyperkalemia and acidosis
The first three test conditions in series III and IV provided an assessment
of the effects of hypoxia alone and these data are summarized in
Fig. 3. Hypoxia at 12.6 kPa and
10 kPa had no significant effect on
max and
POmax either during hypoxia or with subsequent normoxic
exposure (Fig. 3). However,
hypoxic levels between 6.7 and 3.3 kPa not only significantly decreased
max and
POmax by 1025%
(Fig. 3), maximum performance
did not show any immediate recovery during subsequent normoxia from the level
seen under hypoxia. At 2.7 kPa, three out of eight hearts failed during the
hypoxia treatment, and all hearts failed during the 2.0 kPa (N=3) and
1.3 kPa (N=3) treatments. Based on these results, it appears the
hypoxic threshold for impairment of
max is between 10 and 6.7
kPa, and the threshold for complete cardiac failure under these conditions is
between 2.7 and 2.0 kPa.
|
max and
POmax by 38% to 66% (P<0.05) when
PvO2
6.7 kPa
(Fig. 4). Thus, hypoxia

6.7 kPa had no additive effect on maximum performance when compared
to hyperkalemia and acidosis alone. Similar to normoxia, adrenergic
stimulation fully restored
max and
POmax with 5 mmol l1 K+ and
acidosis at 12.6 kPa and 10 kPa. Although the protective effect of AD was
apparently lost at 6.7 kPa (Fig.
4), this result could have been due to poor recovery from prior
exposures (hypoxia alone or hypoxia, hyperkalemia and acidosis with tonic
[AD]) in this series of experiments. Therefore, series V was designed to
eliminate this possibility.
|
max nor
POmax were significantly different from control
(Fig. 4). At hypoxia levels of
1.3 kPa, however, maximal adrenergic stimulation only partially protected
cardiac performance, as
max
and POmax were reduced by 29.4±3.3% and
43.6±2.8% respectively (Fig.
4). Moreover, following the hypoxic, hyperkalemic, acidotic
exposure, with 500 nmol l1 AD, hearts exposed to 2.7, 2.0,
and 1.3 kPa did not recover when returned to normoxic conditions (data not
shown, P<0.05). Therefore, this suggests that under these
hyperkalemic, acidotic conditions with adrenergic stimulation the hypoxic
threshold for maximum cardiac performance is 2.0 kPa, but in the absence of
adrenergic stimulation, there is no refuge from cardiac impairment.
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
max=51.3± 1.7 ml
min1 kg1;
POmax=5.9±0.2 mW g1 ventricle)
are similar to previous in vivo and in situ studies done in
rainbow trout at 10°C. Reported maximum cardiac output values in previous
studies ranged from 43.9 to 62.5 ml kg1
min1, whereas maximum power output values ranged from 5.1 to
6.9 mW g1 ventricle
(Kiceniuk and Jones, 1977
The goal of this experiment was to examine consequences on maximum cardiac
performance of the venous extracellular conditions experienced during and
after exhaustive exercise, because the combination of factors has not been
studied previously. The hyperkalemia, acidosis and hypoxia conditions that we
used were intended to simulate those seen in the plasma of maximally
exercising rainbow trout in vivo
(Milligan and Wood, 1987
;
Nielsen and Lykkeboe, 1992
).
Our results confirmed that acidosis and hypoxia decrease both the force
(Farrell et al., 1983
;
Driedzic and Gesser, 1994
) and
frequency (Gesser and Poupa,
1983
) of myocardial contractions. In addition, we confirmed that
hyperkalemia has a detrimental effect on contraction force
(Kalinin and Gesser, 2002
) and
negatively affects contraction frequency (this study). A novel finding is that
without the chronotropic and inotropic protection provided by maximum
adrenergic stimulation, physiologically relevant acidosis and hyperkalemia
prevent maximum cardiac performance even under normoxic conditions. In fact,
with only tonic adrenergic stimulation, complete cardiac collapse occurred at
a PvO2 level below 6.7 kPa. However, when
hearts were maximally stimulated with adrenaline, the hypoxic threshold for
maximum cardiac performance under physiologically relevant hyperkalemic and
acidotic conditions was lowered to less than 2.0 kPa. This finding is
consistent with earlier work showning that isolated perfused hearts with tonic
adrenergic stimulation performed routine physiological workloads to 3.3 kPa,
but this level of hypoxia decreased
max and
POmax by
50% and 80%, respectively
(Farrell et al., 1989
).
Consequently, this study has clearly demonstrated for the first time that
maximum adrenergic stimulation is necessary for maximum cardiac performance to
occur at the levels of venous hypoxia, hyperkalemia and acidosis seen during
intense activity and recovery in vivo.
The importance of adrenergic stimulation for the hypoxic myocardium
corresponds well with what is known about the role of hypoxia in releasing
catecholamines into the circulation of rainbow trout. Rainbow trout exposed to
a graded hypoxia challenge released adrenaline when arterial blood oxygen
tension (arterial PO2) fell below 3.4 kPa
(Perry and Reid, 1992
). Here,
we found that hearts exposed to hypoxia of 3.3 kPa with only tonic adrenergic
stimulation lasted less than 5 min before undergoing a catastrophic cardiac
collapse. In contrast, hearts exposed to a hyperkalemic, acidotic perfusate in
conjunction with maximal adrenergic stimulation were able to function
maximally at levels of hypoxia as low as 2.0 kPa.
We have shown that adrenergic stimulation can counteract the negative
chronotropic and inotropic effects of hypoxia, hyperkalemia and acidosis. In
fish, adrenergic stimulation of cardiac tissue is mediated by the
ß-adrenoceptor (ß-AR) signalling pathway
(Ask et al., 1981
;
Temma et al., 1986
;
Gamperl et al., 1994c
).
ß-AR-mediated increases in myocardial Ca2+ influx help offset
the deleterious effects of both hyperkalemia and acidosis. Ca2+
influx restores the action potential upstroke lost during hyperkalemia
(Paterson et al., 1992
), and
counteracts the acidotic impairment of calcium-troponin binding. ß-AR
stimulation also helps restore plasma and erythrocyte pH by activating
erythrocyte Na+/H+ exchange
(Tang et al., 1988
;
Perry and Gilmour, 1996
). In
addition, direct adrenergic stimulation of pacemaker cells opposes hypoxic
bradycardia by increasing pacemaker self-excitation rate
(Tibbits et al., 1992
).
One major difference between the present study and in vivo studies
is the lack of a coronary circulation. The coronary circulation provides
arterial blood to the 30% of the ventricle that comprises the compact
myocardium; spongy myocardium, which receives oxygen solely from the cardiac
circulation (venous blood) constitutes the remaining 70%
(Santer and Greer Walker,
1980
; Tota, 1983
;
Davie and Farrell, 1991
).
In vivo, the coronary circulation is not necessary to maintain
routine cardiac performance, as demonstrated by coronary ablation experiments
(Daxboeck, 1982
;
Steffensen and Farrell, 1998
),
although routine flow does occur in the coronary arteries
(Axelsson and Farrell, 1993
;
Gamperl et al., 1994a
;
Gamperl et al., 1995
). Thus,
during routine conditions, in vivo oxygen diffusion from venous blood
is presumably sufficient to meet the needs of both compact and spongy
myocardium, and presumably this would reflect the routine
PvO2 values found in trout of around 34
kPa. When PvO2 of the cardiac circulation is
reduced, as happens during exercise or environmental hypoxia, coronary blood
flow increases (Gamperl et al.,
1994a
; Gamperl et al.,
1994b
) by up to twofold
(Gamperl et al., 1995
),
reflecting the increased oxygen needs of the compact myocardium and the fact
that oxygen diffusion from the lumen to the compacta becomes limited relative
to this demand. Indeed, without this coronary supply, Steffensen and Farrell
(Steffensen and Farrell, 1998
)
found that coronary-ligated rainbow trout reduced cardiac workloads by an
estimated 37% during a hypoxic swimming challenge. Hence, while the coronary
circulation increases in importance during exercise, the majority of the
ventricular myocardial oxygen supply comes from venous blood, and so a venous
oxygen threshold must exist below which the spongy myocardium fails. Thus, the
lack of a coronary circulation in the present study will tend to overestimate
the hypoxic thresholds for maximum cardiac performance. However, the coronary
artery is difficult to cannulate while maintaining the integrity of the
pericardium, which is integral to maximizing PO of the heart
(Farrell et al., 1988
).
Agnisola et al. (Agnisola et al.,
2003
) found that coronary perfusion in isolated trout hearts at
10°C can increase cardiac stroke work by 12%, from 3.36 to 3.77 mJ
g1. Even with coronary perfusion, the
POmax was only 56% of the control value obtained here (we
assumed fH=60 min1 since the information
was not provided).
An additional factor that sustains lower PvO2 thresholds in vivo is the oxygen buffering capacity of haemoglobin. Specifically, unloading of oxygen that occurs on the steep portion of the dissociation curve will have little effect on PvO2, and thus the oxygen diffusion gradient to the myocardium can remain high. In contrast, the linear nature of oxygen solubility in saline and its lower oxygen capacitance means that cardiac oxygen removal from saline decreases PO2 more so than oxygen extraction from blood. Although the oxygen buffering capacity of haemoglobin and the presence of a coronary circulation allow for lower PO2 thresholds in vivo than we measured here, neither of these factors are likely to affect the main finding that adrenaline protected the heart under adverse conditions.
Farrell and Clutterham used a fibreoptic micro-optode to measure the
PvO2 in vivo during maximal exercise
in rainbow trout (Farrell and Clutterham,
2003
) and discovered that at even the most severe exercise
intensity PvO2 did not drop below 2.1 kPa, a
value that corresponds closely to the present study in which maximum cardiac
performance at 2.0 kPa was not significantly different from that observed
under control conditions. At the next lowest tested hypoxia value in this
study (1.3 kPa), POmax decreased by 43.6%. The
correspondence of these findings suggests that although the in vivo
venous oxygen threshold may be lower than that determined here, the difference
may not be that great.
Any hypoxic threshold will be influenced by the absolute level of cardiac
work (van Raaij et al., 1996
),
as shown by the ability of rainbow trout hearts to perform sub-physiological
workloads under near anoxic conditions
(Arthur et al., 1992
).
Therefore, comparisons of hypoxic thresholds in vivo need to
incorporate the work load of the heart, as shown below. A situation comparable
to the absence of coronary perfusion of the perfused heart is coronary
ligation in vivo. Steffensen and Farrell swam coronary-ligated
rainbow trout in hypoxic water (5.2 kPa)
(Steffensen and Farrell, 1998
)
and this resulted in a PvO2 threshold of 1.3
kPa (10 Torr). From their data, we can estimate that POmax
was 4.1 mW g1 ventricle for coronary-ligated fish at this
PvO2 threshold. [Ventral aortic blood pressure
(Pva) was
50 cm H2O (
4.9 kPa).] We
assume that
max was 50 ml
min1 kg1 (as above) in coronary-ligated
and non-ligated fish [as suggested by the work of Gamperl et al.
(Gamperl et al., 1994a
)], and
that rainbow trout have a ventricular mass of
1 g kg1.
By comparison, perfused hearts subjected to an acidotic, hyperkalemic
challenge at a comparable PvO2 level of 1.3 kPa
generated a POmax of only 2.6 mW g1
ventricle. Since POmax was 5.9 mW g1
ventricle at 2.0 kPa, this comparison not only reemphasizes the importance of
the coronary circulation in maintaining maximum cardiac performance during
intense exercise, but re-emphasise that the difference between the in
vivo and in vitro hypoxic thresholds may not be that great.
Rainbow trout hearts have a limited glycolytic potential and a PO
of 1.5 mW g1 ventricle could be maintained for 20 min during
anoxia at 10°C (Overgaard et al.,
2004a
). Although this PO is well below the
POmax here, the possibility still exists that a small
component of maximum cardiac performance near the hypoxic threshold could have
been supported by glycolysis during the short-term hypoxic exposures used
here. If this is the case, we would have underestimated the hypoxic threshold.
Implicit with this possibility is that if PvO2
does fall below the hypoxic threshold in vivo, a component of
post-exercise cardiac performance could be briefly fuelled by glycolysis.
Previously, Gamperl et al. found
(Gamperl et al., 2001
) that
rainbow trout hearts were stunned when exposed to extreme hypoxia
(PO2<5 mmHg) at sub-physiological workloads,
with
max decreasing by
2338% upon return to control conditions. Similarly, we found that
cardiac recovery was compromised by some of the hypoxic conditions. This was
true for hypoxia alone, as well as the combination of hypoxia, hyperkalemia
and acidosis. The majority of hearts exposed to hypoxia alone at levels below
10 kPa experienced impaired recovery, and this may have led to an
underestimation of the protection afforded by the maximum adrenergic
stimulation treatment that followed. The converse may also be true, since
prior exposure to hypoxia may confer a protective advantage. Hypoxic
pre-conditioning has been indirectly shown to confer a protective advantage in
some (Gamperl et al., 2001
)
but not all strains of rainbow trout
(Gamperl et al., 2004
;
Overgaard et al., 2004b
).
Nevertheless, hypoxia of 2.7 kPa did not result in preconditioning here, as
hearts pre-exposed to hypoxia experienced a larger reduction in
max than hearts with no
previous exposure to hypoxia.
In summary, we conclude that adrenaline is critical in maintaining maximum cardiac performance during conditions that simulate those observed in venous blood during and following intense activity. Adrenergic stimulation, when administered in conjunction with hypoxia, hyperkalemia and acidosis, was found to lower the hypoxic threshold for cardiac collapse from 5.0 kPa to less than 1.3 kPa, a value that corresponds closely to PvO2 levels found in maximally exercising rainbow trout.
| Abbreviations |
|---|
|
|
|---|

max
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Agnisola, C., Petersen, L. and Mustafa, T.
(2003). Effect of coronary perfusion on the basal performance,
volume loading and oxygen consumption in the isolated resistance-headed heart
of the trout Oncorhynchus mykiss. J. Exp. Biol.
206,4003
-4010.
Arthur, P. G., Keen, J. E., Hochachka, P. W. and Farrell, A.
P. (1992). Metabolic state of the in situ perfused
trout heart during severe hypoxia. Am. J. Physiol.
263,R798
-R804.
Ask, J. A., Stene-Larsen, G. and Helle, K. B. (1981). Temperature effects on the ß2-adrenoreceptors of the trout atrium. J. Comp. Physiol. 143,161 -168.[CrossRef]
Axelsson, M. and Farrell, A. P. (1993).
Coronary blood flow in vivo in the coho salmon (Oncorhynchus
kisutch). Am. J. Physiol.
264,R963
-R971.
Butler, P. J., Metcalfe, J. D. and Ginley, S. A. (1986). Plasma catecholamines in the lesser spotted dogfish and rainbow trout at rest and during different levels of exercise. J. Exp. Biol. 123,409 -421.[Medline]
Chapman, R. A. and Rodrigo, G. C. (1987). The
negative inotropic effect of raised extracellular potassium and cesium ions on
isolated frog atrial trabeculae. Q. J. Exp. Physiol.
72,561
-570.
Davie, P. S. and Farrell, A. P. (1991). The coronary and luminal circulations of the myocardium of fishes. Can. J. Zool. 69,1993 -2001.
Daxboeck, C. (1982). Effect of coronary artery ablation on exercise performance in Salmo gairdneri. Can. J. Zool. 60,375 -381.
Driedzic, W. R. and Gesser, H. (1994). Energy
metabolism and contractility in ectothermic vertebrate hearts: hypoxia,
acidosis, and low temperature. Physiol. Rev.
74,221
-258.
Fabiato, A. and Fabiato, F. (1978). Effects of
pH on myofilaments and sarcoplasmic reticulum of skinned cells from cardiac
and skeletal muscles. J. Physiol.
276,233
-255.
Farrell, A. P. (1985). A protective effect of adrenaline on the acidotic teleost heart. J. Exp. Biol. 116,503 -508.
Farrell, A. P. (2002). Cardiorespiratory performance in salmonids during exercise at high temperature: insights into cardiovascular design limitations in fishes. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 132A,797 -810.[Medline]
Farrell, A. P. and Clutterham, S. M. (2003).
On-line venous oxygen tensions in rainbow trout during graded exercise at two
acclimation temperatures. J. Exp. Biol.
206,487
-496.
Farrell, A. P. and Milligan, C. L. (1986).
Myocardial intracellular pH in a perfused rainbow trout heart during
extracellular acidosis in the presence and absence of adrenaline.
J. Exp. Biol. 125,347
-359.
Farrell, A. P., MacLeod, K. R., Driedzic, W. R. and Wood, S. (1983). Cardiac performance in the in situ perfused fish heart during extracellular acidosis: interactive effects of adrenaline. J. Exp. Biol. 107,415 -429.[Medline]
Farrell, A. P., MacLeod, K. R. and Chancey, B.
(1986). Intrinsic mechanical properties of the perfused rainbow
trout heart and the effects of catecholamines and extracellular calcium under
control and acidotic conditions. J. Exp. Biol.
125,319
-345.
Farrell, A. P., Macleod, K. R. and Scott, C. (1988). Cardiac performance of the trout (Salmo gairdneri) heart during acidosis effects of low bicarbonate, lactate and cortisol. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 91A,271 -277.[CrossRef]
Farrell, A. P., Small, S. and Graham, M. S. (1989). Effect of heart rate and hypoxia on the performance of a perfused trout heart. Can. J. Zool. 67,274 -280.[Medline]
Farrell, A. P., Johansen, J. A. and Suarez, R. K. (1991). Effects of exercise training on cardiac performance and muscle enzymes in rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss. Fish Physiol. Biochem. 9,303 -312.
Faust, H. A., Gamperl, A. K. and Rodnick, K. J.
(2004). All rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) are not
created equal: intra-specific variation in cardiac hypoxia tolerance.
J. Exp. Biol. 207,1005
-1015.
Gamperl, A. K., Pinder, A. W. and Grant, R. R. (1994a). Influence of hypoxia and adrenaline administration on coronary blood-flow and cardiac performance in seawater rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). J. Exp. Biol. 193,209 -232.[Abstract]
Gamperl, A. K., Pinder, A. W. and Boutilier, R. G. (1994b). Effect of coronary ablation and adrenergic stimulation on in vivo cardiac performance in trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). J. Exp. Biol. 186,127 -143.[Abstract]
Gamperl, A. K., Wilkinson, M. and Boutilier, R. G. (1994c). ß-adrenoceptors in the trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) heart characterization, quantification, and effects of repeated catecholamine exposure. Gen. Comp. Endocrinol. 95,259 -272.[CrossRef][Medline]
Gamperl, A. K., Axelsson, M. and Farrell, A. P. (1995). Effects of swimming and environmental hypoxia on coronary blood-flow in rainbow trout. Am. J. Physiol. 38,R1258 -R1266.
Gamperl, A. K., Todgham, A. E., Parkhouse, W. S., Dill, R. and
Farrell, A. P. (2001). Recovery of trout myocardial
function following anoxia: preconditioning in a non-mammalian model.
Am. J. Physiol. 281,R1755
-R1763.
Gamperl, A. K., Faust, H. A., Dougher, B. and Rodnick, K. J.
(2004). Hypoxia tolerance and preconditioning are not additive in
the trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) heart. J. Exp.
Biol. 207,2497
-2505.
Gesser, H. (1977). The effects of hypoxia and reoxygenation on force development in myocardia of carp and rainbow trout: protective effects of CO2/HCO3. J. Exp. Biol. 69,199 -206.[Medline]
Gesser, H. and Jorgensen, E. (1982). Phi, contractility and Ca2+ balance under hypercapnic acidosis in the myocardium of different vertebrate species. J. Exp. Biol. 96,405 -412.[Medline]
Gesser, H. and Poupa, O. (1983). Acidosis and cardiac muscle contractility comparative aspects. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 76A,559 -566.[CrossRef][Medline]
Gesser, H., Andresen, P., Brams, P. and Sundlaursen, J. (1982). Inotropic effects of adrenaline on the anoxic or hypercapnic myocardium of rainbow trout and eel. J. Comp. Physiol. 147,123 -128.
Graham, M. S. and Farrell, A. P. (1990). Myocardial oxygen consumption in trout acclimated to 5°C and 15°C. Physiol. Zool. 63,536 -554.[Medline]
Graham, M. S., Wood, C. M. and Turner, J. D. (1982). The physiological responses of the rainbow trout to strenuous exercise interactions of water hardness and environmental acidity. Can. J. Zool. 60,3153 -3164.
Holeton, G. F., Neumann, P. and Heisler, N. (1983). Branchial ion exchange and acid-base regulation after strenuous exercise in rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri). Respir. Physiol. 51,303 -318.[CrossRef][Medline]
Holk, K. and Lykkeboe, G. (1998). The impact of endurance training on arterial plasma K+ levels and swimming performance of rainbow trout. J. Exp. Biol. 201,1373 -1380.[Abstract]
Hove-Madsen, L. and Gesser, H. (1989). Force-frequency relation in the myocardium of rainbow trout. J. Comp. Physiol. 159,61 -69.
Kalinin, A. and Gesser, H. (2002). Oxygen consumption and force development in turtle and trout cardiac muscle during acidosis and high extracellular potassium. J. Comp. Physiol. 172B,145 -151.
Kes, P. (2001). Hyperkalemia: a potentially lethal condition. Acta Clin. Croat. 40,215 -225.
Kiceniuk, J. W. and Jones, D. R. (1977). The oxygen transport system in trout (Salmo gairdneri) during sustained exercise. J. Exp. Biol. 69,247 -260.
McDonald, D. G., Tang, Y. and Boutilier, R. G. (1989). The role of ß-adrenoreceptors in the recovery from exhaustive exercise of freshwater-adapted rainbow trout. J. Exp. Biol. 147,471 -491.
Milligan, C. L. and Wood, C. M. (1987).
Regulation of blood oxygen transport and red cell pHi after
exhaustive activity in rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri) and starry
flounder (Platichthys stellatus). J. Exp.
Biol. 133,263
-282.
Milligan, C. L., Graham, M. S. and Farrell, A. P. (1989). The response of trout red cells to adrenaline during seasonal acclimation and changes in temperature. J. Fish Biol. 35,229 -236.[CrossRef]
Nielsen, J. S. and Gesser, H. (2001). Effects of high extracellular [K+] and adrenaline on force development, relaxation and membrane potential in cardiac muscle from freshwater turtle and rainbow trout. J. Exp. Biol. 204,261 -268.[Abstract]
Nielsen, O. B. and Lykkeboe, G. (1992). Changes
in plasma and erythrocyte K+ during hypercapnia and different
grades of exercise in trout. J. Appl. Physiol.
72,1285
-1290.
Overgaard, J. and Gesser, H. (2004). Force
development, energy state and ATP production of cardiac muscle from turtles
and trout during normoxia and severe hypoxia. J. Exp.
Biol. 207,1915
-1924.
Overgaard, J., Stecyk, J. A. W., Gesser, H., Wang, T. and
Farrell, A. P. (2004a). Effects of temperature and anoxia
upon the performance of in situ perfused trout hearts. J. Exp.
Biol. 207,655
-665.
Overgaard, J., Stecyk, J. A. W., Gesser, H., Wang, T., Gamperl, A. K. and Farrell, A. P. (2004b). Preconditioning stimuli do not benefit the myocardium of hypoxia-tolerant rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). J. Comp. Physiol. 174,329 -340.
Paterson, D. J., Blake, G. J., Leitch, S. P., Phillips, S. M.
and Brown, H. F. (1992). Effects of catecholamines and
potassium on cardiovascular performance in the rabbit. J. Appl.
Physiol. 73,1413
-1418.
Perry, S. F. and Gilmour, K. M. (1996). Consequences of catecholamine release on ventilation and blood oxygen transport during hypoxia and hypercapnia in an elasmobranch (Squalus acanthias) and a teleost (Oncorhynchus mykiss). J. Exp. Biol. 199,2105 -2118.[Abstract]
Perry, S. F. and Reid, S. D. (1992).
Relationship between blood O2 content and catecholamine levels
during hypoxia in rainbow trout and American eel. Am. J.
Physiol. 263,R240
-R249.
Perry, S. F., Malone, S. and Ewing, D. (1987). Hypercapnic acidosis in the rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri): 1. Branchial ionic fluxes and blood acid-base status. Can. J. Zool. 65,888 -895.[Medline]
Santer, R. M. and Greer Walker, M. (1980). Morphological studies on the ventricle of teleost and elasmobranch hearts. J. Zool. 190,259 -272.[CrossRef][Medline]
Shiels, H. A. and Farrell, A. P. (1997). The effect of temperature and adrenaline on the relative importance of the sarcoplasmic reticulum in contributing Ca2+ to force development in isolated ventricular trabeculae from rainbow trout. J. Exp. Biol. 200,1607 -1621.[Abstract]
Steffensen, J. F. and Farrell, A. P. (1998). Swimming performance, venous oxygen tension and cardiac performance of coronary-ligated rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss, exposed to progressive hypoxia. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 119A,585 -592.[CrossRef][Medline]
Tang, Y., Nolan, S. and Boutilier, R. G.
(1988). Acid-base regulation following acute acidosis in
seawater-adapted rainbow trout, Salmo gairdneri: a possible role for
catecholamines. J. Exp. Biol.
134,297
-312.
Temma, K., Hirata, T., Kitazawa, T., Kondo, H. and Katano, Y. (1986). Are ß-adrenergic receptors in ventricular muscles of carp heart (Cyprinus carpio) mostly the ß2 type? Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 83C,261 -263.[CrossRef]
Thomas, S., Poupin, J., Lykkeboe, G. and Johansen, K. (1987). Effects of graded exercise on blood-gas tensions and acid base characteristics of rainbow trout. Respir. Physiol. 68,85 -97.[CrossRef][Medline]
Tibbits, G. F., Moyes, C. D. and Hove-Madsen, L. (1992). Excitation-contraction coupling in the teleost heart. In Fish Physiology, vol. 12A (ed. W. S. Hoar, D. J. Randall and A. P. Farrell), pp.267 -296. New York: Academic Press.
Tota, B. (1983). Vascular and metabolic zonation in the ventricular myocardium of mammals and fishes. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 76A,423 -437.[CrossRef][Medline]
Turner, J. D., Wood, C. M. and Clark, D.
(1983). Lactate and proton dynamics in the rainbow trout
(Salmo gairdneri). J. Exp. Biol.
104,247
-268.
van Raaij, M. T., Pit, D. S., Balm, P. H., Steffens, A. B. and van den Thillart, G. E. (1996). Behavioral strategy a