Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, West Virginia University , Morgantown, West Virginia.
Department of Exercise Physiology, West Virginia University , Morgantown, West Virginia.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2018 May 1;314(5):H1070-H1084. doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.00647.2017. Epub 2018 Feb 16.
The increasing prevalence and severity of clinical depression are strongly correlated with vascular disease risk, creating a comorbid condition with poor outcomes but demonstrating a sexual disparity whereby female subjects are at lower risk than male subjects for subsequent cardiovascular events. To determine the potential mechanisms responsible for this protection against stress/depression-induced vasculopathy in female subjects, we exposed male, intact female, and ovariectomized (OVX) female lean Zucker rats to the unpredictable chronic mild stress (UCMS) model for 8 wk and determined depressive symptom severity, vascular reactivity in ex vivo aortic rings and middle cerebral arteries (MCA), and the profile of major metabolites regulating vascular tone. While all groups exhibited severe depressive behaviors from UCMS, severity was significantly greater in female rats than male or OVX female rats. In all groups, endothelium-dependent dilation was depressed in aortic rings and MCAs, although myogenic activation and vascular (MCA) stiffness were not impacted. Higher-resolution results from pharmacological and biochemical assays suggested that vasoactive metabolite profiles were better maintained in female rats with normal gonadal sex steroids than male or OVX female rats, despite increased depressive symptom severity (i.e., higher nitric oxide and prostacyclin and lower HO and thromboxane A levels). These results suggest that female rats exhibit more severe depressive behaviors with UCMS but are partially protected from the vasculopathy that afflicts male rats and female rats lacking normal sex hormone profiles. Determining how female sex hormones afford partial vascular protection from chronic stress and depression is a necessary step for addressing the burden of these conditions on cardiovascular health. NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study used a translationally relevant model for chronic stress and elevated depressive symptoms to determine how these factors impact conduit and resistance arteriolar function in otherwise healthy rats. While chronic stress leads to an impaired vascular reactivity associated with elevated oxidant stress, inflammation, and reduced metabolite levels, we demonstrated partial protection from vascular dysfunction in female rats with normal sex hormone profiles compared with male or ovariectomized female rats.
临床抑郁症的患病率和严重程度不断增加,与血管疾病风险密切相关,导致并发疾病,预后不良,但存在性别差异,即女性发生心血管事件的风险低于男性。为了确定导致女性对压力/抑郁诱导的血管病变具有保护作用的潜在机制,我们将雄性、完整雌性和去卵巢(OVX)雌性瘦 Zucker 大鼠暴露于不可预测的慢性轻度应激(UCMS)模型 8 周,以确定抑郁症状严重程度、离体主动脉环和大脑中动脉(MCA)的血管反应性,以及调节血管张力的主要代谢物谱。虽然所有组的 UCMS 均表现出严重的抑郁行为,但雌性大鼠的严重程度明显高于雄性或 OVX 雌性大鼠。在所有组中,主动脉环和 MCA 的内皮依赖性扩张均受到抑制,尽管血管(MCA)僵硬和血管的肌源性激活未受影响。来自药理学和生物化学测定的更高分辨率结果表明,尽管抑郁症状严重程度增加(即一氧化氮和前列环素水平升高,HO 和血栓素 A 水平降低),但具有正常性腺类固醇的雌性大鼠的血管活性代谢物谱保持更好,而非雄性或 OVX 雌性大鼠。这些结果表明,UCMS 下雌性大鼠表现出更严重的抑郁行为,但部分免受影响雄性大鼠和缺乏正常性激素谱的雌性大鼠的血管病变影响。确定女性性激素如何为慢性应激和抑郁提供部分血管保护作用,对于解决这些疾病对心血管健康的负担是必要的。本研究使用与慢性应激和升高的抑郁症状相关的转化相关模型来确定这些因素如何影响健康大鼠的导管和阻力小动脉功能。虽然慢性应激导致血管反应性受损,与氧化应激、炎症和代谢物水平降低有关,但与雄性或 OVX 雌性大鼠相比,我们在具有正常性激素谱的雌性大鼠中观察到部分血管功能障碍保护。