Acute stress is detrimental to heart regeneration in zebrafish

Psychological stress is one of the factors associated with human cardiovascular disease. Here, we demonstrate that acute perceived stress impairs the natural capacity of heart regeneration in zebrafish. Beside physical and chemical disturbances, intermittent crowding triggered an increase in cortiso...

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Main Authors: Pauline Sallin, Anna Jaźwińska
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2016-01-01
Series:Open Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsob.160012
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spelling doaj-66d31fc1e8424cc99a752c578d6af1522020-11-25T02:06:35ZengThe Royal SocietyOpen Biology2046-24412016-01-016310.1098/rsob.160012160012Acute stress is detrimental to heart regeneration in zebrafishPauline SallinAnna JaźwińskaPsychological stress is one of the factors associated with human cardiovascular disease. Here, we demonstrate that acute perceived stress impairs the natural capacity of heart regeneration in zebrafish. Beside physical and chemical disturbances, intermittent crowding triggered an increase in cortisol secretion and blocked the replacement of fibrotic tissue with new myocardium. Pharmacological simulation of stress by pulse treatment with dexamethasone/adrenaline reproduced the regeneration failure, while inhibition of the stress response with anxiolytic drugs partially rescued the regenerative process. Impaired heart regeneration in stressed animals was associated with a reduced cardiomyocyte proliferation and with the downregulation of several genes, including igfbp1b, a modulator of IGF signalling. Notably, daily stress induced a decrease in Igf1r phosphorylation. As cardiomyocyte proliferation was decreased in response to IGF-1 receptor inhibition, we propose that the stress-induced cardiac regenerative failure is partially caused by the attenuation of IGF signalling. These findings indicate that the natural regenerative ability of the zebrafish heart is vulnerable to the systemic paracrine stress response.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsob.160012non-mammalian modelmyocardiuminfarctioncrowdingcortisolanxiolytic
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pauline Sallin
Anna Jaźwińska
spellingShingle Pauline Sallin
Anna Jaźwińska
Acute stress is detrimental to heart regeneration in zebrafish
Open Biology
non-mammalian model
myocardium
infarction
crowding
cortisol
anxiolytic
author_facet Pauline Sallin
Anna Jaźwińska
author_sort Pauline Sallin
title Acute stress is detrimental to heart regeneration in zebrafish
title_short Acute stress is detrimental to heart regeneration in zebrafish
title_full Acute stress is detrimental to heart regeneration in zebrafish
title_fullStr Acute stress is detrimental to heart regeneration in zebrafish
title_full_unstemmed Acute stress is detrimental to heart regeneration in zebrafish
title_sort acute stress is detrimental to heart regeneration in zebrafish
publisher The Royal Society
series Open Biology
issn 2046-2441
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Psychological stress is one of the factors associated with human cardiovascular disease. Here, we demonstrate that acute perceived stress impairs the natural capacity of heart regeneration in zebrafish. Beside physical and chemical disturbances, intermittent crowding triggered an increase in cortisol secretion and blocked the replacement of fibrotic tissue with new myocardium. Pharmacological simulation of stress by pulse treatment with dexamethasone/adrenaline reproduced the regeneration failure, while inhibition of the stress response with anxiolytic drugs partially rescued the regenerative process. Impaired heart regeneration in stressed animals was associated with a reduced cardiomyocyte proliferation and with the downregulation of several genes, including igfbp1b, a modulator of IGF signalling. Notably, daily stress induced a decrease in Igf1r phosphorylation. As cardiomyocyte proliferation was decreased in response to IGF-1 receptor inhibition, we propose that the stress-induced cardiac regenerative failure is partially caused by the attenuation of IGF signalling. These findings indicate that the natural regenerative ability of the zebrafish heart is vulnerable to the systemic paracrine stress response.
topic non-mammalian model
myocardium
infarction
crowding
cortisol
anxiolytic
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsob.160012
work_keys_str_mv AT paulinesallin acutestressisdetrimentaltoheartregenerationinzebrafish
AT annajazwinska acutestressisdetrimentaltoheartregenerationinzebrafish
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