Department of Neurology and Neuroscience, Division of Neurobiology, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, New York 10021, USA.
J Neurosci. 2012 Apr 4;32(14):4878-86. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.6262-11.2012.
Hypertension, a powerful risk factor for stroke and dementia, has damaging effects on the brain and its vessels. In particular, hypertension alters vital cerebrovascular control mechanisms linking neural activity to cerebral perfusion. In experimental models of slow-developing hypertension, free radical signaling in the subfornical organ (SFO), one of the forebrain circumventricular organs, is critical for the hormonal release and sympathetic activation driving the elevation in arterial pressure. However, the contribution of this central mechanism to the cerebrovascular alterations induced by hypertension remains uncertain. We tested the hypothesis that free radical production in the SFO is involved in the alterations in cerebrovascular regulation produced by hypertension. In a mouse model of gradual hypertension induced by chronic administration of subpressor doses of angiotensin II (AngII), suppression of free radicals in the SFO by overexpression of CuZn-superoxide dismutase (CuZnSOD) prevented the alteration in neurovascular coupling and endothelium-dependent responses in somatosensory cortex induced by hypertension. The SFO mediates the dysfunction via two signaling pathways. One involves SFO-dependent activation of the paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus, elevations in plasma vasopressin, upregulation of endothelin-1 in cerebral resistance arterioles and activation of endothelin type A receptors. The other pathway depends on activation of cerebrovascular AngII type 1 (AT1) receptors by AngII. Both pathways mediate vasomotor dysfunction by inducing vascular oxidative stress. The findings implicate for the first time the SFO and its efferent hypothalamic pathways in the cerebrovascular alterations induced by AngII, and identify vasopressin and endothelin-1 as potential therapeutic targets to counteract the devastating effects of hypertension on the brain.
高血压是中风和痴呆的一个强有力的危险因素,它会对大脑及其血管造成损害。特别是,高血压改变了将神经活动与脑灌注联系起来的重要脑血管控制机制。在缓慢发展的高血压实验模型中,前脑室周器官(SFO)中的自由基信号对于激素释放和交感神经激活驱动动脉压升高至关重要。然而,这种中枢机制对高血压引起的脑血管改变的贡献仍不确定。我们检验了这样一个假设,即在 SFO 中自由基的产生与高血压引起的脑血管调节改变有关。在慢性给予亚加压剂量血管紧张素 II(AngII)诱导的小鼠逐渐性高血压模型中,通过过表达 CuZn-超氧化物歧化酶(CuZnSOD)抑制 SFO 中的自由基产生,可防止高血压引起的体感皮层神经血管偶联和内皮依赖性反应的改变。SFO 通过两种信号通路介导这种功能障碍。一种涉及 SFO 依赖性激活室旁下丘脑核,血浆血管加压素升高,脑阻力小动脉内皮素-1上调和内皮素 A 受体激活。另一种途径依赖于 AngII 对脑血管 AngII 型 1(AT1)受体的激活。这两种途径都通过诱导血管氧化应激导致血管舒缩功能障碍。这些发现首次表明 SFO 及其传出下丘脑途径参与了 AngII 引起的脑血管改变,并确定血管加压素和内皮素-1 是对抗高血压对大脑破坏性影响的潜在治疗靶点。