Abstract: | Since volume expansion and high blood pressure (BP) are known stimuli of atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) release, and since this peptide may be involved in mineralocorticoid escape, we investigated the effects of chronic deoxycorticosterone (DOCA) and DOCA-NaC1 treatment on renal glomerular ANF receptor density and affinity in relation to atrial and plasma ANF levels. An increase in plasma immunoreactive ANF (IR-ANF) was observed both after two and four weeks of treatment. IR-ANF concentrations were elevated in the left atrium only in four-week DOCA treated rats. Administration of the mineralocorticoid alone resulted in a decreased density of glomerular ANF receptors in both time periods investigated. DOCA-NaC1-treated animals presented an increased receptor density during the pre-hypertensive stage (2 weeks) and a reduced density in the later hypertensive period (4 weeks). Receptor affinity in both groups was identical to that in the controls after 2 weeks and was augmented after 4 weeks of treatment. Our data suggest that the down-regulation of renal glomerular ANF receptors during chronic DOCA-NaC1 administration may play a role in the maintenance of high BP in this model of volume-expanded hypertension. |