Intraspecific scaling of arterial blood pressure in the Burmese python

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First posted online on 15 April 2014 as 10.1242/jeb.099226 J Exp Biol Advance Access the Online most recent Articles. version First at http://jeb.biologists.org/lookup/doi/10.1242/jeb.099226 posted online on 15 April 2014 as doi:10.1242/jeb.099226 Access the most recent version at http://jeb.biologists.org/lookup/doi/10.1242/jeb.099226 SHORT COMMUNICATION FOR THE JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY Intraspecific scaling of arterial blood pressure in the Burmese python Sanne Enok 1 ; Christopher Slay 2 ; Augusto S. Abe 3, James W. Hicks 2 ; Tobias Wang 1 1 Zoophysiology, Department of Bioscience, Aarhus University, Denmark 2 Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Irvine, USA 3 Departamento de Zoologia, Universidade Estadual Paulista, Rio Claro, São Paulo, Brazil Address for correspondence: Tobias Wang Zoophysiology, Department of Bioscience Aarhus University, Building 1131 8000 Aarhus C Denmark E-mail: tobias.wang@biology.au.dk Phone: (+45) 5137 7737 Short title: Intraspecific allometry in pythons 2013. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd

SUMMARY Interspecific allometric analyses indicate that mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) increases with body mass of snakes and mammals. In snakes, MAP increases in proportion to the increased distance between the heart and the head, when the heart-head vertical distance is expressed a ρgh, and the rise in MAP is associated with larger heart to normalize wall stress in the ventricular wall. Based on measurements of MAP in Burmese python ranging from 0.9-3.7 m in length (0.20-27 kg), we demonstrate that although MAP increases with body mass, the rise in MAP is merely half of that predicted by heart-head distance. Scaling relationships within individual species, therefore, may not be accurately predicted by existing interspecific analyses. Keywords: allometry, scaling, cardiovascular, blood pressure, snakes, gravity

INTRODUCTION The mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) generated by the heart of animals provides the driving force that ensures adequate perfusion of the various vascular beds to match metabolic requirements. MAP is made up of two principal components: the pressure required to overcome total systemic vascular resistance (TPR) as well as the pressure required to overcome the vertical distance between the heart and upper extremities of the body, i.e. the gravitational (hydrostatic) pressure (Gauer and Thorn, 1965; White and Seymour, 2014). The gravitational pressure correlates directly to the vertical distance above the heart (h) and can be quantified as ρgh, where ρ equals the density of blood and g is acceleration due to gravity (Gauer and Thorn, 1965). Because the vertical distance between the heart and the upper extremities typically increases as animals get larger, the greater gravitational forces predict that MAP increases with body size (Seymour, 1987; White and Seymour, 2014). Consistent with this view, the exceptionally high MAP in giraffes of around 250mmHg, well above other similarsized mammals, is typically viewed as an adaptation to overcome the large vertical distance between the heart and head, and hence provide a normal perfusion pressure of the cerebral circulation (e.g. Patterson et al., 1965; Brøndum et al., 2009). In birds, MAP is higher than in mammals, but because MAP does not scale with body mass nor the distance between heart and head, it has been suggested that factors other than gravity, such as metabolic rate, have major impacts on MAP (Seymour and Blaylock, 2000). The cardiovascular system of long-bodied animals, such as snakes, is particularly affected by gravity and terrestrial and arboreal species are endowed with effective physiological mechanisms and structural adaptations that prevent pooling of blood in the lower body parts and maintains cardiac filling when body position is altered (Lillywhite, 1987, 2005; Lillywhite and Donald, 1994; Lillywhite and Gallagher, 1985; Seymour and Arndt, 2004; Lillywhite et al., 2012). An interspecific comparison of 16 individuals belonging to nine different species of terrestrial snakes revealed a significant rise in MAP with body length, such that MAP increased proportionally to the distance between the heart and head when expressed as the rise in gravitational pressure (ρgh; Seymour, 1987). Interspecific allometric analyses often provide fundamental relationships that transcend taxonomic differences (Savage et al., 2008), however intraspecific and interspecific scaling relationships can differ significantly (Heusner, 1982; Thompson and Withers, 1997; Chappell and Ellis, 1987). To further understand how body size and head to heart distances affect MAP, we provide an intraspecific allometric analysis of heart rate (f H ), ventricular mass and MAP in the Burmese python

(Python molurus). As Seymour (1987), we measured resting undisturbed snakes in a horizontal position. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION The scaling relationship for ventricular mass in the python (Fig. 1; Table 1) was almost identical to the relationship reported for terrestrial snakes (Seymour, 1987). In contrast the effects of body mass on MAP in the python (Fig. 1; Table 1) was considerably less than measured in terrestrial snakes (Seymour, 1987). Regardless, in accordance with the previous allometric analysis (Seymour, 1987), MAP and ventricular mass of the Burmese pythons increased positively with body mass (Fig. 1; Table 1), while f H decreased (Table 1). A regression through all data points predicts that f H decreases from 22.7 to 9.5 min -1 when a Burmese python grow from 200g to 30 kg. We did not measure stroke volume, but given that ventricular mass decreases from 1.8 to 1.2 g kg -1 over the same body mass interval, it seems very likely that cardiac output decreases similarly to reduction in f H. This implies that most of the rise in MAP with increased body mass must be due to a rise in TPR.Interestingly, the rise in MAP when expressed relative to the heart-head distance was also considerably lower than reported in the previous interspecific analysis for snakes (Seymour, 1987; Fig. 2) where the relationship between MAP, measured in resting, horizontal snakes, and the heart-head distance, converted into a gravitational pressure (ρgh), had a slope of 1.18. If head-heart distance perfectly predicts MAP, this slope should be 1.0. In the 15 pythons where we have heart-head distances and MAP, the slope of the relationship was less than half that reported for terrestrial snakes (Seymour, 1987) (slope =0.49 vs 1.18), and significantly less than 1.0 (p=0.0193). Thus, at least in Burmese pythons, MAP is not simply related to the heart-head distance. This result is not necessarily surprising. In a resting, horizontal snake, or any terrestrial vertebrate in a horizontal position, the heart and head are essentially at the same gravitational potential. Thus, the additional gravitational pressure component of MAP is eliminated and the hemodynamic challenges of perfusing the head are minimized. A variety of factors may account for the different MAP scaling relationship found in P. molurus compared to existing interspecific analyses. First, pythons, unlike any other group of snakes, have functional intraventricular separation of the pulmonary and systemic circulations, and hence sustain relatively high MAP, while keeping pressures in the pulmonary circulation low (Wang et al., 2003; Jensen et al., 2010). Consequently, MAP of pythons is already sufficiently high to overcome gravitational stress when the head is elevated. In addition, although the rise in MAP is well below that

predicted by the longer heart-head distance, the reflexive neurogenic regulation of blood pressure may be sufficiently effective to overcome any vertical challenges whenever the head is raised above heart level (e.g. Lillywhite and Donald, 1994). Finally, the steeper interspecific scaling slope of MAP and head-heart distance reported by Seymour (1987) may have been biased by inclusion of many snake species adapted to an arboreal life style (scansorial). Allometric analyses are generally insightful; however, interspecific and intraspecific analyses may depict dissimilar relationships. For example, the scaling of body mass and metabolism have yielded significantly different mass exponents when analysed intraspecifically versus interspecifically (e.g. Heusner, 1987). Therefore, it is not surprising that within the Burmese python, the allometric relationship of MAP and heart-head distance differs significantly from a phylogenetically-diverse, interspecific relationship. MATERIALS AND METHODS Sixty-one Burmese pythons (Python molurus,linnaeus, 1758) with a body mass between 0.2 and 27 kg were purchased from a commercial supplier and kept at Aarhus University in vivaria equipped with a heating system that provided temperatures between 25 and 32 C. In addition, three of the largest individuals were studied at UNESP in Brazil. The snakes had free access to water and were fed once a week. Food was withheld at least two weeks prior to experimentation. The animals grew during captivity and appeared healthy. Anesthesia was induced by inhalation of 5% isoflurane (Baxter, Denmark) to allow intubation for mechanical ventilation (1-2% isoflurane at 5-10 breaths min -1 and 50 ml kg -1 ) using a Harvard apparatus mechanical ventilator. Snakes heavier than 2 kg were manually ventilated with an Ambu bag. Subsequently, a 5 cm ventrolateral incision was made anterior to the heart or posterior to the kidney, for the occlusive insertion of a polyethylene catheter (PE50 or PE90 containing heparinized saline, 50IU ml -1 ) in the vertebral artery or dorsal aorta respectively. Snakes were allowed to recover for 1-2 days at 30 C. To measure MAP, the arterial catheter was connected to a disposable pressure transducer (Model PX600; Baxter Edwards, Ervine, CA) calibrated against a static water column and recorded with a Biopac MP100 data acquisition system (Biopac Systems, Inc., Goleta, CA) at 100hz. f H was derived from the pulsating pressure signal.

All measurements were conducted on fully recovered, fasting and undisturbed snakes kept at 30 C for a minimum of 12h in climatic chambers that also served to reduce visual and auditory disturbance during measurements. Resting MAP and f H were measured one hour after connecting the catheters to alleviate the influence handling stress on MAP and f H. All snakes studied in Aarhus were sacrificed after measurements (200 mg kg -1 pentobarbital, i.p), whereupon length was measured and hearts were harvested. The data reported in the present study were collected in connection with other experiments to determine regulation of the cardiovascular system and the experiments were conducted in accordance with Danish Federal Regulations. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We are grateful to Heidi Meldgaard and Rasmus Buchanan for help and technical assistance. AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS All authors contributed to conception, design and execution of the study, interpretation of the findings. S.E., J.W.H. and T.W. wrote the manuscript, which was subsequently edited by C.S and A.S.A. COMPETING INTERESTS No competing interests declared. FUNDING The Danish Research Council (SE and TW) provided financial support, The National Science Foundation grants IOB 0445680 & IOS 922756 (JWH), an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship (CES), and Fundação de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP) (ASA). List of abbreviations f H heart rate g H MAP TPR ρ is acceleration due to gravity vertical distance above the heart mean arterial blood pressure total systemic vascular resistance density of blood

REFERENCES Brøndum E.T., Hasenkam, J.M., Secher, N.H., Bertelsen, M.F., Grøndahl, C., Petersen, K.K., Buhl, R., Aalkjær, C., Baandrup, U., Nygaard, H., Smerup, M., Stegmann, F., Sloth, E., Østergaard, K.H., Nissen, P., Runge, M. Pitsillides, K. and Wang, T. (2009). Jugular venous pooling during lowering of the head affects blood pressure of the anesthetized giraffe. Am. J. Physiol. 297, R1058 R1065. Chappell, M. A. and Ellis, T. M. (1987). Resting metabolic rates in boid snakes: allometric relationships and temperature effects. J. Comp. Physiol. B157, 227 235. Gauer, O.H. and Thorn, H.L. (1965). Postural changes in circulation. In: Hamilton WF (ed) Handbook of Physiology. American Physiological Society, Washington DC, pp 2409-2439 Heusner, A.A. (1982). Energy metabolism and body size I. Is the 0.75 mass exponent of Kleiber's equation a statistical artifact? Respir. Physiol. 48, 1 12. Heusner, A.A. (1987). What does the power function reveal about structure and function in animals of different size? Annu. Rev. Physiol. 49, 121 133. Jensen, B., Nielsen, J. M., Axelsson, M., Pedersen, M., Löfman, C. and Wang, T. (2010). How the python heart separates pulmonary and systemic blood pressures and blood flows. J. Exp. Biol. 213, 1611 1617. Lillywhite, H.B. (1987). Circulatory adaptations of snakes to gravity. Amer. Zool. 27, 81-95. Lillywhite, H.B. (2005) Cardiovascular adaptations to gravity: lessons from comparative studies of snakes. In: Hargens, A., Takeda, N., Singal, P.K. (eds), Adaptation Biology and Medicine Vol 4 Current Concepts, Narosa Publishing House, New Delhi, Indian, pp.68-81 Lillywhite, H. B. and Donald, J.A. (1994). Neural regulation of arterial blood pressure in snakes. Physiol. Zool. 67, 1260 1283. Lillywhite, H. B. and Gallagher, K.P. (1985). Hemodynamic adjustments to head up posture in the partly arboreal snake, Elaphe obsoleta. J. Exp. Zool. 235, 325-334. Lillywhite, H.B., Albert, J.S., Sheehy, C.M. and Seymour, R.S. (2012). Gravity and the evolution of cardiopulmonary morphology in snakes. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 161A, 230-242. Patterson J.L. Jr, Goetz R.H., Doyle J.T., Warren J.V., Gauer O.H., Detweiler D.K., Said S.I., Hoernicke H., McGregor M., Keen E.N., Smith M.H. Jr, Hardie E.L., Reynolds M., Flatt W.P. and Waldo D.R. (1965). Cardiorespiratory dynamics in the ox and giraffe, with comparative observations on man and other mammals. Ann.N.Y. Acad Sciences 127, 393 413. Savage, V.M., Deeds, E.J. and Fontana, W. (2008). Sizing up allometric scaling theory. PLoS Comput. Biol. 4, e1000171. (doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000171) Seymour, R.S. (1987) Scaling of cardiovascular physiology in snakes. Amer. Zool. 27, 97 109. Seymour, R.S. and Blaylock, A.J. (2000). The principle of Laplace and scaling of ventricular wall stress and blood pressure in mammals and birds. Physiol. Biochem. Zool. 73, 389 405. Seymour, R.S. and Arndt, J.O. (2004). Independent effects of heart head distance and caudal blood pooling on blood pressure regulation in aquatic and terrestrial snakes. J. Exp. Biol. 207, 1305 1311.

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FIGURE LEGENDS Figure 1. a: Mean arterial blood pressure as a function of body mass for Python molurus (N = 53). b: Ventricle mass as a function of total body mass for Python molurus (N = 22). Values are from fasted resting snakes at 30C. Axes are logarithmic and the regression equation and statistics are presented in Table 1. Figure 2. Mean arterial blood pressure as a function of head-heart pressure (ρgh) from 16 Python molurus. A straight line with the equation Y = 0.4942X + 4.017 is fitted to the data (black, r 2 = 0.3229). A regression from Seymour et al. 1987 is shown in red (Y = 1.18X + 2.26). Y=mean arterial pressure (kpa) and X=heart to head distanced converted to kpa. Blood was assumed to have a density of 1.05 g/ml.

Table 1: Allometric equations for ventricular mass (Mv), mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) Head-heart distance heart rate (f H ) and body mass (Mb). All values were measured on fasting and undisturbed Burmese pythons (Python molurus) at 30 o C. Y X Regression a b r 2 n Mv (g) Mb (g) Y = ax b 0.00277 0.9187 0.958 22 MAP (kpa) Mb (g) Y = ax b 3.248 0.0786 0.197 53 f H (min -1 ) Mb (g) Y = ax b 56.87-0.1735 0.680 54 Head-heart (cm) Total length (cm) Y = ax + b 0.1905 2.814 0.971 23

Figure 1 100 a 100 b Mean arterial pressure (kpa) 10 1 100 1000 10000 Total mass (g) Ventricle mass (g) 10 1 0.1 100 1000 10000 Total mass (g)

Figure 2: 15 snakes Mean arterial pressure (kpa) 10 5 0 0 2 4 6 8 10 Head-heart pressure (kpa) Python molurus