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Título
Exercise, programmed cell death and exhaustion of cardiomyocyte proliferation in aging zebrafish
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Cardiomyocyte turnover
Fibrosis
Aging
Zebrafish heart
Exercise
Clasificación UNESCO
2401.13 Fisiología Animal
2407 Biología Celular
Fecha de publicación
2021
Editor
The Company of Biologists Ltd
Citación
Murphy, L. B., Santos-Ledo, A., Dhanaseelan, T., Eley, L., Burns, D., Henderson, D. J., y Chaudhry, B. (2021). Exercise, programmed cell death and exhaustion of cardiomyocyte proliferation in aging zebrafish. Disease Models & Mechanisms, 14(7), dmm049013. https://doi.org/10.1242/dmm.049013
Resumen
[EN] Exercise may ameliorate the eventual heart failure inherent in human aging. In this study, we use zebrafish to understand how aging and exercise affect cardiomyocyte turnover and myocardial remodelling. We show that cardiomyocyte proliferation remains constant throughout life but that onset of fibrosis is associated with a late increase in apoptosis. These findings correlate with decreases in voluntary swimming activity, critical swimming speed (Ucrit), and increases in biomarkers of cardiac insufficiency. The ability to respond to severe physiological stress is also impaired with age. Although young adult fish respond with robust cardiomyocyte proliferation in response to enforced swimming, this is dramatically impaired in older fish and served by a smaller proliferationcompetent cardiomyocyte population. Finally, we show that these aging responses can be improved through increased activity throughout adulthood. However, despite improvement in Ucrit and the proliferative response to stress, the size of the proliferating cardiomyocyte population remained unchanged. The zebrafish heart models human aging and reveals the important trade-off between preserving cardiovascular fitness through exercise at the expense of accelerated fibrotic change. © 2021 Company of Biologists Ltd. All rights reserved.
URI
ISSN
1754-8403
DOI
10.1242/DMM.049013
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