Abstract
Autonomic nervous system dysfunction, exaggerated inflammation, and impaired vascular repair are all hallmarks of hypertension. Considering that bone marrow (BM) is a major source of the inflammatory cells (ICs) and endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs), we hypothesized that impaired BM-autonomic nervous system interaction contributes to dysfunctional BM activity in hypertension. In the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR), we observed a >30% increase in BM and blood ICs (CD4.8) and a >50% decrease in EPCs (CD90.CD4.5.8) when compared with the normotensive Wistar-Kyoto rat. Increased tyrosine hydroxylase (70%) and norepinephrine (160%) and decreased choline acetyl transferase (30%) and acetylcholine esterase (55%) indicated imbalanced autonomic nervous system in SHR BM. In Wistar-Kyoto rat, night time-associated elevation in sympathetic nerve activity (50%) and BM norepinephrine (41%) was associated with increased ICs (50%) and decreased EPCs (350%) although BM sympathetic denervation decreased ICs (25%) and increased EPCs (40%). In contrast, these effects were blunted in SHR, possibly because of chronic downregulation of BM adrenergic receptor α2a (by 50%-80%) and β2 (30%-45%). Application of norepinephrine resulted in increased BM IC activation/release, which was prevented by preadministration of acetylcholine. Electrophysiological recordings of femoral sympathetic nerve activity showed a more robust femoral sympathetic nerve activity in SHR when compared with Wistar-Kyoto rat, peaking earlier in the respiratory cycle, indicative of increased sympathetic tone. Finally, manganese-enhanced MRI demonstrated that presympathetic neuronal activation in SHR was associated with an accelerated retrograde transport of the green fluorescent protein-labeled pseudorabies virus from the BM. These observations demonstrate that a dysfunctional BM autonomic nervous system is associated with imbalanced EPCs and ICs in hypertension. © 2013 American Heart Association, Inc.
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Zubcevic, J., Jun, J. Y., Kim, S., Perez, P. D., Afzal, A., Shan, Z., … Raizada, M. K. (2014). Altered inflammatory response is associated with an impaired autonomic input to the bone marrow in the spontaneously hypertensive rat. Hypertension, 63(3), 542–550. https://doi.org/10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.113.02722
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