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Abstract AimCardiac fibrosis contributes to systolic and diastolic dysfunction and can disrupt electrical pathways in the heart. There are currently no therapies that prevent or reverse fibrosis in human cardiac disease. However, animals like freshwater turtles undergo seasonal remodeling of their hearts, demonstrating the plasticity of fibrotic remodeling. InTrachemys scripta, cold temperature affects cardiac load, suppresses metabolism, and triggers a cardiac remodeling response that includes fibrosis. MethodsWe investigated this remodeling using Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) imaging spectroscopy, together with functional assessment of muscle stiffness, and molecular, histological, and enzymatic analyses in control (25°C)T. scriptaand after 8 weeks of cold (5°C) acclimation. ResultsFTIR revealed an increase in absorption bands characteristic of protein, glycogen, and collagen following cold acclimation, with a corresponding decrease in bands characteristic of lipids and phosphates. Histology confirmed these responses. Functionally, micromechanical stiffness of the ventricle increased following cold exposure assessed via atomic force microscopy (AFM) and was associated with decreased activity of regulatory matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and increased expression of MMP inhibitors (TMPs) which regulate collagen deposition. ConclusionsBy defining the structural and metabolic underpinnings of the cold‐induced remodeling response in the turtle heart, we show commonalities between metabolic and fibrotic triggers of pathological remodeling in human cardiac disease. We propose the turtle ventricle as a novel model for studying the mechanisms underlying fibrotic and metabolic cardiac remodeling.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available April 1, 2026
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ABSTRACT Oxygen deprivation during embryonic development can permanently remodel the vertebrate heart, often causing cardiovascular abnormalities in adulthood. While this phenomenon is mostly damaging, recent evidence suggests developmental hypoxia produces stress-tolerant phenotypes in some ectothermic vertebrates. Embryonic common snapping turtles (Chelydra serpentina) subjected to chronic hypoxia display improved cardiac anoxia tolerance after hatching, which is associated with altered Ca2+ homeostasis in heart cells (cardiomyocytes). Here, we examined the possibility that changes in Ca2+ cycling, through the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), underlie the developmentally programmed cardiac phenotype of snapping turtles. We investigated this hypothesis by isolating cardiomyocytes from juvenile turtles that developed in either normoxia (21% O2; ‘N21’) or chronic hypoxia (10% O2; ‘H10’) and subjected the cells to anoxia/reoxygenation, in either the presence or absence of SR Ca2+-cycling inhibitors. We simultaneously measured cellular shortening, intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i), and intracellular pH (pHi). Under normoxic conditions, N21 and H10 cardiomyocytes shortened equally, but H10 Ca2+ transients (Δ[Ca2+]i) were twofold smaller than those of N21 cells, and SR inhibition only decreased N21 shortening and Δ[Ca2+]i. Anoxia subsequently depressed shortening, Δ[Ca2+]i and pHi in control N21 and H10 cardiomyocytes, yet H10 shortening and Δ[Ca2+]i recovered to pre-anoxic levels, partly due to enhanced myofilament Ca2+ sensitivity. SR blockade abolished the recovery of anoxic H10 cardiomyocytes and potentiated decreases in shortening, Δ[Ca2+]i and pHi. Our novel results provide the first evidence of developmental programming of SR function and demonstrate that developmental hypoxia confers a long-lasting, superior anoxia-tolerant cardiac phenotype in snapping turtles, by modifying SR function and enhancing myofilament Ca2+ sensitivity.more » « less
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ABSTRACT Animals at early life stages are generally more sensitive to environmental stress than adults. This is especially true of oviparous vertebrates that develop in variable environments with little or no parental care. These organisms regularly experience environmental fluctuations as part of their natural development, but climate change is increasing the frequency and intensity of these events. The developmental plasticity of oviparous vertebrates will therefore play a critical role in determining their future fitness and survival. In this Review, we discuss and compare the phenotypic consequences of chronic developmental hypoxia on the cardiovascular system of oviparous vertebrates. In particular, we focus on species-specific responses, critical windows, thresholds for responses and the interactive effects of other stressors, such as temperature and hypercapnia. Although important progress has been made, our Review identifies knowledge gaps that need to be addressed if we are to fully understand the impact of climate change on the developmental plasticity of the oviparous vertebrate cardiovascular system.more » « less
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