Project 2: Developmental Programming & Aging Interactions in Primate CV Function

NIH RePORTER · NIH · U19 · $206,760 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Project 2: Developmental Programming & Aging Interactions in Primate CV Function ABSTRACT Studying aging in baboons can produce useful information to improve our understanding of aging processes in humans. Systemic cardiovascular (CV) measures, especially cardiac MRI assessments of heart function and structure, will be evaluated along with heart tissue analyses from our fetal and life course archives and CV measurements taken on the same animals during regular living situations to evaluate the CV system in the baboon with aging. The research plan includes studying how stresses on individuals early in life, while still in the womb, will modify the normal aging of the heart in the long term. This research will be carried out by characterizing parameters derived from MRI imaging studies (so called imaging biomarkers) and comparing them with each animal's phenotype, composed of functional, structural and molecular biology measurements, that can be used to predict aging-related changes. Parameters to be measured in the 96 baboons (6-18 years; human ~20-70 years) will characterize left and right ventricular function, aortic distensibility, myocardial extracellular volume, cardiac steatosis, myofilament protein expression, heart rate variability, baroreceptor response and circulating microRNA's. In all groups, we study equal numbers of males and female. These measurements will be carried out for all three aims. In Aim 1 normal life course baboons (N=48) will be studied to establish normative values and serve as age-matched controls for groups studied in subsequent aims. In all animals, we shall correlate data obtained with microarray data, tissue biopsied and system metabolic data to MRI measures of myocardial aging changes. In Aim 2 offspring (F1) of mothers, subjected to moderate (30%) caloric restriction in pregnancy and lactation (N=16), will be studied as well as offspring of obese mothers (OM) fed a high-fat, high-fructose diet during pregnancy (N=16). Studying baboons with these conditions will help differentiate changes due to direct effects on myocardial structure and function versus secondary effects on myocardium due to normal aging. In Aim 3, we shall determine whether the aging trajectory is altered in a subset (N=16), using cortisol replacement intervention (CRI) challenge. We shall use the same methods on all animals in all conditions to evaluate changes in cardiovascular function that are attributed to age-related processes. Importantly, the same animals whose CV parameters are being evaluated in this project (Project 2) are also being studied across the other projects for neuroendocrine, brain and behavioral function (Project 1), and metabolic aging (Project 3). Since the 01 submission we can report five papers published on cardiometabolic effects in the baboon model: three published in J Physiology, one in J Devel Origins Health Dis and one in Int J Obes (Lond). Response to review: We respond to the major named weaknesses, i.e. the die...

Key facts

NIH application ID
9965733
Project number
5U19AG057758-03
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF WYOMING
Principal Investigator
GEOFFREY DAVID CLARKE
Activity code
U19
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$206,760
Award type
5
Project period
— → —