Neuropharmacology Laboratory, Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Research Institute, P.O. Box 6492, St Kilda Rd Central, Melbourne, Victoria 8008, Australia.
Hypertension. 2013 Oct;62(4):775-81. doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.113.01701. Epub 2013 Jul 29.
Genetically hypertensive mice (BPH/2J) are hypertensive because of an exaggerated contribution of the sympathetic nervous system to blood pressure. We hypothesize that an additional contribution to elevated blood pressure is via sympathetically mediated activation of the intrarenal renin-angiotensin system. Our aim was to determine the contribution of the renin-angiotensin system and sympathetic nervous system to hypertension in BPH/2J mice. BPH/2J and normotensive BPN/3J mice were preimplanted with radiotelemetry devices to measure blood pressure. Depressor responses to ganglion blocker pentolinium (5 mg/kg i.p.) in mice pretreated with the angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor enalaprilat (1.5 mg/kg i.p.) revealed a 2-fold greater sympathetic contribution to blood pressure in BPH/2J mice during the active and inactive period. However, the depressor response to enalaprilat was 4-fold greater in BPH/2J compared with BPN/3J mice, but only during the active period (P=0.01). This was associated with 1.6-fold higher renal renin messenger RNA (mRNA; P=0.02) and 0.8-fold lower abundance of micro-RNA-181a (P=0.03), identified previously as regulating human renin mRNA. Renin mRNA levels correlated positively with depressor responses to pentolinium (r=0.99; P=0.001), and BPH/2J mice had greater renal sympathetic innervation density as identified by tyrosine hydroxylase staining of cortical tubules. Although there is a major sympathetic contribution to hypertension in BPH/2J mice, the renin-angiotensin system also contributes, doing so to a greater extent during the active period and less during the inactive period. This is the opposite of the normal renin-angiotensin system circadian pattern. We suggest that renal hyperinnervation and enhanced sympathetically induced renin synthesis mediated by lower micro-RNA-181a contributes to hypertension in BPH/2J mice.
遗传性高血压小鼠(BPH/2J)由于交感神经系统对血压的过度贡献而出现高血压。我们假设,血压升高的另一个贡献是通过交感神经介导的肾内肾素-血管紧张素系统的激活。我们的目的是确定肾素-血管紧张素系统和交感神经系统对 BPH/2J 小鼠高血压的贡献。BPH/2J 和血压正常的 BPN/3J 小鼠预先植入无线电遥测设备以测量血压。在预先用血管紧张素转换酶抑制剂依那普利(1.5mg/kg 腹腔注射)预处理的小鼠中,降压反应对节后阻滞剂戊烷脒(5mg/kg 腹腔注射)揭示了 BPH/2J 小鼠在活动期和不活动期交感神经对血压的贡献增加了 2 倍。然而,与 BPN/3J 小鼠相比,BPH/2J 小鼠对依那普利的降压反应增加了 4 倍,但仅在活动期(P=0.01)。这与肾素信使 RNA(mRNA)增加 1.6 倍(P=0.02)和微 RNA-181a 丰度降低 0.8 倍(P=0.03)相关,以前被认为是调节人肾素 mRNA 的。肾素 mRNA 水平与对戊烷脒的降压反应呈正相关(r=0.99;P=0.001),并且 BPH/2J 小鼠的皮质小管酪氨酸羟化酶染色显示出更大的肾交感神经支配密度。尽管 BPH/2J 小鼠的高血压有一个主要的交感神经贡献,但肾素-血管紧张素系统也有贡献,在活动期的贡献更大,在不活动期的贡献更小。这与正常肾素-血管紧张素系统的昼夜节律模式相反。我们认为,肾神经支配过度和通过低 micro-RNA-181a 增强的交感神经诱导的肾素合成有助于 BPH/2J 小鼠的高血压。