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Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 246: H332-H338, 1984;
0363-6135/84 $5.00
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AJP - Heart and Circulatory Physiology, Vol 246, Issue 3 332-H338, Copyright © 1984 by American Physiological Society


ARTICLES

Nutritional modification of rat heart postnatal development

R. T. Dowell

Postnatal development of the mammalian myocardium encompasses increases in cellularity, energy producing and energy utilizing systems, and concurrent augmentation of heart contractile performance. The present study disrupted normal developmental sequences by adjusting the number of newborn rats per litter at 4 days postbirth. Fast-growing (4 rats/litter), normal (8 rats/litter), or slow-growing (16 rats/litter) animals were studied when 21 days old. Left ventricular cellularity (total DNA) increased as a function of the nutritionally modified growth of the heart, having values of 562 +/- 27, 625 +/- 33, and 791 +/- 20 (SE) micrograms in 16, 8, and 4 rats/litter groups, respectively. Low levels of systolic pressure (55 + 5 mmHg) and rate of pressure development (dP/dt, 2,670 +/- 130 mmHg/s) were noted in the slow-growing rats. Growth-related augmentation of pressure and dP/dt occurred such that adult levels (104 +/- 4 mmHg; 5,810 +/- 290 mmHg/s) were observed in 21-day-old, fast-growing rats. An enzymatic marker for aerobic metabolism (malate dehydrogenase) indicated mitochondrial accumulation in excess of ventricular tissue, thereby establishing progressive increases in aerobic capacity. Myofibrillar ATPase activity was not significantly different among all groups. Thus heart contractile function during nutritionally induced changes in postnatal development is augmented in proportion to increases in heart DNA content. A positive relationship also exists between dP/dt and number of mitochondria; however, enhanced contractile function is achieved independently of myofibrillar ATPase activity level.


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