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NEUROHUMORAL CONTROL OF CARDIOVASCULAR FUNCTION
Departments of 1Physiology and Biophysics and 2Medicine, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, Mississippi; and 3Department of Medicine and Pathophysiology, National Hospital of Paraguay, Asunción, Paraguay
Submitted 5 December 2003 ; accepted in final form 17 August 2004
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in women after menopause. Hypertension, a major cardiovascular risk factor, becomes more prevalent after menopause. The mechanisms responsible for the increase in blood pressure (BP) in postmenopausal women are unknown. We have recently characterized the aged, postestrous-cycling (PMR) spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) as a model of postmenopausal hypertension. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether endothelin plays a role in the increased BP in PMR. Premenopausal female SHR, aged 45 mo (YF), and PMR, aged 16 mo, were studied. Expression of preproendothelin-1 mRNA was not different in either renal cortex or medulla between PMR and YF (n = 78/group). In contrast, ET-1 peptide expression was significantly higher in renal cortex of PMR than in renal cortex of YF, but there was no difference in medullary ET-1. Expression of endothelin ETA receptor (ETAR) mRNA was lower in renal cortex and medulla of PMR than of YF. Additional groups of rats (n = 67/group) were treated for 3 wk with the ETAR antagonist ABT-627 (5 mg·kg1·day1). BP was significantly higher in PMR than in YF. ETAR antagonist reduced BP in PMR by 20% to the level found in control YF. ETAR antagonist had no effect on BP in YF. These data support the hypothesis that the increase in BP in PMR is mediated in part by endothelin and the ETAR.
ETA receptor; ETB receptor; kidney
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