Sehgel Nancy L, Sun Zhe, Hong Zhongkui, Hunter William C, Hill Michael A, Vatner Dorothy E, Vatner Stephen F, Meininger Gerald A
From the Department of Cell Biology and Molecular Medicine, New Jersey Medical School, Rutgers University, Biomedical and Health Sciences, Newark (N.L.S., W.C.H., D.E.V., S.F.V.); Department of Biomedical Engineering, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark (N.L.S., W.C.H.); Department of Medical Pharmacology and Physiology, Dalton Cardiovascular Research Center, University of Missouri, Columbia (Z.S., Z.H., M.A.H., G.A.M.).
Hypertension. 2015 Feb;65(2):370-7. doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.114.04456. Epub 2014 Dec 1.
Hypertension and aging are both recognized to increase aortic stiffness, but their interactions are not completely understood. Most previous studies have attributed increased aortic stiffness to changes in extracellular matrix proteins that alter the mechanical properties of the vascular wall. Alternatively, we hypothesized that a significant component of increased vascular stiffness in hypertension is due to changes in the mechanical and adhesive properties of vascular smooth muscle cells, and that aging would augment the contribution from vascular smooth muscle cells when compared with the extracellular matrix. Accordingly, we studied aortic stiffness in young (16-week-old) and old (64-week-old) spontaneously hypertensive rats and Wistar-Kyoto wild-type controls. Systolic and pulse pressures were significantly increased in young spontaneously hypertensive rats when compared with young Wistar-Kyoto rats, and these continued to rise in old spontaneously hypertensive rats when compared with age-matched controls. Excised aortic ring segments exhibited significantly greater elastic moduli in both young and old spontaneously hypertensive rats versus Wistar-Kyoto rats. were isolated from the thoracic aorta, and stiffness and adhesion to fibronectin were measured by atomic force microscopy. Hypertension increased both vascular smooth muscle cell stiffness and vascular smooth muscle cell adhesion, and these increases were both augmented with aging. By contrast, hypertension did not affect histological measures of aortic collagen and elastin, which were predominantly changed by aging. These findings support the concept that stiffness and adhesive properties of vascular smooth muscle cells are novel mechanisms contributing to the increased aortic stiffness occurring with hypertension superimposed on aging.
高血压和衰老均被认为会增加主动脉僵硬度,但其相互作用尚未完全明确。以往大多数研究将主动脉僵硬度增加归因于细胞外基质蛋白的变化,这些变化改变了血管壁的力学特性。相反,我们推测高血压时血管僵硬度增加的一个重要因素是血管平滑肌细胞力学和黏附特性的改变,并且与细胞外基质相比,衰老会增强血管平滑肌细胞的作用。因此,我们研究了年轻(16周龄)和老年(64周龄)自发性高血压大鼠以及Wistar-Kyoto野生型对照大鼠的主动脉僵硬度。与年轻的Wistar-Kyoto大鼠相比,年轻自发性高血压大鼠的收缩压和脉压显著升高,并且与年龄匹配的对照相比,老年自发性高血压大鼠的这些指标持续升高。与Wistar-Kyoto大鼠相比,年轻和老年自发性高血压大鼠切除的主动脉环段均表现出显著更高的弹性模量。从胸主动脉分离出血管平滑肌细胞,并用原子力显微镜测量其僵硬度和对纤连蛋白的黏附力。高血压增加了血管平滑肌细胞僵硬度和血管平滑肌细胞黏附力,并且这些增加在衰老时进一步增强。相比之下,高血压并未影响主动脉胶原蛋白和弹性蛋白的组织学指标,这些指标主要受衰老影响。这些发现支持了这样一种观点,即血管平滑肌细胞的僵硬度和黏附特性是导致高血压合并衰老时主动脉僵硬度增加的新机制。