PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Researchers at Penn show optimal framework for heartbeats

2013-12-12
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Evan Lerner
elerner@upenn.edu
215-573-6604
University of Pennsylvania
Researchers at Penn show optimal framework for heartbeats

VIDEO: Researchers from the University of Pennsylvania used fluorescently labeled embryonic chicken hearts to study the role collagen plays in the stress of a heartbeat. By treating the heart tissue with...
Click here for more information.

The heart maintains a careful balancing act; too soft and it won't pump blood, but too hard and it will overtax itself and stop entirely. There is an optimal amount of strain that a beating heart can generate and still beat at its usual rate, once per second.

In a study published in the journal Current Biology, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania have shown that this "sweet spot" depends on the stiffness of the collagen framework that the heart's cells live within. They also have shown that the other biophysical factors that contribute to the strength of the heartbeat adjust alongside the natural stiffening of collagen during embryonic development, keeping the growing heart in this optimal zone.

Taking into account the role that this collagen matrix plays in the optimal heartbeat could help cardiologists repair tissue after a heart attack, where scarring stiffens the heart's collagen.

"If we can understand more clearly the effects on cells of normal and damaged collagen frameworks, then we can develop better treatments for the frameworks as well as the cells within," said Dennis Discher, professor in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering in the School of Engineering and Applied Science.

Discher and lead author Stephanie Majkut, a member of his lab and a doctoral candidate in the Department of Physics and Astronomy in Penn's School of Arts and Sciences, conducted the study along with other members of Discher's lab, Joe Swift and Christine Krieger. They collaborated with physics professor Andrea Liu and Timon Idema, a member of her lab.

The study's experiments were conducted on embryonic chick hearts, which are anatomically similar to human hearts during early development. The researchers chemically treated the beating hearts to either stiffen or soften the collagen matrix surrounding the cells. The treatment made it either harder or easier for the cell's molecular motors, proteins known as myosins, to contract the heart muscle.

After testing that their treated hearts were sufficiently softened or stiffened, they fluorescently labeled a small percentage of cells in the heart so they could quantify how hard the hearts were beating while looking at them under a microscope.

"When we treat the hearts with a chemical that breaks down the collagen," Majkut said, "we can directly see that the hearts aren't contracting as much because the labeled cells aren't getting as close to each other as they did before."

"The same effect was also seen when we treated the hearts with a chemical that helps the collagen crosslink and stiffen itself. Eventually, those hearts simply stop beating all together," she said.

The researchers saw that the further along the embryos were in maturation, the stiffer the "sweet spot" for their optimal beating was. As the collagen matrix of the heart stiffened, the concentration of the myosin motor proteins that contract the muscle increased along with it to keep pace.

"We also showed this dynamic on the level of the individual cell with heart cells and stem cell derived heart cells," Discher said. "We put isolated cells on gels that have the stiffness of the native heart, or else we make the gel softer or stiffer, and we see the same optimum. Surprisingly, the cells working together in heart tissue are even more sensitive to the stiffness of their environment."

Cardiologists might one day use such stiffness-optimized gels for growing heart tissue from stem cells to replace just the scarred and damaged parts of a patient's heart. A better fundamental understanding of the role collagen stiffness plays in the heartbeat could underpin other treatments as well.

"There were hints of this stiffness effect with adult hearts before, but this study made it very clear that the heart muscle cells are optimized from 'day one' to do work against the native stiffness they see in collagen, and that all of the factors that determine this relationship change in a coordinated way as the heart develops so it can stay in that sweet spot," Discher said.



INFORMATION:

The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Dietary amino acids improve sleep problems in mice with traumatic brain injury

2013-12-12
Dietary amino acids improve sleep problems in mice with traumatic brain injury PORTLAND, Ore. — Scientists have discovered how to fix sleep disturbances in mice with traumatic brain injuries — a discovery that could lead to help for hundreds of thousands ...

Liquid to gel to bone

2013-12-12
Liquid to gel to bone Rice U. develops temperature-sensitive gelling scaffolds to regenerate craniofacial bone HOUSTON – (Dec. 11, 2013) – Rice University bioengineers have developed a hydrogel scaffold for craniofacial bone tissue regeneration that starts as a liquid, solidifies ...

Pilot program study finds that pediatric obesity patients like telehealth services

2013-12-12
Pilot program study finds that pediatric obesity patients like telehealth services For youth dealing with obesity who need extra help losing weight, experts suggest a multidisciplinary approach in which care is provided by several ...

Orbital samples with sight-saving potential

2013-12-12
Orbital samples with sight-saving potential Those who travel to space are rewarded with a beautiful sight - planet Earth. But the effects of space travel on the human sense of sight aren't so beautiful. More than 30 percent of astronauts who returned from two-week ...

US risks losing clean electricity if nuclear plants keep closing

2013-12-12
US risks losing clean electricity if nuclear plants keep closing WASHINGTON, D.C. – Four nuclear power plants, sources of low-emissions electricity, have announced closings this year. If plants continue to shut down instead of extending operations the nation ...

Central to evaluating researchers, publication citations reflect gender bias, barrier to women

2013-12-12
Central to evaluating researchers, publication citations reflect gender bias, barrier to women Research analyzed 5.5 million research papers, 27.3 million authorships worldwide BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- Whether from the trickle-down effects of having fewer female elders in ...

Study links nonconcussion head impacts in contact sports to brain changes and lower test scores

2013-12-12
Study links nonconcussion head impacts in contact sports to brain changes and lower test scores

Older mice fed wolfberries show reduced risk for flu virus with vaccine

2013-12-12
Older mice fed wolfberries show reduced risk for flu virus with vaccine BOSTON (December 11, 2013) — In a study of older mice, wolfberries appear to interact with the influenza vaccine to offer additional protection against the flu virus. The research, led by scientists ...

Overcoming linguistic taboos: Lessons from Australia

2013-12-12
Overcoming linguistic taboos: Lessons from Australia (Washington, DC) – Grammar is sometimes shaped by restrictions on language use. This is the key finding of a new study to be published in the December issue of the scholarly journal Language, demonstrating how ...

Brain trauma raises risk of later PTSD in active-duty Marines

2013-12-12
Brain trauma raises risk of later PTSD in active-duty Marines Deployment-related injuries are biggest predictor, but not the only factor In a novel study of U.S. Marines investigating the association between traumatic brain injury (TBI) and the ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study sheds new light on how hormones influence decision-making and learning

Continents peel from below, triggering oceanic volcanoes

Where does continental material on islands come from?

New drug target identified in fight against resistant infections

Male pregnancy: a deep dive with seahorses

Nanopores act like electrical gates

New molecule reduces ethanol intake and drinking motivation in mice, with sex-dependent differences

AI adoption in the US adds ~900,000 tons of CO₂ annually, equal to 0.02% of national emissions

Adenosine is the metabolic common pathway of rapid antidepressant action: The coffee paradox

Vegan diet can halve your carbon footprint, study shows

Anti-amyloid therapy does not change short-term waste clearance in Alzheimer’s

Personalized interactions increase cooperation, trust and fairness

How are metabolism and cell growth connected? — A mystery over 180 years old

Novel transmission technique enables world record 430 Tb/s in a commercially available, international-standard-compliant optical fiber

Can risk prediction tools identify patients at risk of overdose or death after “before medically advised” hospital discharge?

Dreaming of fewer running injuries? Start with better sleep

USC study links ultra-processed food intake to prediabetes in young adults

How life first got moving: nature’s motor from billions of years ago

The 2nd International Conference on Civil Engineering and Smart Construction (ICCESC 2025)

Hidden catalysis: Abrasion transforms common chemistry equipment into reagents

ASH 2025 tip sheet: Sylvester researchers contribute to more than 35 oral presentations at ASH Annual Meeting

Feeling fit, but not fine: ECU study finds gap between athletes’ health perceptions and body satisfaction 

The flexible brain: How circuit excitability and plasticity shift across the day

New self-heating catalyst cleans antibiotic pollutants from water and soil

Could tiny airborne plastics help viruses spread? Scientists warn of a hidden infection risk

Breakthrough in water-based light generation: 1,000-fold enhancement of white-light output using non-harmonic two-color femtosecond lasers

Food stamp expansion in 2021 reduced odds of needy US kids going hungry

Cash transfers boost health in low- and middle-income countries

LDL cholesterol improved among veterans in program with health coaches, other resources

New study finds novel link between shared brain-gene patterns and autism symptom severity in children with autism and ADHD

[Press-News.org] Researchers at Penn show optimal framework for heartbeats