Literature DB >> 25237184

Heat acclimation memory: do the kinetics of the deacclimated transcriptome predispose to rapid reacclimation and cytoprotection?

Anna Tetievsky1, Miri Assayag1, Rotem Ben-Hamo2, Sol Efroni2, Gal Cohen1, Atallah Abbas1, Michal Horowitz3.   

Abstract

Faster reinduction of heat acclimation (AC) after its decline indicates "AC memory." Our previous results revealed involvement of epigenetic mechanisms of transcriptional regulation. We hypothesized that the decline of AC (DeAC) is a period of "dormant memory" during which many processes are alerted to enable rapid reacclimation (ReAC). Using a genomewide approach we studied the AC, DeAC, and ReAC transcriptomes, to uncover hallmark pathways linked to "molecular memory" in the cardioacclimatome. Fifty rats subjected to heat acclimation [34°C for 2d (AC2d) or 30d (AC30)], DeAC (24°C, 30 days), ReAC (34°C, 2 days), and untreated controls were used. The GeneChip Rat Gene 1.0 ST Array was employed for left ventricular (cardiac) mRNA hybridization. Three independent bioinformatic analyses showed that 1) during AC2d enrichment of DNA impair/repair-linked genes is seen, and this is the molecular on-switch of acclimation; 2) genes activated in AC30 underlie the qualitative physiological adaptations of cardiac performance; 3) particular molecular programs encompassing constitutive upregulation of p38 MAPK, Jak/Stat, and Akt pathways and targets are specifically activated during DeAC and ReAC; and 4) epigenetic markers such as linker histones (histones H1 cluster), associated with nucleosome spacing, transcriptional chromatin modifiers, poly-(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP1) linked to chromatin compaction, and microRNAs are only altered during DeAC/ReAC. The latter are newcomers to the AC/DeAC puzzle. We suggest that these transcriptional responses maintain euchromatin and proteostasis and enable faster physiological recovery upon ReAC by rapidly reestablishing the protected acclimated cardiophenotype. We propose that the cardiac AC model can be applied to acclimation processes in general.
Copyright © 2014 the American Physiological Society.

Entities:  

Keywords:  adaptive memory; cardiotranscriptome; epigenetic markers; heat-acclimation/deacclimation/reacclimation

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25237184     DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00422.2014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)        ISSN: 0161-7567


  11 in total

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Journal:  Temperature (Austin)       Date:  2016-03-30

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Authors:  Christopher C Barney; Elizabeth M Schanhals; Justin L Grobe; Bradley T Andresen; Michael Traver
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Review 10.  Recent Advances in Genetic and Epigenetic Modulation of Animal Exposure to High Temperature.

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