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Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 286: H1712-H1719, 2004. First published January 8, 2004; doi:10.1152/ajpheart.00898.2003
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Effect of prenatal hypoxia on heat stress-mediated cardioprotection in adult rat heart

Guohu Li, Soochan Bae, and Lubo Zhang

Center for Perinatal Biology, Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Loma Linda University School of Medicine, Loma Linda, California 92350

Submitted 18 September 2003 ; accepted in final form 7 January 2004

Fetal programming has profound effects on cardiovascular function in later adult life. We tested the hypothesis that chronic hypoxic exposure during fetal development downregulates endogenous cardioprotective mechanisms in adult rats. Time-dated pregnant rats were divided between normoxic and hypoxic (10.5% O2 from days 15 to 21 of gestation) groups. The male progeny were studied at 2 mo of age. Rats were subjected to heat stress (42°C for 15 min). After 24 h, hearts were excised and subjected to 30 min of global ischemia and 1 h of reperfusion. Prenatal hypoxia did not change adult rat body weight and heart weight, but significantly increased the cross-sectional area of a left ventricular (LV) myocyte. Heat stress significantly improved postischemic recovery of LV function in normoxic control rats, but not in prenatally hypoxic rats. The infarct size in the LV resulting from ischemia-reperfusion was reduced by the heat stress pretreatment in control rats, but not in prenatally hypoxic rats. In accordance, heat stress significantly increased LV myocardial content of heat shock protein 70 only in normoxic control rats. In addition, there was a significant decrease in the LV myocardial content of the PKC-{epsilon} isoform in prenatally hypoxic rats compared with control rats. We conclude that prenatal hypoxia causes in utero programming of hsp70 gene in the LV, leading to an inhibition of its response to heat stress and a loss of cardioprotection in later adult life.

fetal programming; heat shock protein 70; protein kinase C-{epsilon}; ischemia-reperfusion injury



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: L. Zhang, Center for Perinatal Biology, Dept. of Physiology and Pharmacology, Loma Linda Univ. School of Medicine, Loma Linda, CA 92350 (E-mail: lzhang{at}som.llu.edu).




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