
Change of heart keeps bears healthy
Research published in the latest issue of the journal Physiological
and Biochemical Zoology illustrates a complex series of changes that
occur in grizzly bears' hearts as they hibernate. The changes guard
against complications that could arise from greatly reduced activity.A
grizzly hibernates five to six months of the year. During that time, its
heart rate slows drastically from around 84 beats per minute when active
to around 19.

"If a human heart were to slow down like this, you'd see very
detrimental things happening," said Bryan Rourke, a professor at Cal
State Long Beach who worked on the research with his graduate student,
Nathan Barrows.Such a slow beat causes blood to pool in the heart's four
chambers. In a human, the increased pressure would cause the chambers to
stretch out. The dilated muscle would be weaker and less efficient,
leading ultimately to congestive heart failure."Bears are able to avoid
this," Rourke said, "and we're interested in how they do it."Barrows and
Rourke worked with Lynne Nelson and Charles Robbins, researchers at
Washington State University who have been studying bears for years. They
operate a facility at Washington State where grizzlies have been raised
since birth and acclimated to echocardiogram testing.
Research at the facility is providing crucial insight into the
mysteries of the hibernating heart.Nelson and Robbins had previously
shown that, during hibernation, the muscle of a bear's left ventricle
stiffens to prevent it from stretching as blood accumulates. But the
stiffening of the ventricle presents another problem.
The left atrium, which pushes blood into the left ventricle, must
then work against greater resistance."The atrium is pushing against a
brick wall," Rourke said. "We thought there must be some kind of
mechanism to keep the atrial muscle from wearing itself out."Using
echocardiogram data from the captive bears at Washington State and
tissue samples from wild bears, the researchers found that the atrium
protects itself by weakening its beat.Muscle contractions in the heart
are controlled by a protein called myosin heavy chain. The protein comes
in two varieties, alpha and beta.
The alpha version produces a quicker but slightly weaker contraction
compared to the beta. "We found that the muscle in the left atrium
produces more alpha protein during hibernation, which results in a
slightly weaker beat," Rourke said. "The lower force keeps the atrium
from being damaged as it pushes against the stiffer ventricle."When the
bears emerge from hibernation, the protein ratio switches back and the
atrial contraction returns to its original strength.The researchers
believe this is the first study to show a shift in myosin ratio in
bears, and they hope the information might someday have an application
for humans."Bears aren't a perfect model for humans, but the way in
which a bear's heart can change could be helpful in understanding human
disease," Rourke said.
-ScienceDaily |