Myocardial adrenergic and cholinergic receptor function in hypoxia: correlation with O2 transport in exercise

Author:

Favret Fabrice1,Richalet Jean-Paul1,Henderson Kyle K.2,Germack Renée1,Gonzalez Norberto C.2

Affiliation:

1. Laboratoire Réponses Cellulaires et Fonctionnellesà l'Hypoxie, EA 2363, Association pour la Recherche en Physiologie de l'Environnement, Université Paris XIII, 93017 Bobigny, France; and

2. Department of Molecular and Integrative Physiology, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas 66160-7401

Abstract

The time course of changes in rat myocardial α1- and β-adrenoceptors and of muscarinic cholinergic (M-Ach) receptor characteristics was studied parallel with the changes in exercise systemic O2 transport during a 21-day period of hypoxia (barometric pressure 380 Torr) to assess the effects of receptor modification during acclimatization on maximal exercise capacity. Hypoxia resulted in polycythemia, pulmonary hypertension, right ventricular hypertrophy, and transient left ventricular weight loss. Maximal O2 consumption at 30 min of hypoxia was reduced to 60% of the normoxic value and remained unchanged. This was partly due to a gradual decrease in maximal cardiac output and heart rate (HRmax), which offset the increase in blood O2 content. HRmax correlated positively ( r = 0.994) with β-adrenoceptor density and negatively ( r = −0.964) with M-Ach-receptor density, suggesting that HRmax reduction results from intrinsic changes in myocardial receptor characteristics leading to reduced responses to adrenergic stimulation and elevated responses to cholinergic stimulation. α-Adrenoceptor density in both ventricles increased initially to eventually fall below normoxic values. The dissociation between the different patterns of right and left ventricular weight and the similar pattern of α-adrenoceptor change in both ventricles do not support a role for these receptors on right ventricular myocardial hypertrophy.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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