4.7 Article

Enhanced interaction between renovascular α2-adrenoceptors and angiotensin II receptors in genetic hypertension

Journal

HYPERTENSION
Volume 38, Issue 3, Pages 353-360

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/01.HYP.38.3.353

Keywords

hypertension, genetic; angiotensin II; vasopressin; kidney; G protein; receptors, adrenergic, alpha

Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [HL-55314, HL-35909] Funding Source: Medline

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In spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR), hypertension is mediated in part by an enhanced renovascular response to angiotensin (Ang) II. Pertussis toxin normalizes renovascular responses to Ang II and lowers blood pressure in SHR, suggesting a role for altered G(i) signaling in the enhanced renovascular response to Ang II in SHR. To further investigate this hypothesis, we measured reductions in renal blood flow and increases in renovascular resistance in response to intrarenal infusions of Ang II in the presence and absence of coactivation of alpha (2)-adrenoceptors (ie, receptors selectively coupled to G(i)) with UK 14,304 in adrenalectomized, renal-denervated, captopril-pretreated SHR and normotensive Wistar-Kyoto rats. In SHR, but not Wistar-Kyoto rats, UK 14,304 markedly enhanced renovascular responses to Ang II and vasopressin. However, UK 14,304 did not enhance renovascular responses to methoxamine (alpha (1)-adrenoceptor agonist) in either strain. In uninephrectomized, normotensive Sprague-Dawley animals and in Sprague-Dawley rats with nongenetic hypertension induced by uninephrectomy, chronic administration of deoxycorticosterone acetate, and 1% saline as drinking water, UK 14,304 had little or no effect on renovascular responses to Ang II. In SHR, intrarenal infusions of U73122, a phospholipase C/D inhibitor, blocked the enhancement of renovascular responses to Ang II by UK 14,304. We conclude that activation of alpha (2)-adrenoceptors selectively enhances renovascular responses to Ang II and vasopressin in vivo in animals with genetic hypertensive but not in normotensive animals or animals with acquired hypertension. These results suggest that in SHR, there is a genetically mediated enhanced cross talk between the G(i) signal transduction pathway and signal transduction pathways activated by Ang II and vasopressin, but not methoxamine, and involving phospholipase C and/or D.

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