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Vascular Biology and Hypertension Program, Division of Cardiovascular Disease, Department of Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama 35294
Atrial natriuretic
peptide (ANP) has negative modulatory effects on a variety of
pathophysiological mechanisms; i.e., it inhibits hypoxia-induced
pulmonary vasoconstriction and vascular remodeling and facilitates
natriuresis and vasorelaxation in NaCl-supplemented subjects. We have
previously demonstrated organ-selective potentiation of ANP in the
pulmonary circulation of hypoxia-adapted animals by local
downregulation of its clearance receptor (NPR-C; Li H, Oparil S, Meng
QC, Elton T, and Chen Y-F. Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol
Physiol 268: L328-L335, 1995). The present study tested the hypothesis that NPR-C expression is attenuated selectively in kidneys
of NaCl-supplemented subjects. Adult male wild-type (ANP+/+) and
homozygous mutant (ANP
/
) mice were studied after 5 wk of normal or
high-salt diets. Mean arterial pressure (MAP) and left (LV) and right
ventricular (RV) mass were greater in ANP
/
mice than in ANP+/+ mice
fed the normal-salt diet; salt supplementation induced increases in
plasma ANP in ANP+/+ mice and in MAP and LV, RV, and renal mass in
ANP
/
mice but not in ANP+/+ mice. NPR-C mRNA levels were
selectively and significantly reduced (>60%) in kidney, but not in
lung, brain, LV, or RV, by dietary salt supplementation in both
genotypes. NPR-A mRNA levels did not differ among diet-genotype groups
in any organ studied. cGMP content was significantly increased in
kidney, but not in lung or brain, by dietary salt supplementation in
both genotypes. These findings suggest that selective downregulation of
NPR-C in the kidney in response to dietary salt supplementation may
contribute to local elevation in ANP levels and may be functionally
significant in attenuating the development of salt-sensitive hypertension.
salt-sensitive hypertension; atrial natriuretic peptide; clearance receptor; atrial natriuretic peptide knockout mice; kidney
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