| Literature DB >> 34095129 |
Suneeta Narumanchi1, Hong Wang1, Sanni Perttunen1, Ilkka Tikkanen1,2, Päivi Lakkisto1,3, Jere Paavola1.
Abstract
Heart failure causes significant morbidity and mortality worldwide. The understanding of heart failure pathomechanisms and options for treatment remain incomplete. Zebrafish has proven useful for modeling human heart diseases due to similarity of zebrafish and mammalian hearts, fast easily tractable development, and readily available genetic methods. Embryonic cardiac development is rapid and cardiac function is easy to observe and quantify. Reverse genetics, by using morpholinos and CRISPR-Cas9 to modulate gene function, make zebrafish a primary animal model for in vivo studies of candidate genes. Zebrafish are able to effectively regenerate their hearts following injury. However, less attention has been given to using zebrafish models to increase understanding of heart failure and cardiac remodeling, including cardiac hypertrophy and hyperplasia. Here we discuss using zebrafish to study heart failure and cardiac remodeling, and review zebrafish genetic, drug-induced and other heart failure models, discussing the advantages and weaknesses of using zebrafish to model human heart disease. Using zebrafish models will lead to insights on the pathomechanisms of heart failure, with the aim to ultimately provide novel therapies for the prevention and treatment of heart failure.Entities:
Keywords: cardiac hypertrophy; cardiac remodeling; cardiomyopathy; heart failure; zebrafish
Year: 2021 PMID: 34095129 PMCID: PMC8173159 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.662583
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
Advantages and disadvantages of using zebrafish for modeling human diseases in general (A) and specifically for cardiac diseases (B).
| A | Advantages (general) | Disadvantages (general) |
| • Ease, speed, and affordability of maintenance and breeding | • Duplicated genome | |
| • Small size and optical transparency | • Relative unavailability of antibodies | |
| • Rapid development | ||
| • High-throughput drug screening | ||
| • Ease and availability of genetic manipulation | ||
| • Rapid development: heartbeat begins already at 24 h post-fertilization | • Two-chambered heart lacking pulmonary circulation | |
| • Blood circulation not needed for development in the first week of life, possible to study severe cardiovascular phenotypes | • Hemodynamics: low central venous pressure, ventricular filling relies mainly on atrial contraction | |
| • Conserved fundamentals of excitation-contraction coupling | • Electrophysiology: differences in inward currents, sodium current is lower and calcium current higher | |
| • Electrophysiology: similar heart rate and action potential duration and morphology | • Electrophysiology: lack of transient outward potassium current and slow component of the delayed rectifier current | |
| • Cardiac regeneration following injury | • Minor role of SR calcium stores for muscle contraction and triggered arrhythmias, negative FFR | |
| • Lack of sarcolemmal T-tubules in cardiomyocytes | ||
| • Scarcity of chronic cardiac fibrosis and cardiac fat | ||
| • Tiny size of the embryonic heart complicates handling and experimentation with staining, qPCR etc. | ||
| • Small size and trabeculation of the adult heart muscle complicates imaging and quantification of cardiac function with echocardiography | ||
FIGURE 1Zebrafish at 4 dpf with a zoom-in of the ventricle. Ventricular width a and length b. Adapted with permission from Paavola et al. (2020).
FIGURE 2Treatment with isoproterenol increases cardiomyocyte size. 4 dpf zebrafish without (A) and with (B) 300 μM isoproterenol-treatment 2–4 dpf. Staining with Mef-2 antibody (red) to identify cardiomyocyte nuclei and with ZN-5 antibody (green) to delineate cardiomyocyte cell borders. Ventricles marked with arrows and atria marked with arrowheads. Adapted with permission from Paavola et al. (2020).
Genetic models of heart failure.
| Gene | Embryo/Adult | Knock-out (KO)/Morpholino/Other | Main Phenotype | References |
| Both | Morpholino and KO | Cardiac dysfunction | ||
| Adult | KO | hypertrophy and hyperplasia | ||
| Adult | KO | Arrhythmia | ||
| Embryo | KO | Conduction defect | ||
| Both | KO | Hypertrophy, cardiac dysfunction | ||
| Both | KO | Hypertrophy | ||
| Embryo | KO | Cardiac dysfunction | ||
| Embryo | Morpholino | Hypertrophy, cardiac dysfunction | ||
| Embryo | KO | Cardiac dysfunction | ||
| Both | Genetic ablation | Hypertrophy | ||
| Adult | KO | Hypertrophy, cardiac dysfunction | ||
| Embryo | Morpholino | Valvular heart defect | ||
| Embryo | Morpholino | Hypertrophy | ||
| Adult | KO | Hypertrophy | ||
| Both | KO | Cardiac dysfunction, arrhythmia | ||
| Embryo | Morpholino | Hypertrophy | ||
| Adult | KO | Hyperplasia | ||
| Embryo | Morpholino | Hypertrophy, cardiac dysfunction | ||
| Embryo | Morpholino | Cardiac dysfunction, AV-block | ||
| Embryo | mRNA injections | left-right asymmetry | ||
| Embryo | Morpholino | Cardiac dysfunction | ||
| Embryo | Morpholino | Cardiac dysfunction | ||
| Embryo | KO and morpholino | Cardiac dysfunction | ||
| Embryo | KO | Cardiac dysfunction | ||
| Embryo | KO | Cardiac dysfunction | ||
| Adult | KO | Hyperplasia | ||
| Adult | Overexpression | Hyperplasia | ||
| Embryo | Morpholino | Attenuation of cardiac growth | ||
| Embryo | Morpholino | Cardiac dysfunction | ||
| Embryo | Morpholino | Restrictive cardiomyopathy | ||
| Until 3 months of age | 2057del2 mutant | Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy | ||
| Embryo | Morpholino | Left ventricular non-compaction cardiomyopathy |
Drug-induced models of heart failure.
| Drug | Embryo/Adult | Main Phenotype | References |
| Aristolochic acid (AA) | Embryo | Cardiac dysfunction | |
| Benzo(a)pyrene (Bap) | Both | Hypertrophy | |
| Doxorubicin | Embryo | Cardiac dysfunction | |
| Isoproterenol (ISO) | Both | Cardiac dysfunction | |
| Phenyl hydrazine hydrochloride (PHZ) | Adult | Hypertrophy and hyperplasia | |
| Phenylephrine (PE) | Adult | Hypertrophy and hyperplasia | |
| Streptozocin | Adult | Diabetic cardiomyopathy | |
| Terfenadine | Embryo | Cardiac dysfunction, AV-block | |
| Tolterodine | Embryo | Arrhythmia | |
| Verapamil | Embryo | Cardiac dysfunction |