4.6 Article

Heart rate-associated mechanical stress impairs carotid but not cerebral artery compliance in dyslipidemic atherosclerotic mice

出版社

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpheart.00706.2011

关键词

cerebrovascular compliance; endothelial function; resting heart rate

资金

  1. Montreal Heart Institute Foundation
  2. Heart and Stroke Foundation of Quebec
  3. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [MOP89733]
  4. Servier (France)
  5. Frederick Banting and Charles Best Canada Graduate Scholarships-Doctoral Award

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Bolduc V, Drouin A, Gillis MA, Duquette N, Thorin-Trescases N, Frayne-Robillard I, Des Rosiers C, Tardif JC, Thorin E. Heart rate-associated mechanical stress impairs carotid but not cerebral artery compliance in dyslipidemic atherosclerotic mice. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 301: H2081-H2092, 2011. First published September 16, 2011; doi:10.1152/ajpheart.00706.2011.-The cardiac cycle imposes a mechanical stress that dilates elastic carotid arteries, while shear stress largely contributes to the endothelium-dependent dilation of downstream cerebral arteries. In the presence of dyslipidemia, carotid arteries stiffen while the endothelial function declines. We reasoned that stiffening of carotid arteries would be prevented by reducing resting heart rate (HR), while improving the endothelial function would regulate cerebral artery compliance and function. Thus we treated or not 3-mo-old male atherosclerotic mice (ATX; LDLr(-/-) : hApoB(+/+)) for 3 mo with the sinoatrial pacemaker current inhibitor ivabradine (IVA), the beta-blocker metoprolol (METO), or subjected mice to voluntary physical training (PT). Arterial (carotid and cerebral artery) compliance and endothelium-dependent flow-mediated cerebral dilation were measured in isolated pressurized arteries. IVA and METO similarly reduced (P < 0.05) 24-h HR by approximate to 15%, while PT had no impact. As expected, carotid artery stiffness increased (P < 0.05) in ATX mice compared with wild-type mice, while cerebral artery stiffness decreased (P < 0.05); this paradoxical increase in cerebrovascular compliance was associated with endothelial dysfunction and an augmented metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) activity (P < 0.05), without changing the lipid composition of the wall. Reducing HR (IVA and METO) limited carotid artery stiffening, but plaque progression was prevented by IVA only. In contrast, IVA maintained and PT improved cerebral endothelial nitric oxide synthase-dependent flow-mediated dilation and wall compliance, and both interventions reduced MMP-9 activity (P < 0.05); METO worsened endothelial dysfunction and compliance and did not reduce MMP-9 activity. In conclusion, HR-dependent mechanical stress contributes to carotid artery wall stiffening in severely dyslipidemic mice while cerebrovascular compliance is mostly regulated by the endothelium.

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