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1.
The effect of chronic activation or inhibition of central ANG II receptors on cardiac baroreflex function in conscious normotensive rabbits was examined. Animals received a fourth ventricular (4V) infusion of ANG II (30 and 100 ng/h), losartan (3 and 30 microg/h), or Ringer solution (2 microl/h) for 2 wk. After 1 and 2 wk, ANG II (100 ng/h) decreased cardiac baroreflex gain by 20 and 37%, respectively (P = 0.015), whereas losartan (30 microg/h) increased baroreflex gain by 24 and 58%, respectively (P = 0.02). Within 1 wk of the end of the infusions, cardiac baroreflex gain had returned to control. Ringer solution or the lower doses of ANG II or losartan did not modify the cardiac baroreflex function. Blood pressure and heart rate were not altered by any treatment, nor was their variability affected. These data demonstrate a novel long-term modulation of cardiac baroreflexes by endogenous ANG II that is independent of blood pressure level.  相似文献   

2.
The aim of the present study was to investigate the role of the endogenous nitric oxide synthase inhibitor asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA) and its degrading enzyme dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase (DDAH) in angiotensin II (ANG II)-induced hypertension and target organ damage in mice. Mice transgenic for the human DDAH1 gene (TG) and wild-type (WT) mice (each, n = 28) were treated with 1.0 microg kg(-1) min(-1) ANG II, 3.0 microg kg(-1) min(-1) ANG II, or phosphate-buffered saline over 4 wk via osmotic minipumps. Blood pressure, as measured by tail cuff, was elevated to the same degree in TG and WT mice. Plasma levels of ADMA were lower in TG than WT mice and were not affected after 4 wk by either dose of ANG II in both TG and WT animals. Oxidative stress within the wall of the aorta, measured by fluorescence microscopy using the dye dihydroethidium, was significantly reduced in TG mice. ANG II-induced glomerulosclerosis was similar between WT and TG mice, whereas renal interstitial fibrosis was significantly reduced in TG compared with WT animals. Renal mRNA expression of protein arginine methyltransferase (PRMT)1 and DDAH2 increased during the infusion of ANG II, whereas PRMT3 and endogenous mouse DDAH1 expression remained unaltered. Chronic infusion of ANG II in mice has no effect on the plasma levels of ADMA after 4 wk. However, an overexpression of DDAH1 alleviates ANG II-induced renal interstitial fibrosis and vascular oxidative stress, suggesting a blood pressure-independent effect of ADMA on ANG II-induced target organ damage.  相似文献   

3.
Angiotensin-(1-7) [ANG-(1-7)] plays a counterregulatory role to angiotensin II in the renin-angiotensin system. In trained spontaneous hypertensive rats, Mas expression and protein are upregulated in ventricular tissue. Therefore, we examined the role of ANG-(1-7) on cardiac hemodynamics, cardiac functions, and cardiac remodeling in trained two-kidney one-clip hypertensive (2K1C) rats. For this purpose, rats were divided into sedentary and trained groups. Each group consists of sham and 2K1C rats with and without ANG-(1-7) infusion. Swimming training was performed for 1 h/day, 5 days/wk for 4 wk following 1 wk of swimming training for acclimatization. 2K1C rats showed moderate hypertension and left ventricular hypertrophy without changing left ventricular function. Chronic infusion of ANG-(1-7) attenuated hypertension and cardiac hypertrophy only in trained 2K1C rats but not in sedentary 2K1C rats. Chronic ANG-(1-7) treatment significantly attenuated increases in myocyte diameter and cardiac fibrosis induced by hypertension in only trained 2K1C rats. The Mas receptor, ANG II type 2 receptor protein, and endothelial nitric oxide synthase phosphorylation in ventricles were upregulated in trained 2K1C rats. In conclusion, chronic infusion of ANG-(1-7) attenuates hypertension in trained 2K1C rats.  相似文献   

4.
The objective of the present study was to evaluate the baroreflex and the autonomic control of heart rate (HR) in renovascular hypertensive mice. Experiments were carried out in conscious C57BL/6 (n = 16) mice 28 days after a 2-kidney 1-clip procedure (2K1C mice) or a sham operation (sham mice). Baroreflex sensitivity was evaluated by measuring changes in heart rate (HR) in response to increases or decreases in mean arterial pressure (MAP) induced by phenylephrine or sodium nitroprusside. Cardiac autonomic tone was determined by use of atropine and atenolol. Basal HR and MAP were significantly higher in 2K1C mice than in sham mice. The reflex tachycardia induced by decreases in MAP was greatly attenuated in 2K1C mice compared with sham mice. Consequently, the baroreflex sensitivity was greatly decreased (2.2 +/- 0.4 vs. 4.4 +/- 0.3 beats x min(-1) x mmHg(-1)) in hypertensive mice compared with sham mice. The reflex bradycardia induced by increases in MAP and the baroreflex sensitivity were similar in both groups. Evaluation of autonomic control of HR showed an increased sympathetic tone and a tendency to a decreased vagal tone in 2K1C mice compared with that in sham mice. 2K1C hypertension in mice is accompanied by resting tachycardia, increased predominance of the cardiac sympathetic tone over the cardiac vagal tone, and impairment of baroreflex sensitivity.  相似文献   

5.
It has been shown that the area postrema (AP) plays a role in the development of certain types of chronic angiotensin II (ANG II)-induced hypertension in the rat but is not of great importance in the salt sensitivity of arterial pressure. It has recently been proposed, however, that elevated sodium levels may exacerbate the hypertensive effects of ANG II, which by itself dramatically affects salt sensitivity, by acting at sodium-sensing neurons in certain circumventricular organs of the brain. Thus the interactions of ANG II, sodium, and the central nervous system remain to be fully understood. The purpose of this study was to examine the role of the AP in ANG II-induced hypertension during periods of normal and elevated dietary salt. We hypothesized that an intact AP was necessary for the full development of hypertension under chronic ANG II infusion and that its role would be pronounced during periods of increased dietary sodium. To test this, male Sprague-Dawley rats underwent ablation of the area postrema (APx, n = 6) or sham operation (sham, n = 6). After 3 wk of recovery, rats were instrumented with radiotelemetry transducers for constant blood pressure and heart rate monitoring and venous catheters for vehicle infusion. After a 3-day control period of 0.9% saline infusion (7 ml/day) and 0.4% dietary sodium, a 10-day period of ANG II infusion (10 ng.kg(-1).min(-1)) was begun, immediately followed by a second 10-day period during which rats were fed a 4.0% sodium diet. By day 6 of ANG II infusion, mean arterial pressure (MAP) in APx rats had increased to 139 +/- 4 mmHg, whereas MAP in sham rats had increased to 126 +/- 3 mmHg. This difference was found to be significant and continued through day 1 of the high-salt period, after which MAP of the two groups had risen to similar levels. On day 9 of high salt, MAP was again observed to be significantly higher (162 +/- 1 mmHg) in APx rats when compared with sham rats (147 +/- 4 mmHg.) These results do not support the hypothesis that the AP is necessary for the full development of ANG II-induced hypertension at normal or elevated levels of dietary sodium.  相似文献   

6.
Circulating ANG II modulates the baroreceptor reflex control of heart rate (HR), at least partly via activation of ANG II type 1 (AT1) receptors on neurons in the area postrema. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that the effects of circulating ANG II on the baroreflex also depend on AT1 receptors within the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS). In confirmation of previous studies in other species, increases in arterial pressure induced by intravenous infusion of ANG II had little effect on HR in urethane-anesthetized rats, in contrast to the marked bradycardia evoked by equipressor infusion of phenylephrine. In the presence of a continuous background infusion of ANG II, the baroreflex control of HR was shifted to higher levels of HR but had little effect on the baroreflex control of renal sympathetic activity. The modulatory effects of circulating ANG II on the cardiac baroreflex were significantly reduced by microinjection of candesartan, an AT1 receptor antagonist, into the area postrema and virtually abolished by microinjections of candesartan into the medial NTS. After acute ablation of the area postrema, a background infusion of ANG II still caused an upward shift of the cardiac baroreflex curve, which was reversed by subsequent microinjection of candesartan into the medial NTS. The results indicate that AT1 receptors in the medial NTS play a critical role in modulation of the cardiac baroreflex by circulating ANG II via mechanisms that are at least partly independent of AT1 receptors in the area postrema.  相似文献   

7.
Sex has an important influence on blood pressure (BP) regulation. There is increasing evidence that sex hormones interfere with the renin-angiotensin system. Thus the purpose of this study was to determine whether there are sex differences in the development of ANG II-induced hypertension in conscious male and female mice. We used telemetry implants to measure aortic BP and heart rate (HR) in conscious, freely moving animals. ANG II (800 ng.kg(-1).min(-1)) was delivered via an osmotic pump implanted subcutaneously. Our results showed baseline BP in male and female mice to be similar. Chronic systemic infusion of ANG II induced a greater increase in BP in male (35.1 +/- 5.7 mmHg) than in female mice (7.2 +/- 2.0 mmHg). Gonadectomy attenuated ANG II-induced hypertension in male mice (15.2 +/- 2.4 mmHg) and augmented it in female mice (23.1 +/- 1.0 mmHg). Baseline HR was significantly higher in females relative to males (630.1 +/- 7.9 vs. 544.8 +/- 16.2 beats/min). In females, ANG II infusion significantly decreased HR. However, the increase in BP with ANG II did not result in the expected decrease in HR in either intact male or gonadectomized mice. Moreover, the slope of the baroreflex bradycardia to phenylephrine was blunted in males (-5.6 +/- 0.3 to -2.9 +/- 0.5) but not in females (-6.5 +/- 0.5 to -5.6 +/- 0.3) during infusion of ANG II, suggesting that, in male mice, infusion of ANG II results in a resetting of the baroreflex control of HR. Ganglionic blockade resulted in greater reduction in BP on day 7 after ANG II infusion in males compared with females (-61.0 +/- 8.9 vs. -36.6 +/- 6.6 mmHg), suggesting an increased contribution of sympathetic nerve activity in arterial BP maintenance in male mice. Together, these data indicate that there are sex differences in the development of chronic ANG II-induced hypertension in conscious mice and that females may be protected from the increases in BP induced by ANG II.  相似文献   

8.
Fatty acids (FAs) are acquired from free FA associated with albumin and lipoprotein triglyceride that is hydrolyzed by lipoprotein lipase (LpL). Hypertrophied hearts shift their substrate usage pattern to more glucose and less FA. However, FAs may still be an important source of energy in hypertrophied hearts. The aim of this study was to examine the importance of LpL-derived FAs in hypertensive hypertrophied hearts. We followed cardiac function and metabolic changes during 2 wk of angiotensin II (ANG II)-induced hypertension in control and heart-specific lipoprotein lipase knockout (hLpL0) mice. Glucose metabolism was increased in ANG II-treated control (control/ANG II) hearts, raising it to the same level as hLpL0 hearts. FA uptake-related genes, CD36 and FATP1, were reduced in control/ANG II hearts to levels found in hLpL0 hearts. ANG II did not alter these metabolic genes in hLpL0 mice. LpL activity was preserved, and mitochondrial FA oxidation-related genes were not altered in control/ANG II hearts. In control/ANG II hearts, triglyceride stores were consumed and reached the same levels as in hLpL0/ANG II hearts. Intracellular ATP content was reduced only in hLpL0/ANG II hearts. Both ANG II and deoxycorticosterone acetate-salt induced hypertension caused heart failure only in hLpL0 mice. Our data suggest that LpL activity is required for normal cardiac metabolic compensation to hypertensive stress.  相似文献   

9.
Renal nerves are thought to play an important role in cardiovascular regulation under both normotensive and hypertensive conditions. In the present study the effect of renal denervation on the changes in plasma renin activity (PRA) after aortic baroreceptor deafferentation (tADN) were investigated in the rat. Bilateral renal denervation did not alter arterial pressure (AP, 100 +/- 4 mmHg; 1 mmHg = 133.32 Pa), heart rate (HR, 363 +/- 12 bpm), or PRA (2.9 +/- 0.6 ng.mL-1.h-1) compared with the respective sham renal denervation values of 106 +/- 3 mmHg (AP), 385 +/- 13 bpm (HR), and 3.3 +/- 0.7 ng.mL-1.h-1 (PRA). On the other hand, bilateral tADN resulted in significant increases in AP, HR, and PRA. One and 3 days after tADN, AP was 130 +/- 4 and 127 +/- 6 mmHg, HR was 461 +/- 15 and 463 +/- 20 bpm, and PRA was 9.1 +/- 3.0 and 11.9 +/- 4.5 ng.mL-1.h-1, respectively. Renal denervation before tADN prevented the increases in AP and PRA, but it did not affect the increase in HR. These data indicate that renal denervation does not alter basal PRA in normotensive animals but prevents the increased renin release observed in neurogenic hypertension. These data suggest that the increased PRA may be one of several factors that contributes to the elevated AP after tADN.  相似文献   

10.
Little is known about baroreflex control of renal nerve sympathetic activity (RSNA) or the effect of angiotensin II (ANG II) on the baroreflex in diabetes. We examined baroreflex control of RSNA and heart rate (HR) in conscious, chronically instrumented rats 2 wk after citrate vehicle (normal) or 55 mg/kg iv streptozotocin (diabetic) before and after losartan (5 mg/kg iv) or enalapril (2.5 mg/kg iv). Resting HR and RSNA were lower in diabetic versus normal rats. The range of baroreflex control of HR and the gain of baroreflex-mediated bradycardia were impaired in diabetic rats. Maximum gain was unchanged. The baroreflex control of RSNA was reset to lower pressures in the diabetic rats but remained otherwise unchanged. Losartan decreased mean arterial pressure (MAP) and increased HR and RSNA in both groups but had no influence on the baroreflex. Enalapril decreased MAP only in normal rats, yet the increase in HR and RSNA was similar in both groups. Thus in diabetic rats enalapril produced a pressure-independent increase in HR and RSNA. Enalapril exerted no effect on the baroreflex control of HR or RSNA in either group. These data indicate that in conscious rats resting RSNA is lower but baroreflex control of RSNA is preserved after 2 wk of diabetes. At this time, the baroreflex control of HR is already impaired and blockade of endogenous ANG II does not improve this dysfunction.  相似文献   

11.
Hypertension alters cerebrovascular regulation and increases the brain's susceptibility to stroke and dementia. We investigated the temporal relationships between the arterial pressure (AP) elevation induced by "slow pressor" angiotensin II (ANG II) infusion, which recapitulates key features of human hypertension, and the resulting cerebrovascular dysfunction. Minipumps delivering saline or ANG II for 14 days were implanted subcutaneously in C57BL/6 mice (n = 5/group). Cerebral blood flow was assessed by laser-Doppler flowmetry in anesthetized mice equipped with a cranial window. With ANG II (600 ng · kg(-1) · min(-1)), AP started to rise after 9 days (P < 0.05 vs. saline), remained elevated at 11-17 days, and returned to baseline at 21 days (P > 0.05). ANG II attenuated the cerebral blood flow increase induced by neural activity (whisker stimulation) or endothelium-dependent vasodilators, an effect observed before the AP elevation (7 days), as well as after the hypertension subsided (21 days). Nonpressor doses of ANG II (200 ng · kg(-1) · min(-1)) induced cerebrovascular dysfunction and oxidative stress without elevating AP (P > 0.05 vs. saline), whereas phenylephrine elevated AP without inducing cerebrovascular effects. ANG II (600 ng · kg(-1) · min(-1)) augmented neocortical reactive oxygen species (ROS) with a time course similar to that of the cerebrovascular dysfunction. Neocortical application of the ROS scavenger manganic(I-II)meso-tetrakis(4-benzoic acid)porphyrin or the NADPH oxidase peptide inhibitor gp91ds-tat attenuated ROS and cerebrovascular dysfunction. We conclude that the alterations in neurovascular regulation induced by slow pressor ANG II develop before hypertension and persist beyond AP normalization but are not permanent. The findings unveil a striking susceptibility of cerebrovascular function to the deleterious effects of ANG II and raise the possibility that cerebrovascular dysregulation precedes the elevation in AP also in patients with ANG II-dependent hypertension.  相似文献   

12.
Males develop higher blood pressure than do females. This study tested the hypothesis that androgens enhance responsiveness to ANG II during the development of hypertension in New Zealand genetically hypertensive (NZGH) rats. Male NZGH rats were obtained at 5 wk of age and subjected to sham operation (Sham) or castration (Cas) then studied at three age groups: 6-7, 11-12, and 16-17 wk. Mean arterial blood pressure (MAP), heart rate (HR), and renal blood flow (RBF) measurements were recorded under Inactin anesthesia. These variables were measured after enalapril (1 mg/kg) treatment and during intravenous ANG II infusion (20, 40, and 80 ng/kg/min). Plasma testosterone was measured by ELISA. Angiotensin type 1 (AT1) receptor expression was assessed by Western blot analysis and RT-PCR. ANG II-induced MAP responses were significantly attenuated in Cas NZGH rats. At the highest ANG II dose, MAP increased by 40+/-4% in Sham vs. 22+/-1% in Cas NZGH rats of 16-17 wk of age. Similarly, renal vascular resistance (RVR) responses to ANG II were reduced by castration (209+/-20% in Sham vs. 168+/-10% in Cas NZGH rats at 16-17 wk of age). Castration also reduced MAP recorded in conscious NZGH rats of this age group. Testosterone replacement restored baseline MAP and the pressor and RVR responses to ANG II. Castration reduced testosterone concentrations markedly. Testosterone treatment restored these concentrations. Neither castration nor castration+testosterone treatment affected AT1 receptor mRNA or protein expression. Collectively, these data suggest that androgens modulate renal and systemic vascular responsiveness to ANG II, which may contribute to androgen-induced facilitation of NZGH rat hypertension.  相似文献   

13.
Oxidative stress is implicated in menopause-associated hypertension and cardiovascular disease. The role of antioxidants in this process is unclear. We questioned whether the downregulation of thioredoxin (TRX) is associated with oxidative stress and the development of hypertension and target-organ damage (cardiac hypertrophy) in a menopause model. TRX is an endogenous antioxidant that also interacts with signaling molecules, such as apoptosis signal-regulated kinase 1 (ASK-1), independently of its antioxidant function. Aged female wild-type (WT) and follitropin receptor knockout (FORKO) mice (20-24 wk), with hormonal imbalances, were studied. Mice were infused with ANG II (400 ng x kg(-1) x min(-1); 14 days). Systolic blood pressure was increased by ANG II in WT (166+/-8 vs. 121+/-5 mmHg) and FORKO (176+/-7 vs. 115+/-5 mmHg; P<0.0001; n=9/group) mice. In ANG II-infused FORKO mice, cardiac mass was increased by 42% (P<0.001). This was associated with increased collagen content and augmented ERK1/2 phosphorylation (2-fold). Cardiac TRX expression and activity were decreased by ANG II in FORKO but not in WT (P<0.01) mice. ASK-1 expression, cleaved caspase III content, and Bax/Bcl-2 content were increased in ANG II-infused FORKO (P<0.05). ANG II had no effect on cardiac NAD(P)H oxidase activity or on O(2)(*-) levels in WT or FORKO. Cardiac ANG II type 1 receptor expression was similar in FORKO and WT. These findings indicate that in female FORKO, ANG II-induced cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis are associated with the TRX downregulation and upregulation of ASK-1/caspase signaling. Our data suggest that in a model of menopause, protective actions of TRX may be blunted, which could contribute to cardiac remodeling independently of oxidative stress and hypertension.  相似文献   

14.
Despite its usefulness as a nongenetic model of hypertension, little information is available regarding baroreflex function in the Grollman, renal wrap model of hypertension in the rat. Baroreflex regulation of renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) and heart rate (HR) were studied in male, Sprague-Dawley rats hypertensive (HT) for 1 or 4-6 wk after unilateral nephrectomy and figure-8 ligature around the remaining kidney or normotensive (NT) after sham surgery. Rats were anesthetized with Inactin and RSNA, and HR was recorded during intravenous infusions of sodium nitroprusside or phenylephrine to lower or raise mean arterial pressure (MAP). Response curves were analyzed using a logistic sigmoid function. In 1- and 4-wk HT rats the midpoints of RSNA and HR reflex curves were shifted to the right (P < 0.05). Comparing NT to 1- or 4-wk HT rats, the gain of RSNA-MAP curves was no different; however, gain was reduced in the HR-MAP curves at both 1 and 4 wk in HT rats (P < 0.05). In anesthetized rats the HR range was small; therefore, MAP and HR were measured in conscious rats during intravenous injections of three doses of phenylephrine and three doses of sodium nitroprusside. Linear regressions revealed a reduced slope in both 1- and 4-wk HT rats compared with NT rats (P < 0.05). The results indicate that baroreflex curves are shifted to the right, to higher pressures, in hypertension. After 1-4 wk of hypertension the gain of baroreflex regulation of RSNA is not altered; however, the gain of HR regulation is reduced.  相似文献   

15.
During activation of the renin-angiotensin system, hindbrain circumventricular organs such as the area postrema have been implicated in modulating the arterial baroreflex. This study was undertaken to test the hypothesis that the subfornical organ (SFO), a forebrain circumventricular structure, may also modulate the baroreflex. Studies were performed in rats with two-kidney, one-clip (2K,1C) hypertension as a model of endogenously activated renin-angiotensin system. Baroreflex function was ascertained during ramp infusions of phenylephrine and nitroprusside in conscious sham-clipped and 5-wk 2K,1C rats with either a sham or electrolytically lesioned SFO. Lesioning significantly decreased mean arterial pressure in 2K,1C rats from 158 +/- 7 to 131 +/- 4 mmHg but not in sham-clipped rats. SFO-lesioned, sham-clipped rats had a significantly higher upper plateau and range of the renal sympathetic nerve activity-mean arterial pressure relationship compared with sham-clipped rats with SFO ablation. In contrast, lesioning the SFO in 2K,1C rats significantly decreased both the upper plateau and range of the baroreflex control of renal sympathetic nerve activity, but only the range of the baroreflex response of heart rate decreased. Thus, during unloading of the baroreceptors, the SFO differentially modulates the baroreflex responses in sham-clipped vs. 2K,1C rats. Since lesioning the SFO did not influence plasma angiotensin II (ANG II), the effects of the SFO lesion are not caused by changes in circulating levels of ANG II. These findings support a pivotal role for the SFO in the sympathoexcitation observed in renovascular hypertension and in baroreflex regulation of sympathetic activity in both normal and hypertensive states.  相似文献   

16.
Short-term intravenous infusion of angiotensin II (ANG II) into conscious rabbits reduces the range of renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) by attenuating reflex disinhibition of RSNA. This action of ANG II to attenuate the arterial baroreflex range is exaggerated when ANG II is directed into the vertebral circulation, which suggests a mechanism involving the central nervous system. Because an intact area postrema (AP) is required for ANG II to attenuate arterial baroreflex-mediated bradycardia and is also required for maintenance of ANG II-dependent hypertension, we hypothesized that attenuation of maximum RSNA during infusion of ANG II involves the AP. In conscious AP-lesioned (APX) and AP-intact rabbits, we compared the effect of a 5-min intravenous infusion of ANG II (10 and 20 ng x kg(-1) x min(-1)) on the relationship between mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) and RSNA. Intravenous infusion of ANG II into AP-intact rabbits resulted in a dose-related attenuation of maximum RSNA observed at low MAP. In contrast, ANG II had no effect on maximum RSNA in APX rabbits. To further localize the central site of ANG II action, its effect on the arterial baroreflex was assessed after a midcollicular decerebration. Decerebration did not alter arterial baroreflex control of RSNA compared with the control state, but as in APX, ANG II did not attenuate the maximum RSNA observed at low MAP. The results of this study indicate that central actions of peripheral ANG II to attenuate reflex disinhibition of RSNA not only involve the AP, but may also involve a neural interaction rostral to the level of decerebration.  相似文献   

17.
Alterations in the balance between ANG II/ACE and ANG 1-7/ACE2 in ANG II-dependent hypertension could reduce the generation of ANG 1-7 and contribute further to increased intrarenal ANG II. Upregulation of collecting duct (CD) renin may lead to increased ANG II formation during ANG II-dependent hypertension, thus contributing to this imbalance. We measured ANG I, ANG II, and ANG 1-7 contents, angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) and ACE2 gene expression, and renin activity in the renal cortex and medulla in the clipped kidneys (CK) and nonclipped kidneys (NCK) of 2K1C rats. After 3 wk of unilateral renal clipping, systolic blood pressure and plasma renin activity increased in 2K1C rats (n = 11) compared with sham rats (n = 9). Renal medullary angiotensin peptide levels were increased in 2K1C rats [ANG I: (CK = 171 ± 4; NCK = 251 ± 8 vs. sham = 55 ± 3 pg/g protein; P < 0.05); ANG II: (CK = 558 ± 79; NCK = 328 ± 18 vs. sham = 94 ± 7 pg/g protein; P < 0.001)]; and ANG 1-7 levels decreased (CK = 18 ± 2; NCK = 19 ± 2 pg/g vs. sham = 63 ± 10 pg/g; P < 0.001). In renal medullas of both kidneys of 2K1C rats, ACE mRNA levels and activity increased but ACE2 decreased. In further studies, we compared renal ACE and ACE2 mRNA levels and their activities from chronic ANG II-infused (n = 6) and sham-operated rats (n = 5). Although the ACE mRNA levels did not differ between ANG II rats and sham rats, the ANG II rats exhibited greater ACE activity and reduced ACE2 mRNA levels and activity. Renal medullary renin activity was similar in the CK and NCK of 2K1C rats but higher compared with sham. Thus, the differential regulation of ACE and ACE2 along with the upregulation of CD renin in both the CK and NCK in 2K1C hypertensive rats indicates that they are independent of perfusion pressure and contribute to the altered content of intrarenal ANG II and ANG 1-7.  相似文献   

18.
This study reports the effects of angiotensin II (ANG II), arginine vasopression (AVP), phenylephrine (PE), and sodium nitroprusside (SNP) on baroreflex control of heart rate in the presence and absence of the area postrema (AP) in conscious mice. In intact, sham-lesioned mice, baroreflex-induced decreases in heart rate due to increases in arterial pressure with intravenous infusions of ANG II were significantly less than those observed with similar increases in arterial pressure with PE (slope: -3.0 +/- 0.9 vs. -8.1 +/- 1.5 beats x min(-1) x mmHg(-1)). Baroreflex-induced decreases in heart rate due to increases in arterial pressure with intravenous infusions of AVP were the same as those observed with PE in sham animals (slope: -5.8 +/- 0.7 vs. -8.1 +/- 1.5 beats x min(-1) x mmHg(-1)). After the AP was lesioned, the slope of baroreflex inhibition of heart rate was the same whether pressure was increased with ANG II, AVP, or PE. The slope of the baroreflex-induced increases in heart rate due to decreases in arterial blood pressure with SNP were the same in sham- and AP-lesioned animals. These results indicate that, similar to other species, in mice the ability of ANG II to acutely reset baroreflex control of heart rate is dependent on an intact AP.  相似文献   

19.
Previous studies suggest that ANG II-induced hypertension in rats fed a high-salt (HS) diet (ANG II-salt hypertension) has a neurogenic component dependent on an enhanced sympathetic tone to the splanchnic veins and independent from changes in sympathetic nerve activity to the kidney or hind limb. The purpose of this study was to extend these findings and test whether altered autonomic control of splanchnic resistance arteries and the heart also contributes to the neurogenic component. Mean arterial pressure (MAP), heart rate (HR), superior mesenteric artery blood flow, and mesenteric vascular resistance (MVR) were measured during 4 control days, 14 days of ANG II delivered subcutaneously (150 ng·kg(-1)·min(-1)), and 4 days of recovery in conscious rats fed a HS (2% NaCl) or low-salt (LS; 0.1% NaCl) diet. Autonomic effects on MAP, HR, and MVR were assessed by acute ganglionic blockade with hexamethonium (20 mg/kg iv) on day 3 of control, days 1, 3, 5, 7, 10, and 13 of ANG II, and day 4 of recovery. MVR increased during ANG II infusion in HS and LS rats but remained elevated only in HS rats. Additionally, the MVR response to hexamethonium was enhanced on days 10 and 13 of ANG II selectively in HS rats. Compared with LS rats, HR in HS rats was higher during the 2nd wk of ANG II, and its response to hexamethonium was greater on days 7, 10, and 13 of ANG II. These results suggest that ANG II-salt hypertension is associated with delayed changes in autonomic control of splanchnic resistance arteries and the heart.  相似文献   

20.
ANG II has a clear role in development of cardiac hypertrophy, fibrosis, and dysfunction. It has been difficult, however, to determine whether these actions are direct or consequences of its systemic hemodynamic effects in vivo. To overcome this limitation, we used transgenic mice with cardiac-specific expression of a transgene fusion protein that releases ANG II from cardiomyocytes (Tg-ANG II-cardiac) without involvement of the systemic renin-angiotensin system and tested whether increased cardiac ANG II accelerates remodeling and dysfunction postmyocardial infarction (MI), whereas those mice show no evidence of cardiac hypertrophy under the basal condition. Male 12- to 14-wk-old Tg-ANG II-cardiac mice and their wild-type littermates (WT) were subjected to sham-MI or MI by ligating the left anterior descending coronary artery for 8 wk. Cardiac ANG II levels were approximately 10-fold higher in Tg-ANG II-cardiac mice than their WT, whereas ANG II levels in plasma and other tissues did not differ between strains. Systolic blood pressure and heart rate were similar between groups with or without MI. In sham-MI, Tg-ANG II-cardiac mice had increased collagen deposition and decreased capillary density. The differences between strains became more pronounced after MI. Although cardiac function was well preserved in the Tg-ANG II-cardiac mice with sham-MI, cardiac remodeling and dysfunction post-MI were more severe than WT. Our results demonstrate that, independent of systemic hemodynamic effects, cardiac ANG II may act locally in the heart, causing interstitial fibrosis in sham-MI and accelerating deterioration of cardiac dysfunction and remodeling post-MI.  相似文献   

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