4.7 Article

Intrauterine Nitric Oxide Deficiency Weakens Differentiation of Vascular Smooth Muscle in Newborn Rats

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22158003

Keywords

nitric oxide; preeclampsia; prenatal ontogenesis; vascular smooth muscle cells; synthetic phenotype; contractile phenotype

Funding

  1. Russian Science Foundation [N19-15-00210]

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Nitric oxide (NO) deficiency during pregnancy is a key factor in the development of preeclampsia, affecting the expression of specific genes in arterial smooth muscle of newborn offspring.
Nitric oxide (NO) deficiency during pregnancy is a key reason for preeclampsia development. Besides its important vasomotor role, NO is shown to regulate the cell transcriptome. However, the role of NO in transcriptional regulation of developing smooth muscle has never been studied before. We hypothesized that in early ontogeny, NO is important for the regulation of arterial smooth muscle-specific genes expression. Pregnant rats consumed NO-synthase inhibitor L-NAME (500 mg/L in drinking water) from gestational day 10 till delivery, which led to an increase in blood pressure, a key manifestation of preeclampsia. L-NAME reduced blood concentrations of NO metabolites in dams and their newborn pups, as well as relaxations of pup aortic rings to acetylcholine. Using qPCR, we demonstrated reduced abundances of the smooth muscle-specific myosin heavy chain isoform, alpha-actin, SM22 alpha, and L-type Ca2+-channel mRNAs in the aorta of newborn pups from the L-NAME group compared to control pups. To conclude, the intrauterine NO deficiency weakens gene expression specific for a contractile phenotype of arterial smooth muscle in newborn offspring.

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