1. Academic Validation
  2. Norepinephrine-induced aortic hyperplasia and extracellular matrix deposition are endothelin-dependent

Norepinephrine-induced aortic hyperplasia and extracellular matrix deposition are endothelin-dependent

  • J Hypertens. 2001 Nov;19(11):1965-73. doi: 10.1097/00004872-200111000-00006.
H H Dao 1 J Lemay J de Champlain D deBlois P Moreau
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Faculty of Pharmacy and bDepartment of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Montreal, Canada.
Abstract

Background: Sympathetic hyperactivity is observed in several disease states and may contribute to cardiovascular hypertrophic remodeling. Endothelin has been suggested to be a mediator of hypertrophy.

Objective: To examine the involvement of endothelin in maintaining the growth response induced by exogenous norepinephrine.

Design and methods: Rats were treated with norepinephrine (2.5 microg/Kg per min subcutaneously) for 2 and 4 weeks, alone or in association with the selective endothelin-A (ETA) receptor antagonist, darusentan (LU135252, 30 mg/Kg per day orally) for weeks 3 and 4.

Results: Increases in medial cell number and accumulation of collagen and elastin characterized norepinephrine-induced aortic remodeling. These effects occurred without marked changes of mean arterial pressure, but may be related to enhanced pressure variability in addition to direct effects of norepinephrine. Inhibition of ETA receptors by darusentan reversed aortic alterations produced by infusion of norepinephrine. Evaluation of medial Apoptosis did not reveal any significant change in any group at 4 weeks.

Conclusions: Antagonism of ETA receptors effectively and rapidly reversed norepinephrine-induced aortic structural and compositional changes, suggesting a central role of endothelin in mediating this response. Thus, ETA receptor antagonists may help to regress large artery remodeling in conditions of increased circulating Catecholamine concentrations.

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