Simultaneous Characterization of Metabolic, Cardiac, Vascular and Renal Phenotypes of Lean and Obese SHHF Rats
Author(s) -
Gina Youcef,
Arnaud Olivier,
C. L’Huillier,
Carlos Labat,
Renaud Fay,
Lina Tabcheh,
Simon Toupance,
Rosa-Maria Rodríguez-Guéant,
Damien Bergerot,
Frédéric Jaisser,
Patrick Lacolley,
Faı̈ez Zannad,
Laurent Vallar,
Anne Pizard
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0096452
Subject(s) - medicine , heart failure , endocrinology , dyslipidemia , left ventricular hypertrophy , cardiology , ejection fraction , blood pressure , obesity
Individuals with metabolic syndrome (MetS) are prone to develop heart failure (HF). However, the deleterious effects of MetS on the continuum of events leading to cardiac remodeling and subsequently to HF are not fully understood. This study characterized simultaneously MetS and cardiac, vascular and renal phenotypes in aging Spontaneously Hypertensive Heart Failure lean (SHHF +/? regrouping +/+ and +/cp rats) and obese (SHHF cp/cp , “cp” defective mutant allele of the leptin receptor gene) rats. We aimed to refine the milestones and their onset during the progression from MetS to HF in this experimental model. We found that SHHF cp/cp but not SHHF +/? rats developed dyslipidemia, as early as 1.5 months of age. This early alteration in the lipidic profile was detectable concomitantly to impaired renal function (polyuria, proteinuria but no glycosuria) and reduced carotid distensibility as compared to SHHF +/? rats. By 3 months of age SHHF cp/cp animals developed severe obesity associated with dislipidemia and hypertension defining the onset of MetS. From 6 months of age, SHHF +/? rats developed concentric left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) while SHHF cp/cp rats developed eccentric LVH apparent from progressive dilation of the LV dimensions. By 14 months of age only SHHF cp/cp rats showed significantly higher central systolic blood pressure and a reduced ejection fraction resulting in systolic dysfunction as compared to SHHF +/? . In summary, the metabolic and hemodynamic mechanisms participating in the faster decline of cardiac functions in SHHF cp/cp rats are established long before their physiological consequences are detectable. Our results suggest that the molecular mechanisms triggered within the first three months after birth of SHHF cp/cp rats should be targeted preferentially by therapeutic interventions in order to mitigate the later HF development.
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