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Department of Cell and Molecular Physiology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599-7545
One purpose of the
present study was to evaluate the ability of 7-wk-old spontaneously
hypertensive rats (SHR) to reset tubuloglomerular feedback (TGF)
activity in response to acute volume expansion (VE). Second, we
evaluated the contribution of ANG II, via its action on
AT1 receptors, to TGF control of
glomerular function during VE. TGF was assessed by micropuncture
methods and proximal tubular stop-flow pressure (SFP) determinations in
SHR, Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY), and Sprague-Dawley rats (SD). During
euvolemia SHR exhibited enhanced TGF activity. In the same animals
acute VE was achieved by infusion of saline (5 ml · h
1 · 100 g body wt
1). VE led to
resetting of TGF in all three strains. Maximal SFP responses, elicited
by a 30-40 nl/min loop of Henle perfusion rate, decreased from 19 to 12 mmHg in SHR and, on average, from 11 to 5 mmHg in WKY and SD
(P < 0.001). Tubular flow rate
producing a half-maximal response (turning point) shifted to higher
flow rates during VE, from 12 to 14 nl/min in SHR and from 15 to 19 nl/min in WKY. Administration of the
AT1 receptor blocker candesartan (0.05 mg/kg iv) during sustained VE decreased TGF-mediated reductions in SFP in SHR and slightly increased the turning point in WKY. Nevertheless, other parameters of TGF activity were unaffected by
AT1 receptor blockade. In
conclusion, young SHR possess the ability to reset TGF activity in
response to VE to a degree similar to compensatory adjustments in WKY.
However, TGF remains enhanced in SHR during VE. ANG II and its action
on AT1 receptors are in part
responsible for the exaggerated SFP responses in young SHR during VE.
juxtaglomerular apparatus; renin-angiotensin system; genetic hypertension; afferent arteriole; glomerular capillary pressure; spontaneously hypertensive rats
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