Regulation of murine myocardial energy metabolism during adrenergic stress studied by in vivo 31P NMR spectroscopy

AV Naumova, RG Weiss… - American Journal of …, 2003 - journals.physiology.org
AV Naumova, RG Weiss, VP Chacko
American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology, 2003journals.physiology.org
Image-guided, spatially localized 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) was used to
study in vivo murine cardiac metabolism under resting and dobutamine-induced stress
conditions. Intravenous dobutamine infusion (24 μg· min–1· kg body wt–1) increased the
mean heart rate by∼ 39% from 482±46 per min at baseline to 669±77 per min in adult mice.
The myocardial phosphocreatine (PCr)-to-ATP (PCr/ATP) ratio remained unchanged at
2.1±0.5 during dobutamine stress, compared with baseline conditions. Therefore, we …
Image-guided, spatially localized 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) was used to study in vivo murine cardiac metabolism under resting and dobutamine-induced stress conditions. Intravenous dobutamine infusion (24 μg · min–1 · kg body wt–1) increased the mean heart rate by ∼39% from 482 ± 46 per min at baseline to 669 ± 77 per min in adult mice. The myocardial phosphocreatine (PCr)-to-ATP (PCr/ATP) ratio remained unchanged at 2.1 ± 0.5 during dobutamine stress, compared with baseline conditions. Therefore, we conclude that a significant increase in heart rate does not result in a decline in the in vivo murine cardiac PCr/ATP ratio. These observations in very small mammals, viz., mice, at extremely high heart rates are consistent with studies in large animals demonstrating that global levels of high-energy phosphate metabolites do not regulate in vivo myocardial metabolism during physiologically relevant increases in cardiac work.
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