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Mineralocorticoid Receptor Antagonism Attenuates Vascular Apoptosis and Injury via Rescuing Protein Kinase B Activation

Authors :
Jenna Rehmer
Javad Habibi
Melvin R. Hayden
Yongzhong Wei
Jamal A. Ibdah
James R. Sowers
Adam Whaley-Connell
Kamlesh Patel
Vincent G. DeMarco
Carlos M. Ferrario
Nathan Rehmer
Source :
Hypertension. 53:158-165
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2009.

Abstract

Emerging evidence indicates that mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) blockade reduces the risk of cardiovascular events beyond those predicted by its blood pressure–lowering actions; however, the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. To investigate whether protection elicited by MR blockade is through attenuation of vascular apoptosis and injury, independently of blood pressure lowering, we administered a low dose of the MR antagonist spironolactone or vehicle for 21 days to hypertensive transgenic Ren2 rats with elevated plasma aldosterone levels. Although Ren2 rats developed higher systolic blood pressures compared with Sprague-Dawley littermates, low-dose spironolactone treatment did not reduce systolic blood pressure compared with untreated Ren2 rats. Ren2 rats exhibited vascular injury as evidenced by increased apoptosis, hemidesmosome-like structure loss, mitochondrial abnormalities, and lipid accumulation compared with Sprague-Dawley rats, and these abnormalities were attenuated by MR antagonism. Protein kinase B activation is critical to vascular homeostasis via regulation of cell survival and expression of apoptotic genes. Protein kinase B serine 473 phosphorylation was impaired in Ren2 aortas and restored with MR antagonism. In vivo MR antagonist treatment promoted antiapoptotic effects by increasing phosphorylation of BAD serine 136 and expression of Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL, decreasing cytochrome c release and BAD expression, and suppressing caspase-3 activation. Furthermore, MR antagonism substantially reduced the elevated NADPH oxidase activity and lipid peroxidation, expression of angiotensin II, angiotensin type 1 receptor, and MR in Ren2 vasculature. These results demonstrate that MR antagonism protects the vasculature from aldosterone-induced vascular apoptosis and structural injury via rescuing protein kinase B activation, independent of blood pressure effects.

Details

ISSN :
15244563 and 0194911X
Volume :
53
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Hypertension
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c7b7ee950ddbbe9569025198a9d79ec6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1161/hypertensionaha.108.121954