Title Heart rate dynamics in monoamine oxidase-A- and -B-deficient mice.
Author Holschneider, D P; Scremin, O U; Chialvo, D R; Chen, K; Shih, J C
Journal Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol Publication Year/Month 2002-May
PMID 11959640 PMCID PMC4075429
Affiliation 1.Department of Psychiatry and the Behavioral Sciences, University of Southern California, Keck School of Medicine, Los Angeles 90089, USA. holschne@hsc.usc.edu.

Heart rate (HR) dynamics were investigated in mice deficient in monoamine oxidase A and B, whose phenotype includes elevated tissue levels of norepinephrine, serotonin, dopamine, and phenylethylamine. In their home cages, spectral analysis of R-R intervals revealed more pronounced fluctuations at all frequencies in the mutants compared with wild-type controls, with a particular enhancement at 1-4 Hz. No significant genotypic differences in HR variability (HRV) or entropies calculated from Poincare plots of the R-R intervals were noted. During exposure to the stress of a novel environment, HR increased and HRV decreased in both genotypes. However, mutants, unlike controls, demonstrated a rapid return to baseline HR during the 10-min exposure. Such modulation may result from an enhanced vagal tone, as suggested by the observation that mutants responded to cholinergic blockade with a decrease in HRV and a prolonged tachycardia greater than controls. Monoamine oxidase-deficient mice may represent a useful experimental model for studying compensatory mechanisms responsible for changes in HR dynamics in chronic states of high sympathetic tone.

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