Abstract

The zebrafish (Danio rerio) is an important organism as a model for understanding vertebrate cardiovascular development. However, little is known about adult ZF cardiac function and how contractile function changes to cope with fluctuations in ambient temperature. The goals of this study were to: 1) determine if high resolution echocardiography (HRE) in the presence of reduced cardiodepressant anesthetics could be used to accurately investigate the structural and functional properties of the ZF heart and 2) if the effect of ambient temperature changes both acutely and chronically could be determined non-invasively using HRE in vivo. Heart rate (HR) appears to be the critical factor in modifying cardiac output (CO) with ambient temperature fluctuation as it increases from 78 ± 5.9 bpm at 18°C to 162 ± 9.7 bpm at 28°C regardless of acclimation state (cold acclimated CA– 18°C; warm acclimated WA– 28°C). Stroke volume (SV) is highest when the ambient temperature matches the acclimation temperature, though this difference did not constitute a significant effect (CA 1.17 ± 0.15 μL at 18°C vs 1.06 ± 0.14 μl at 28°C; WA 1.10 ± 0.13 μL at 18°C vs 1.12 ± 0.12 μl at 28°C). The isovolumetric contraction time (IVCT) was significantly shorter in CA fish at 18°C. The CA group showed improved systolic function at 18°C in comparison to the WA group with significant increases in both ejection fraction and fractional shortening and decreases in IVCT. The decreased early peak (E) velocity and early peak velocity / atrial peak velocity (E/A) ratio in the CA group are likely associated with increased reliance on atrial contraction for ventricular filling.

Highlights

  • Ectothermic fish must cope with environmental temperature changes on a chronic and on an acute basis

  • Heart rate was used as the principle parameter to assess whether the anesthetic protocol caused significant cardiac depression that would confound the accurate determination of cardiac function

  • This study revealed a significant increase in ejection fraction (EF) with cold acclimation, which is consistent with an increase in the expression of contractile proteins such as cardiac troponin C (cTnC) [46]

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Summary

Introduction

Ectothermic fish must cope with environmental temperature changes on a chronic (seasonal) and on an acute basis. Fish typically exhibit changes in heart rate with acute temperature fluctuation [2,5] but the extent to which this varies cardiac output depends on the species. Acclimation, or remodeling to cope with longer term changes in temperature, typically involves transcriptional regulation which results in morphological or biochemical changes in order to cope with the new environment. Since these changes take longer to accomplish, there is often a cost associated with them, such as the energetic cost of producing proteins or an expression profile that is no longer optimal for the current environment

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