4.6 Article

Acute Pressor Response to Psychosocial Stress Is Dependent on Endothelium-Derived Endothelin-1

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.117.007863

Keywords

cage switch stress; endothelin-1; endothelium-derived factors; psychosocial stress; stress; vascular endothelium-specific ET-1 knockout mice

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [F30 DK107194, T32 HL007457, R00 HL111354, K01 DK105038, NIH P01 HL69999, NIH P01 HL95499, NIH P01 HL136267, NIH U01 HL117684]
  2. World Premier International Research Center Initiative from MEXT, Japan
  3. American Heart Association [15SFRN2390002]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

BackgroundAcute psychosocial stress provokes increases in circulating endothelin-1 (ET-1) levels in humans and animal models. However, key questions about the physiological function and cellular source of stress-induced ET-1 remain unanswered. We hypothesized that endothelium-derived ET-1 contributes to the acute pressor response to stress via activation of the endothelin A receptor. Methods and ResultsAdult male vascular endothelium-specific ET-1 knockout mice and control mice that were homozygous for the floxed allele were exposed to acute psychosocial stress in the form of cage switch stress (CSS), with blood pressure measured by telemetry. An acute pressor response was elicited by CSS in both genotypes; however, this response was significantly blunted in vascular endothelium-specific ET-1 knockout mice compared with control mice that were homozygous for the floxed allele. In mice pretreated for 3days with the endothelin A antagonist, ABT-627, or the dual endothelin A/B receptor antagonist, A-182086, the pressor response to CSS was similar between genotypes. CSS significantly increased plasma ET-1 levels in control mice that were homozygous for the floxed allele. CSS failed to elicit an increase in plasma ET-1 in vascular endothelium-specific ET-1 knockout mice. Telemetry frequency domain analyses suggested similar autonomic responses to stress between genotypes, and isolated resistance arteries demonstrated similar sensitivity to (1)-adrenergic receptor-mediated vasoconstriction. ConclusionsThese findings specify that acute stress-induced activation of endothelium-derived ET-1 and subsequent endothelin A receptor activation is a novel mediator of the blood pressure response to acute psychosocial stress.

Authors

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

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available