Endothelin-1, Oxidative Stress, and Endogenous Angiotensin II: Mechanisms of Angiotensin II Type I Receptor Autoantibody-Enhanced Renal and Blood Pressure Response During Pregnancy [Preeclampsia]

This study was designed to determine mechanisms whereby agonistic autoantibodies to the ANGII type I receptor (AT1-AA) enhance blood pressure (mean arterial pressure [MAP]) and renal vascular sensitivity to ANGII during pregnancy. First, we examined MAP and renal artery resistance index in response to chronic administration of ANGII or AT1-AA or AT1-AA+ANGII in pregnant rats compared with control pregnant rats. To examine mechanisms of heightened sensitivity in response to AT1-AA during pregnancy, we examined the role of endogenous ANGII in AT1-AA–infused pregnant rats, and that of endothelin-1 and oxidative stress in AT1-AA+ANGII–treated rats. Chronic ANGII increased MAP from 95±2 in normal pregnant rats to 115±2 mm Hg; chronic AT1-AA increased MAP to 118±1 mm Hg in normal pregnant rats, which further increased to 123±2 mm Hg with AT1-AA+ANGII. Increasing ANGII from 10–11 to 10–8 decreased afferent arteriole diameter from 15% to 20% but sharply decreased afferent arteriole diameter to 60% in AT1-AA–pretreated vessels. Renal artery resistance index increased from 0.67 in normal pregnant rats to 0.70 with AT1-AA infusion, which was exacerbated to 0.74 in AT1-AA+ANGII–infused rats. AT1-AA–induced hypertension decreased with enalapril but was not attenuated. Both tissue endothelin-1 and reactive oxygen species increased with AT1-AA+ANGII compared with AT1-AA alone, and blockade of either of these pathways had ...
Source: Hypertension - Category: Cardiology Authors: Tags: Animal models of human disease, Other hypertension Preeclampsia Source Type: research