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2. Soluble Protein Oligomers induce Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress in Acute Conditions in Mesenteric Resistance Arteries from Male and Female Mice

4. 1,3‐Butanediol at 5% v/v best mimics the systemic and urinary concentrations of β‐hydroxybutyrate after a 24 h fast in adult rats

6. Opioids Cause Vascular Dysfunction in a Sex‐Specific Manner

7. Resistance Arteries from Low‐Capacity Running Rats Exhibit Diminished Acetylcholine‐Induced Relaxation in Comparison to High‐Capacity Running Rats: Effects of Native and Allografted Perivascular Adipose Tissue on Vascular Function

8. PP242, mTOR inhibitor, decreases phenylephrine‐induced vascular contractility in hypertensive and normotensive arteries

9. Activation of Formyl Peptide Receptor Precedes the Onset of Hypertension in Dahl Salt Sensitive Rats: Effects of Microbiota and Salt

10. TRPM8 channel activation triggers relaxation of pudendal artery and corpus cavernosum with increased vascular sensitivity in spontaneously hypertensive rats: Is it a new target for erectile dysfunction?

11. β‐Hydroxybutyrate (βHOB) Increases Nitric Oxide Synthase Activity in Resistance Arteries from Dahl Salt‐sensitive Rats

13. Reshaping commensal gut microbiota in early life lowers blood pressure potentially via a succinate mediated mechanism

14. Opioids Cause Vascular Remodeling via Changes in Cofilin‐ERK Signaling: Female Mice Present Higher Risk of Developing Morphine‐induced Cardiovascular Disease than Male Mice

15. Female Rats Artificially Selected for Low and High Intrinsic Aerobic Capacity Swap Inflammatory Cascade in Resistance Arteries: Mechanisms of Cyclooxygenase‐Derived Prostanoids

16. Sex differences in salt‐responsive modulation of bile acids by microbiota regulates Hypertension

18. Gnotobiotic rats reveal an obligatory role of microbiota in blood pressure

20. Formyl Peptide Receptor‐1 Activation is Crucial for Spontaneous and Salt‐Induced Hypertension in Dahl Salt Sensitive Rats: Mitochondria vs. Microbiota

22. Increased Soluble Protein Oligomer in Sepsis is Associated with the Induction of Pro‐inflammatory Signal Transduction in Intra‐renal Arteries

24. Functional Impairment in the Corpus Cavernosum Related to a High Fat Diet is Prevented in Toll‐Like Receptor 9 Mutant Mice

25. Participation of Toll‐like Receptor (TLR) 9 in Obesity‐Induced Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH) in Mice: Implication of Periprostatic Fat

26. Mitochondria N‐formyl peptides in plasma of polytrauma patients cause vascular endothelial barrier dysfunction through formyl peptide receptor‐1 activation

28. Toll‐Like Receptor 9 Signals through both the Stress‐tolerance and Inflammatory Cascades after Pharmacological Stimulation in Isolated Rat Arteries

29. Toll‐like receptor 9 Activation Contributes to Decreased Autophagy in Hypertension

30. Toll‐like receptor 2 activation increases contractile responses in rat corpus cavernosum (1158.6)

31. Mitochondrial N‐formyl peptides cause hypotension via formyl peptide receptor activation (1157.6)

32. Short‐term Toll‐like receptor 9 stimulation increases blood pressure and vascular dysfunction via attenuated NO and exacerbated ROS generation (1140.9)

33. Circulating fragmented mitochondria induce maternal hypertension, placental inflammation and apoptosis in pregnant rats

35. Chronic Toll‐like receptor 9 activation mediates heightened vascular contractility via attenuated NOS activity in isolated aortic segments

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