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Featured researches published by Bryan C. Rourke.


Nature | 2005

Physiology: postprandial cardiac hypertrophy in pythons.

Johnnie B. Andersen; Bryan C. Rourke; Vincent J. Caiozzo; Albert F. Bennett; James W. Hicks

Oxygen consumption by carnivorous reptiles increases enormously after they have eaten a large meal in order to meet metabolic demands, and this places an extra load on the cardiovascular system. Here we show that there is an extraordinarily rapid 40% increase in ventricular muscle mass in Burmese pythons (Python molurus) a mere 48 hours after feeding, which results from increased gene expression of muscle-contractile proteins. As this fully reversible hypertrophy occurs naturally, it could provide a useful model for investigating the mechanisms that lead to cardiac growth in other animals.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2010

Adaptive thermogenesis and thermal conductance in wild-type and UCP1-KO mice

Carola W. Meyer; Monja Willershäuser; Martin Jastroch; Bryan C. Rourke; Tobias Fromme; Rebecca Oelkrug; Gerhard Heldmaier; Martin Klingenspor

We compared maximal cold-induced heat production (HPmax) and cold limits between warm (WA; 27°C), moderate cold (MCA; 18°C), or cold acclimated (CA; 5°C) wild-type and uncoupling-protein 1 knockout (UCP1-KO) mice. In wild-type mice, HPmax was successively increased after MCA and CA, and the cold limit was lowered to -8.3°C and -18.0°C, respectively. UCP1-KO mice also increased HPmax in response to MCA and CA, although to a lesser extent. Direct comparison revealed a maximal cold-induced recruitment of heat production by +473 mW and +227 mW in wild-type and UCP1-KO mice, respectively. The increase in cold tolerance of UCP1-KO mice from -0.9°C in MCA to -10.1°C in CA could not be directly related to changes in HPmax, indicating that UCP1-KO mice used the dissipated heat more efficiently than wild-type mice. As judged from respiratory quotients, acutely cold-challenged UCP1-KO mice showed a delayed transition toward lipid oxidation, and 5-h cold exposure revealed diminished physical activity and less variability in the control of metabolic rate. We conclude that BAT is required for maximal adaptive thermogenesis but also allows metabolic flexibility and a rapid switch toward sustained lipid-fuelled thermogenesis as an acute response to cold. In both CA groups, expression of contractile proteins (myosin heavy-chain isoforms) showed minor training effects in skeletal muscles, while cardiac muscle of UCP1-KO mice had novel expression of beta cardiac isoform. Neither respiration nor basal proton conductance of skeletal muscle mitochondria were different between genotypes. In subcutaneous white adipose tissue of UCP1-KO mice, cold exposure increased cytochrome-c oxidase activity and expression of the cell death-inducing DFFA-like effector A by 3.6-fold and 15-fold, respectively, indicating the recruitment of mitochondria-rich brown adipocyte-like cells. Absence of functional BAT leads to remodeling of white adipose tissue, which may significantly contribute to adaptive thermogenesis during cold acclimation.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2013

Increase in cardiac myosin heavy-chain (MyHC) alpha protein isoform in hibernating ground squirrels, with echocardiographic visualization of ventricular wall hypertrophy and prolonged contraction.

O. Lynne Nelson; Bryan C. Rourke

SUMMARY Deep hibernators such as golden-mantled ground squirrels (Callospermophilus lateralis) have multiple challenges to cardiac function during low temperature torpor and subsequent arousals. As heart rates fall from over 300 beats min−1 to less than 10, chamber dilation and reduced cardiac output could lead to congestive myopathy. We performed echocardiography on a cohort of individuals prior to and after several months of hibernation. The left ventricular chamber exhibited eccentric and concentric hypertrophy during hibernation and thus calculated ventricular mass was ~30% greater. Ventricular ejection fraction was mildly reduced during hibernation but stroke volumes were greater due to the eccentric hypertrophy and dramatically increased diastolic filling volumes. Globally, the systolic phase in hibernation was ~9.5 times longer, and the diastolic phase was 28× longer. Left atrial ejection generally was not observed during hibernation. Atrial ejection returned weakly during early arousal. Strain echocardiography assessed the velocity and total movement distance of contraction and relaxation for regional ventricular segments in active and early arousal states. Myocardial systolic strain during early arousal was significantly greater than the active state, indicating greater total contractile movement. This mirrored the increased ventricular ejection fraction noted with early arousal. However, strain rates were slower during early arousal than during the active period, particularly systolic strain, which was 33% of active, compared with the rate of diastolic strain, which was 67% of active. As heart rate rose during the arousal period, myocardial velocities and strain rates also increased; this was matched closely by cardiac output. Curiously, though heart rates were only 26% of active heart rates during early arousal, the cardiac output was nearly 40% of the active state, suggesting an efficient pumping system. We further analyzed proportions of cardiac myosin heavy-chain (MyHC) isoforms in a separate cohort of squirrels over 5 months, including time points before hibernation, during hibernation and just prior to emergence. Hibernating individuals were maintained in both a 4°C cold room and a 20°C warm room. Measured by SDS-PAGE, relative percentages of cardiac MyHC alpha were increased during hibernation, at both hibernacula temperatures. A potential increase in contractile speed, and power, from more abundant MyHC alpha may aid force generation at low temperature and at low heart rates. Unlike many models of cardiomyopathies where the alpha isoform is replaced by the beta isoform in order to reduce oxygen consumption, ground squirrels demonstrate a potential cardioprotective mechanism to maintain cardiac output during torpor.


Conservation Physiology | 2017

Polar bears experience skeletal muscle atrophy in response to food deprivation and reduced activity in winter and summer

John P. Whiteman; Henry J. Harlow; George M. Durner; Eric V. Regehr; Bryan C. Rourke; Manuel Robles; Steven C. Amstrup; Merav Ben-David

Polar bears experience skeletal muscle atrophy during winter whether they hibernate or not. Bears spending summer on sea ice in the Arctic basin undergo a second period of atrophy caused by fasting, whereas bears with shore access to adequate, alternative food do not. Summer atrophy may influence fitness.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 1999

Effects of lipid phase transitions on cuticular permeability: model membrane and in situ studies

Bryan C. Rourke; Allen G. Gibbs


Journal of Comparative Physiology B-biochemical Systemic and Environmental Physiology | 2011

Muscle plasticity in hibernating ground squirrels (Spermophilus lateralis) is induced by seasonal, but not low-temperature, mechanisms

Megan M. Nowell; Hyung Choi; Bryan C. Rourke


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2006

Postprandial increase of oleoylethanolamide mobilization in small intestine of the Burmese python (Python molurus)

Giuseppe Astarita; Bryan C. Rourke; Johnnie B. Andersen; Jin Fu; Janet Kim; Albert F. Bennett; James W. Hicks; Daniele Piomelli


Journal of Molecular Evolution | 2011

Interspecific and Intragenic Differences in Codon Usage Bias Among Vertebrate Myosin Heavy-Chain Genes

Mikio C. Aoi; Bryan C. Rourke


The FASEB Journal | 2008

Lack of skeletal muscle atrophy and myosin isoform changes in a rodent hibernator, Spermophilus lateralis, subjected to activity restriction

Bryan C. Rourke; Pocholo-Jose Selpides; Nicole Choi; Yanett Roman; Jessica Jimenez


Archive | 2015

unloadingatrophy processes during the initial stages of Isometric resistance exercise fails to counteract skeletal

Fadia Haddad; G. R. Adams; P. W. Bodell; Kenneth M. Baldwin; O. Lynne Nelson; Bryan C. Rourke; Yoshitaka Ohno; Takao Sugiura; Yoshinobu Ohira; Toshitada Yoshioka; Katsumasa Goto

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Janet Kim

University of California

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Jin Fu

University of California

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O. Lynne Nelson

Washington State University

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Eric V. Regehr

United States Fish and Wildlife Service

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