University of Florida, 1600 SW Archer Road, Room M552, PO Box 100274, Gainesville, FL 32610-0274, USA.
Exp Physiol. 2010 Jan;95(1):26-31. doi: 10.1113/expphysiol.2008.045971. Epub 2009 Sep 11.
Chronic stress causes elevations in glucocorticoid secretion and also increases the incidence of hypertension and other manifestations of cardiovascular disease. The extent to which the elevated glucocorticoids mediate the stress-associated increase in cardiovascular disease risk is unknown. Chronically elevated glucocorticoids can cause hypertension by acting in the periphery, but their effects within the brain on blood pressure regulation remain largely unexplored. We developed a method to produce selective chronic increases in the endogenous glucocorticoid corticosterone or the glucocorticoid receptor antagonist mifepristone within the hindbrain region, which includes a key cardiovascular regulatory area, the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS). Experiments were performed in male Sprague-Dawley, Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) and borderline hypertensive rats (BHR). The results indicate that elevated exogenous corticosterone can act within the hindbrain to enhance the arterial pressure response to novel restraint stress and to reduce the gain and increase the mid-point of the arterial baroreflex. Basal levels of endogenous corticosterone have no effect on the arterial pressure response to stress in normotensive rats but enhance this response in BHR. Chronic stress-induced increases in baseline corticosterone enhance the arterial pressure response to stress in BHR but attenuate the adaptation of the response in WKY rats. Furthermore, an elevated corticosterone concentration within the hindbrain is necessary but not sufficient to cause glucocorticoid-induced hypertension. The effects of corticosterone within the hindbrain on blood pressure regulation are mediated in part by the glucocortiocid receptor, but are also likely to involve mineralocorticoid receptor-mediated effects and NTS catecholaminergic neurons. These data support the hypothesis that elevated glucocorticoids acting within the brain probably contribute to the adverse effects of stress on cardiovascular health in susceptible people.
慢性应激会导致糖皮质激素分泌增加,同时增加高血压和其他心血管疾病的发病率。糖皮质激素升高在多大程度上介导应激相关的心血管疾病风险增加尚不清楚。慢性升高的糖皮质激素可以通过在外周发挥作用导致高血压,但它们在大脑内对血压调节的影响在很大程度上仍未得到探索。我们开发了一种方法,可在包括关键心血管调节区域孤束核(NTS)在内的后脑区域内产生内源性糖皮质激素皮质酮或糖皮质激素受体拮抗剂米非司酮的选择性慢性增加。实验在雄性 Sprague-Dawley、Wistar-Kyoto(WKY)和边缘性高血压大鼠(BHR)中进行。结果表明,升高的外源性皮质酮可在脑内发挥作用,增强对新的束缚应激的动脉血压反应,并降低动脉压力反射的增益和中点。基础水平的内源性皮质酮对正常血压大鼠应激时的动脉血压反应没有影响,但增强了 BHR 大鼠的这种反应。慢性应激诱导的基础皮质酮升高增强了 BHR 大鼠应激时的动脉血压反应,但减弱了 WKY 大鼠的反应适应性。此外,脑内升高的皮质酮浓度是引起糖皮质激素诱导性高血压所必需的,但不是充分的。皮质酮在脑内对血压调节的影响部分是通过糖皮质激素受体介导的,但也可能涉及盐皮质激素受体介导的作用和 NTS 儿茶酚胺能神经元。这些数据支持这样的假设,即脑内升高的糖皮质激素可能在易感性人群中对压力对心血管健康的不良影响起作用。