Diaz-Otero Janice M, Fisher Courtney, Downs Kelsey, Moss M Elizabeth, Jaffe Iris Z, Jackson William F, Dorrance Anne M
From the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Michigan State University, East Lansing (J.M.D.-O., C.F., K.D., W.F.J., A.M.D.); and Molecular Cardiology Research Institute, Tufts Medical Center, Boston, MA (M.E.M., I.Z.J.).
Hypertension. 2017 Dec;70(6):1113-1121. doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.117.09598. Epub 2017 Oct 3.
The brain is highly susceptible to injury caused by hypertension because the increased blood pressure causes artery remodeling that can limit cerebral perfusion. Mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) antagonism prevents hypertensive cerebral artery remodeling, but the vascular cell types involved have not been defined. In the periphery, the endothelial MR mediates hypertension-induced vascular injury, but cerebral and peripheral arteries are anatomically distinct; thus, these findings cannot be extrapolated to the brain. The parenchymal arterioles determine cerebrovascular resistance. Determining the effects of hypertension and MR signaling on these arterioles could lead to a better understanding of cerebral small vessel disease. We hypothesized that endothelial MR signaling mediates inward cerebral artery remodeling and reduced cerebral perfusion during angiotensin II (AngII) hypertension. The biomechanics of the parenchymal arterioles and posterior cerebral arteries were studied in male C57Bl/6 and endothelial cell-specific MR knockout mice and their appropriate controls using pressure myography. AngII increased plasma aldosterone and decreased cerebral perfusion in C57Bl/6 and MR-intact littermates. Endothelial cell MR deletion improved cerebral perfusion in AngII-treated mice. AngII hypertension resulted in inward hypotrophic remodeling; this was prevented by MR antagonism and endothelial MR deletion. Our studies suggest that endothelial cell MR mediates hypertensive remodeling in the cerebral microcirculation and large pial arteries. AngII-induced inward remodeling of cerebral arteries and arterioles was associated with a reduction in cerebral perfusion that could worsen the outcome of stroke or contribute to vascular dementia.
大脑对高血压引起的损伤高度敏感,因为血压升高会导致动脉重塑,进而限制脑灌注。盐皮质激素受体(MR)拮抗作用可预防高血压性脑动脉重塑,但其中涉及的血管细胞类型尚未明确。在周围组织中,内皮MR介导高血压诱导的血管损伤,但脑动脉和外周动脉在解剖结构上有所不同;因此,这些发现不能外推至大脑。实质小动脉决定脑血管阻力。确定高血压和MR信号传导对这些小动脉的影响可能有助于更好地理解脑小血管疾病。我们假设内皮MR信号传导介导血管紧张素II(AngII)高血压期间脑动脉向内重塑和脑灌注减少。使用压力肌动描记法在雄性C57Bl/6小鼠和内皮细胞特异性MR基因敲除小鼠及其相应对照中研究了实质小动脉和大脑后动脉的生物力学。AngII使C57Bl/6小鼠和MR完整的同窝小鼠血浆醛固酮增加并降低脑灌注。内皮细胞MR缺失改善了AngII处理小鼠的脑灌注。AngII高血压导致向内的营养不良性重塑;MR拮抗作用和内皮MR缺失可预防这种情况。我们的研究表明,内皮细胞MR介导脑微循环和大脑软膜大动脉中的高血压重塑。AngII诱导的脑动脉和小动脉向内重塑与脑灌注减少有关,这可能会使中风的后果恶化或导致血管性痴呆。