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Atrial Natriuretic Peptide: A Molecular Target of Novel Therapeutic Approaches to Cardio-Metabolic Disease

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms20133265

Keywords

atrial natriuretic peptide; hypertension; heart failure; cardiometabolic disease; obesity; metabolic syndrome; cGMP; guanylyl cyclase receptor A; natriuretic peptides

Funding

  1. National Heart Lung and Blood Institute [RO1 HL36634, RO1 HL136340]
  2. American Heart Association [16SDG29930003]
  3. Marie Ingalls Cardiovascular Research Career Development Fund

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Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) is a cardiac hormone with pleiotropic cardiovascular and metabolic properties including vasodilation, natriuresis and suppression of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system. Moreover, ANP induces lipolysis, lipid oxidation, adipocyte browning and ameliorates insulin sensitivity. Studies on ANP genetic variants revealed that subjects with higher ANP plasma levels have lower cardio-metabolic risk. In vivo and in humans, augmenting the ANP pathway has been shown to exert cardiovascular therapeutic actions while ameliorating the metabolic profile. MANP is a novel designer ANP-based peptide with greater and more sustained biological actions than ANP in animal models. Recent studies also demonstrated that MANP lowers blood pressure and inhibits aldosterone in hypertensive subjects whereas cardiometabolic properties of MANP are currently tested in an on-going clinical study in hypertension and metabolic syndrome. Evidence from in vitro, in vivo and in human studies support the concept that ANP and related pathway represent an optimal target for a comprehensive approach to cardiometabolic disease.

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