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Publication year
2012Source
Journal of Applied Physiology, 112, 6, (2012), pp. 962-9ISSN
Annotation
01 maart 2012
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
Gynaecology
Pharmacology-Toxicology
Laboratory of Genetic, Endocrine and Metabolic Diseases
Internal Medicine
Journal title
Journal of Applied Physiology
Volume
vol. 112
Issue
iss. 6
Page start
p. 962
Page end
p. 9
Subject
IGMD 6: Hormonal regulation ONCOL 5: Aetiology, screening and detection; NCEBP 14: Cardiovascular diseases; NCEBP 14: Cardiovascular diseases IGMD 6: Hormonal regulation; NCEBP 14: Cardiovascular diseases NCMLS 5: Membrane transport and intracellular motility; Laboratory Medicine Radboud University Medical CenterAbstract
Relaxin mediates renal and mesenteric vascular adaptations to pregnancy by increasing endothelium-dependent vasodilation and compliance and decreasing myogenic reactivity. Diet-induced overweight and obesity are associated with impaired endothelial dysfunction and vascular remodeling leading to a reduction in arterial diameter. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that local vascular responses to relaxin are impaired in diet-induced overweight female rats on a high-fat cafeteria-style diet for 9 wk. Rats were chronically infused with either relaxin or placebo for 5 days, and vascular responses were measured in isolated mesenteric arteries and the perfused kidney. Diet-induced overweight significantly increased sensitivity to phenylephrine (by 17%) and vessel wall thickness, and reduced renal perfusion flow (RPFF; by 16%), but did not affect flow-mediated vasodilation, myogenic reactivity, and vascular compliance. In the normal weight rats, relaxin treatment significantly enhanced flow-mediated vasodilation (2.67-fold), decreased myogenic reactivity, and reduced sensitivity to phenylephrine (by 28%), but had no effect on compliance or RPFF. NO blockade by l-NAME diminished most relaxin-mediated effects. In diet-induced overweight rats, the vasodilator effects of relaxin were markedly reduced for flow-mediated vasodilation, sensitivity to phenylephrine, and myogenic response compared with the normal diet rats, mostly persistent under l-NAME. Our data demonstrate that some of the vasodilator responses to in vivo relaxin administration are impaired in isolated mesenteric arteries and the perfused kidney in diet-induced overweight female rats. This does not result from a decrease in Rxfp1 (relaxin family peptide receptor) expression but is likely to result from downstream disruption to endothelial-dependent mechanisms in diet-induced overweight animals.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [245104]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [93207]
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