PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Myocardial wall stiffening in a mouse model of persistent truncus arteriosus.

  • Christine Miller Buffinton,
  • Alyssa K Benjamin,
  • Ashley N Firment,
  • Anne M Moon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0184678
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 9
p. e0184678

Abstract

Read online

Genetic and epigenetic programs regulate dramatic structural changes during cardiac morphogenesis. Concurrent biomechanical forces within the heart created by blood flow and pressure in turn drive downstream cellular, molecular and genetic responses. Thus, a genetic-morphogenetic-biomechanical feedback loop is continually operating to regulate heart development. During the evolution of a congenital heart defect, concomitant abnormalities in blood flow, hemodynamics, and patterns of mechanical loading would be predicted to change the output of this feedback loop, impacting not only the ultimate morphology of the defect, but potentially altering tissue-level biomechanical properties of structures that appear structurally normal.The goal of this study was to determine if abnormal hemodynamics present during outflow tract formation and remodeling in a genetically engineered mouse model of persistent truncus arteriosus (PTA) causes tissue-level biomechanical abnormalities.The passive stiffness of surface locations on the left ventricle (LV), right ventricle (RV), and outflow tract (OFT) was measured with a pipette aspiration technique in Fgf8;Isl1Cre conditional mutant embryonic mouse hearts and controls. Control and mutant experimental results were compared by a strain energy metric based on the measured relationship between pressure and aspirated height, and also used as target behavior for finite element models of the ventricles. Model geometry was determined from 3D reconstructions of whole-mount, confocal-imaged hearts. The stress-strain relationship of the model was adjusted to achieve an optimal match between model and experimental behavior.Although the OFT is the most severely affected structure in Fgf8;Isl1Cre hearts, its passive stiffness was the same as in control hearts. In contrast, both the LV and RV showed markedly increased passive stiffness, doubling in LVs and quadrupling in RVs of mutant hearts. These differences are not attributable to differences in ventricular volume, wall thickness, or trabecular density. Excellent agreement was obtained between the model and experimental results. Overall our findings show that hearts developing PTA have early changes in ventricular tissue biomechanics relevant to cardiac function and ongoing development.