The effects of gonadectomy on left ventricular function and cardiac contractile proteins in male and female rats.

Abstract
To examine the influence of the sex hormones on mechanical properties and biochemistry of the adult heart, left ventricular function and cardiac contractile proteins were studied in hearts from 20-wk-old male and female rats that were gonadectomized at 18 days of age, and were compared with hearts from sham-operated animals. Testosterone and estradiol were not detectable in serum from male and female gonadectomized rats, respectively. The male rats had lower body and heart weights than male sham operated rats, whereas these values were higher in female gonadectomized than in female sham-operated rats. Left ventricular function was studied in a working heart apparatus at similar heart rate and at controlled levels of aortic diastolic pressure and left atrial pressure. At moderate left atrial pressure, end-diastolic pressure and volume per gram dry left ventricle were the same in all groups, but at high left atrial pressure, end-diastolic pressure and volume per gram dry left ventricle were lower in male and female gonadectomized than in the respective sham-operated rats. Further increases in left atrial pressure were associated with mechanical alternans in male and female gonadectomized rats. Significantly (P < 0.05) lower values for cardiac output, peak systolic pressure, ejection fraction and myocardial O2 consumption occurred in male gonadectomized compared with sham-operated rats at moderate and high left atrial pressure at higher levels of aortic diastolic pressure. Decreases in these values for female gonadectomized compared with sham-operated rats occurred only at high left atrial pressure. A significant downward shift in the mean force-velocity relationship was observed in all gonadectomized rats at both moderate and high left atrial pressure. In a follow-up study, when end-diastolic pressure was kept the same at both moderate and high left atrial pressure in female sham-operated and gonadectomized rats by reducing heart rate, decreases in contractile function in gonadectomized rats were observed at all preloads. Ca2+-myosin ATPase activity was significantly reduced by 34% in male and by 19% in female gonadectomized rats when compared to respective sham-operated control hearts. These alterations in myosin ATPase activity were associated with a reduction in the V1 myosin isoenzyme and an increase in the V3 isoenzyme. Thus, left ventricular filling and left ventricular function were impaired in hearts of gonadectomized rats. Alterations in function were associated with depressed cardiac myosin ATPase activity in male and female gonadectomized rats. Evidently, the sex hormones have cardioregulatory properties, but it remains uncertain whether their effect is exerted during or after maturation.