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Dietary fish oil is anti-hypertrophic but does not enhance post-ischemic myocardial function in female mice

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posted on 2024-11-14, 20:33 authored by Catherine E Huggins, Claire L Curl, Ruchi Patel, Peter McLennanPeter McLennan, Mandy Theiss, Thierry Pedrazzini, Salvatore Pepe, Lea MD Delbridge
Clinically and experimentally, a case for omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) cardioprotection in females has not been clearly established. The goal of this study was to investigate whether dietary omega-3 PUFA supplementation could provide ischemic protection in female mice with an underlying genetic predisposition to cardiac hypertrophy. Mature female transgenic mice (TG) with cardiac-specific overexpression of angiotensinogen that develop normotensive cardiac hypertrophy and littermate wild-type (WT) mice were fed a fish oil-derived diet (FO) or PUFA-matched control diet (CTR) for 4 wk. Myocardial membrane lipids, ex vivo cardiac performance (intraventricular balloon) after global no-flow ischemia and reperfusion (15/30 min), and reperfusion arrhythmia incidence were assessed. FO diet suppressed cardiac growth by 5% and 10% in WT and TG, respectively (P < 0.001). The extent of mechanical recovery [ratepressure product (RPP) = beats/min x mmHg] of FO-fed WT and TG hearts was similar (50 ± 7% vs. 45 ± 12%, 30 min reperfusion), and this was not significantly different from CTR-fed WT or TG. To evaluate whether systemic estrogen was masking a protective effect of the FO diet, the responses of ovariectomized (OVX) WT and TG mice to FO dietary intervention were assessed. The extent of mechanical recovery of FO-fed OVX WT and TG (RPP, 50 ± 4% vs. 64 ± 8%) was not enhanced compared with CTR-fed mice (RPP, 60 ± 11% vs. 80 ± 8%, P = 0.335). Dietary FO did not suppress the incidence of reperfusion arrhythmias in WT or TG hearts (ovary-intact mice or OVX). Our findings indicate a lack of cardioprotective effect of dietary FO in females, determined by assessment of mechanical and arrhythmic activity postischemia in a murine ex vivo heart model.

History

Citation

Huggins, C. E., Curl, C. L., Patel, R., McLennan, P. L., Theiss, M. L., Pedrazzini, T., . . . Delbridge, L. M. D. (2009). Dietary fish oil is antihypertrophic but does not enhance postischemic myocardial function in female mice. American Journal of Physiology - Heart and Circulatory Physiology, 296(4). doi:10.1152/ajpheart.01151.2008

Journal title

American Journal of Physiology

Volume

296

Issue

4

Pagination

H957-H966

Language

English

RIS ID

30085

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