4.7 Article

Changes in Gut Microbiota Induced by Doxycycline Influence in Vascular Function and Development of Hypertension in DOCA-Salt Rats

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu13092971

Keywords

doxycycline; gut dysbiosis; hypertension; oxidative stress; inflammation; DOCA-salt model

Funding

  1. Comision Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnologia, Ministerio de Economia y competitividad [SAF2017-84894-R]
  2. Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion [PID2020-116347RB-I00]
  3. Junta de Andalucia [CTS-164, P20_00193]
  4. European Union
  5. Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad, Instituto de Salud Carlos III (CIBER-CV
  6. Ciberes), Spain
  7. European Union (Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional, FEDER, FEDER una manera de hacer Europa)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study showed that DOX can reduce blood pressure, improve endothelial dysfunction, and decrease oxidative stress and inflammation in DOCA-salt hypertensive rats. Additionally, DOX can modulate gut microbiota composition, enhance intestinal barrier integrity, and maintain normal levels of endotoxemia and noradrenaline.
Previous experiments in animals and humans show that shifts in microbiota and its metabolites are linked to hypertension. The present study investigates whether doxycycline (DOX, a broad-spectrum tetracycline antibiotic) improves dysbiosis, prevent cardiovascular pathology and attenuate hypertension in deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA)-salt rats, a renin-independent model of hypertension. Male Wistar rats were randomly assigned to three groups: control, DOCA-salt hypertensive rats, DOCA-salt treated with DOX for 4 weeks. DOX decreased systolic blood pressure, improving endothelial dysfunction and reducing aortic oxidative stress and inflammation. DOX decreased lactate-producing bacterial population and plasma lactate levels, improved gut barrier integrity, normalized endotoxemia, plasma noradrenaline levels and restored the Treg content in aorta. These data demonstrate that DOX through direct effects on gut microbiota and its non-microbial effects (anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory) reduces endothelial dysfunction and the increase in blood pressure in this low-renin form of hypertension.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available