Dietary vitamin D supplementation partially rescues heart rate in Ts65Dn mice, a model of Down syndrome

IF 5.3 2区 医学 Q1 PHYSIOLOGY Physiology Pub Date : 2023-05-01 DOI:10.1152/physiol.2023.38.s1.5735207
K. Deruisseau, Silas Derfel, J. MacDonald, L. DeRuisseau
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Abstract

Down syndrome is the most common developmental and intellectual disability that leads to co-morbidities including lower heart rate and blood pressure. We previously showed that Ts65Dn mice also display reduced heart rate and blood pressure compared to wild-type (WT) colony controls. Lower serum Vitamin D (VitD) levels have been reported among individuals with Ds. In other populations, VitD is a regulator of nitric oxide synthase and a known modulator of cardiovascular outcomes. VitD effects on cardiovascular physiology in Ds is unknown. In this preliminary study, we hypothesized that Ts65Dn mice supplemented with VitD would display improved heart rate compared to Ts65Dn mice on a control diet. Two-month old male Ts65Dn mice were placed onto a control diet (1IU VitD/g; n=4) or VitD supplemented diet (50IU/g; n=5) for two weeks and subsequently tested for resting heart rate. Mice were fitted with a MouseOx neck collar to monitor heart rate while freely moving within the cage. After habituation to the collar, heart rate was recorded for 30 minutes in the light cycle. Heart rate in Ts65Dn on the control diet was 510±67 bpm vs. 636±78 on the VitD diet (p=.038; t-test). As expected, WT (n=5; control diet) displayed a higher heart rate of 729±62 bpm. These preliminary data reveal a partial rescue of resting heart rate in Ts65Dn following VitD supplementation. Future studies can evaluate serum VitD levels, nitric oxide synthase, and cardiovascular metrics including blood pressure, heart rate, and pulse wave velocity in Ts65Dn and WT mice supplemented with dietary VitD. This work was supported by NIH R21HD099573 This is the full abstract presented at the American Physiology Summit 2023 meeting and is only available in HTML format. There are no additional versions or additional content available for this abstract. Physiology was not involved in the peer review process.
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膳食中补充维生素D可以部分缓解Ts65Dn小鼠(唐氏综合征模型)的心率
唐氏综合症是最常见的发育和智力残疾,可导致包括心率和血压降低在内的合并症。我们之前的研究表明,与野生型(WT)菌落对照相比,Ts65Dn小鼠的心率和血压也有所降低。据报道,维生素D患者血清维生素D (VitD)水平较低。在其他人群中,VitD是一氧化氮合酶的调节剂和已知的心血管结局调节剂。维生素d对糖尿病患者心血管生理的影响尚不清楚。在这项初步研究中,我们假设补充了VitD的Ts65Dn小鼠比对照组饮食的Ts65Dn小鼠表现出更高的心率。两个月大的雄性Ts65Dn小鼠被置于对照饮食(1IU VitD/g;n=4)或补充维生素d的日粮(50IU/g;N =5),然后测试静息心率。老鼠在笼子里自由活动时,戴上了MouseOx颈圈来监测心率。在适应项圈后,在光循环中记录30分钟的心率。对照组Ts65Dn组的心率为510±67 bpm,而VitD组为636±78 bpm (p= 0.038;t检验)。如预期,WT (n=5;对照组的心率更高,为729±62 bpm。这些初步数据揭示了补充维生素d后Ts65Dn患者静息心率的部分恢复。未来的研究将评估补充维生素d的Ts65Dn和WT小鼠的血清维生素d水平、一氧化氮合酶和心血管指标,包括血压、心率和脉搏波速度。这是在2023年美国生理学峰会会议上发表的全文摘要,仅以HTML格式提供。此摘要没有附加版本或附加内容。生理学没有参与同行评议过程。
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来源期刊
Physiology
Physiology 医学-生理学
CiteScore
14.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
37
期刊介绍: Physiology journal features meticulously crafted review articles penned by esteemed leaders in their respective fields. These articles undergo rigorous peer review and showcase the forefront of cutting-edge advances across various domains of physiology. Our Editorial Board, comprised of distinguished leaders in the broad spectrum of physiology, convenes annually to deliberate and recommend pioneering topics for review articles, as well as select the most suitable scientists to author these articles. Join us in exploring the forefront of physiological research and innovation.
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