Department of Pathology and Molecular Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Biology, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2019 Sep 1;317(3):R407-R417. doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.00005.2019. Epub 2019 Jun 26.
High-altitude natives have evolved to overcome environmental hypoxia and provide a compelling system to understand physiological function during reductions in oxygen availability. The sympathoadrenal system plays a key role in responses to acute hypoxia, but prolonged activation of this system in chronic hypoxia may be maladaptive. Here, we examined how chronic hypoxia exposure alters adrenal catecholamine secretion and how adrenal function is altered further in high-altitude natives. Populations of deer mice () native to low and high altitudes were each born and raised in captivity at sea level, and adults from each population were exposed to normoxia or hypobaric hypoxia for 5 mo. Using carbon fiber amperometry on adrenal slices, catecholamine secretion evoked by low doses of nicotine (10 µM) or acute hypoxia (Po ∼15-20 mmHg) was reduced in lowlanders exposed to hypobaric hypoxia, which was attributable mainly to a decrease in quantal charge rather than event frequency. However, secretion evoked by high doses of nicotine (50 µM) was unaffected. Hypobaric hypoxia also reduced plasma epinephrine and protein expression of 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA) decarboxylase in the adrenal medulla of lowlanders. In contrast, highlanders were unresponsive to hypobaric hypoxia, exhibiting typically low adrenal catecholamine secretion, plasma epinephrine, and DOPA decarboxylase. Highlanders also had consistently lower catecholamine secretion evoked by high nicotine, smaller adrenal medullae with fewer chromaffin cells, and a larger adrenal cortex compared with lowlanders across both acclimation environments. Our results suggest that plastic responses to chronic hypoxia along with evolved changes in adrenal function attenuate catecholamine release in deer mice at high altitude.
高海拔居民已经进化到能够克服环境缺氧,并提供了一个引人入胜的系统来理解在氧气供应减少时的生理功能。交感肾上腺系统在急性缺氧反应中起着关键作用,但在慢性缺氧中,该系统的长期激活可能是适应不良的。在这里,我们研究了慢性缺氧暴露如何改变肾上腺儿茶酚胺的分泌,以及高海拔居民的肾上腺功能如何进一步改变。原产于低海拔和高海拔的鹿鼠种群分别在低海拔出生和在海平面的圈养中长大,每个种群的成年个体都在常氧或低氧环境中暴露 5 个月。使用碳纤维安培法在肾上腺切片上,低剂量尼古丁(10µM)或急性缺氧(Po 约 15-20mmHg)引起的儿茶酚胺分泌在低地居民暴露于低氧环境中减少,这主要归因于量子荷的减少而不是事件频率的减少。然而,高剂量尼古丁(50µM)引起的分泌不受影响。低氧环境还降低了低地居民血浆肾上腺素和肾上腺髓质中 3,4-二羟苯丙氨酸(DOPA)脱羧酶的蛋白表达。相比之下,高地居民对低氧环境没有反应,表现出典型的低肾上腺儿茶酚胺分泌、血浆肾上腺素和 DOPA 脱羧酶。与低地居民相比,高地居民在两个适应环境中对高尼古丁引起的儿茶酚胺分泌、较小的肾上腺髓质和较少的嗜铬细胞以及较大的肾上腺皮质都表现出较低的反应。我们的研究结果表明,对慢性缺氧的可塑性反应以及肾上腺功能的进化变化,减弱了鹿鼠在高海拔时的儿茶酚胺释放。