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Graded Maximal Exercise Testing to Assess Mouse Cardio-Metabolic Phenotypes

Functional assessments of cardiovascular fitness (CVF) are needed to establish animal models of dysfunction, test the effects of novel therapeutics, and establish the cardio-metabolic phenotype of mice. In humans, the graded maximal exercise test (GXT) is a standardized diagnostic for assessing CVF...

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Autores principales: Petrosino, Jennifer M., Heiss, Valerie J., Maurya, Santosh K., Kalyanasundaram, Anuradha, Periasamy, Muthu, LaFountain, Richard A., Wilson, Jacob M., Simonetti, Orlando P., Ziouzenkova, Ouliana
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4747552/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26859763
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0148010
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author Petrosino, Jennifer M.
Heiss, Valerie J.
Maurya, Santosh K.
Kalyanasundaram, Anuradha
Periasamy, Muthu
LaFountain, Richard A.
Wilson, Jacob M.
Simonetti, Orlando P.
Ziouzenkova, Ouliana
author_facet Petrosino, Jennifer M.
Heiss, Valerie J.
Maurya, Santosh K.
Kalyanasundaram, Anuradha
Periasamy, Muthu
LaFountain, Richard A.
Wilson, Jacob M.
Simonetti, Orlando P.
Ziouzenkova, Ouliana
author_sort Petrosino, Jennifer M.
collection PubMed
description Functional assessments of cardiovascular fitness (CVF) are needed to establish animal models of dysfunction, test the effects of novel therapeutics, and establish the cardio-metabolic phenotype of mice. In humans, the graded maximal exercise test (GXT) is a standardized diagnostic for assessing CVF and mortality risk. These tests, which consist of concurrent staged increases in running speed and inclination, provide diagnostic cardio-metabolic parameters, such as, VO(2max), anaerobic threshold, and metabolic crossover. Unlike the human-GXT, published mouse treadmill tests have set, not staged, increases in inclination as speed progress until exhaustion (PXT). Additionally, they often lack multiple cardio-metabolic parameters. Here, we developed a mouse-GXT with the intent of improving mouse-exercise testing sensitivity and developing translatable parameters to assess CVF in healthy and dysfunctional mice. The mouse-GXT, like the human-GXT, incorporated staged increases in inclination, speed, and intensity; and, was designed by considering imitations of the PXT and differences between human and mouse physiology. The mouse-GXT and PXTs were both tested in healthy mice (C57BL/6J, FVBN/J) to determine their ability to identify cardio-metabolic parameters (anaerobic threshold, VO(2max), metabolic crossover) observed in human-GXTs. Next, theses assays were tested on established diet-induced (obese-C57BL/6J) and genetic (cardiac isoform Casq2(-/-)) models of cardiovascular dysfunction. Results showed that both tests reported VO(2max) and provided reproducible data about performance. Only the mouse-GXT reproducibly identified anaerobic threshold, metabolic crossover, and detected impaired CVF in dysfunctional models. Our findings demonstrated that the mouse-GXT is a sensitive, non-invasive, and cost-effective method for assessing CVF in mice. This new test can be used as a functional assessment to determine the cardio-metabolic phenotype of various animal models or the effects of novel therapeutics.
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spelling pubmed-47475522016-02-22 Graded Maximal Exercise Testing to Assess Mouse Cardio-Metabolic Phenotypes Petrosino, Jennifer M. Heiss, Valerie J. Maurya, Santosh K. Kalyanasundaram, Anuradha Periasamy, Muthu LaFountain, Richard A. Wilson, Jacob M. Simonetti, Orlando P. Ziouzenkova, Ouliana PLoS One Research Article Functional assessments of cardiovascular fitness (CVF) are needed to establish animal models of dysfunction, test the effects of novel therapeutics, and establish the cardio-metabolic phenotype of mice. In humans, the graded maximal exercise test (GXT) is a standardized diagnostic for assessing CVF and mortality risk. These tests, which consist of concurrent staged increases in running speed and inclination, provide diagnostic cardio-metabolic parameters, such as, VO(2max), anaerobic threshold, and metabolic crossover. Unlike the human-GXT, published mouse treadmill tests have set, not staged, increases in inclination as speed progress until exhaustion (PXT). Additionally, they often lack multiple cardio-metabolic parameters. Here, we developed a mouse-GXT with the intent of improving mouse-exercise testing sensitivity and developing translatable parameters to assess CVF in healthy and dysfunctional mice. The mouse-GXT, like the human-GXT, incorporated staged increases in inclination, speed, and intensity; and, was designed by considering imitations of the PXT and differences between human and mouse physiology. The mouse-GXT and PXTs were both tested in healthy mice (C57BL/6J, FVBN/J) to determine their ability to identify cardio-metabolic parameters (anaerobic threshold, VO(2max), metabolic crossover) observed in human-GXTs. Next, theses assays were tested on established diet-induced (obese-C57BL/6J) and genetic (cardiac isoform Casq2(-/-)) models of cardiovascular dysfunction. Results showed that both tests reported VO(2max) and provided reproducible data about performance. Only the mouse-GXT reproducibly identified anaerobic threshold, metabolic crossover, and detected impaired CVF in dysfunctional models. Our findings demonstrated that the mouse-GXT is a sensitive, non-invasive, and cost-effective method for assessing CVF in mice. This new test can be used as a functional assessment to determine the cardio-metabolic phenotype of various animal models or the effects of novel therapeutics. Public Library of Science 2016-02-09 /pmc/articles/PMC4747552/ /pubmed/26859763 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0148010 Text en © 2016 Petrosino et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Petrosino, Jennifer M.
Heiss, Valerie J.
Maurya, Santosh K.
Kalyanasundaram, Anuradha
Periasamy, Muthu
LaFountain, Richard A.
Wilson, Jacob M.
Simonetti, Orlando P.
Ziouzenkova, Ouliana
Graded Maximal Exercise Testing to Assess Mouse Cardio-Metabolic Phenotypes
title Graded Maximal Exercise Testing to Assess Mouse Cardio-Metabolic Phenotypes
title_full Graded Maximal Exercise Testing to Assess Mouse Cardio-Metabolic Phenotypes
title_fullStr Graded Maximal Exercise Testing to Assess Mouse Cardio-Metabolic Phenotypes
title_full_unstemmed Graded Maximal Exercise Testing to Assess Mouse Cardio-Metabolic Phenotypes
title_short Graded Maximal Exercise Testing to Assess Mouse Cardio-Metabolic Phenotypes
title_sort graded maximal exercise testing to assess mouse cardio-metabolic phenotypes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4747552/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26859763
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0148010
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