Aldosterone promotes cardiac endothelial cell proliferation in vivo

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Abstract

Background: Experimentally, aldosterone in association with NaCl induces cardiac fibrosis, oxidative stress, and inflammation through mineralocorticoid receptor activation; however, the biological processes regulated by aldosterone alone in the heart remain to be identified. Methods and Results: Mice were treated for 7 days with aldosterone, and then cardiac transcriptome was analyzed. Aldosterone regulated 60 transcripts (51 upregulated and 9 downregulated) in the heart (fold change ≥1.5, false discovery rate <0.01). To identify the biological processes modulated by aldosterone, a gene ontology analysis was performed. The majority of aldosteroneregulated genes were involved in cell division. The cardiac Ki-67 index (an index of proliferation) of aldosterone-treated mice was higher than that of nontreated mice, confirming microarray predictions. Costaining of Ki-67 with vinculin, CD68, α-smooth muscle actin, CD31, or caveolin 1 revealed that the cycling cells were essentially endothelial cells. Aldosterone-induced mineralocorticoid receptor-dependent proliferation was confirmed ex vivo in human endothelial cells. Moreover, pharmacological-specific blockade of mineralocorticoid receptor by eplerenone inhibited endothelial cell proliferation in a preclinical model of heart failure (transverse aortic constriction). Conclusions: Aldosterone modulates cardiac gene expression and induces the proliferation of cardiac endothelial cells in vivo.

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Gravez, B., Tarjus, A., Pelloux, V., Ouvrard-Pascaud, A., Delcayre, C., Samuel, J., … Messaoudi, S. (2015). Aldosterone promotes cardiac endothelial cell proliferation in vivo. Journal of the American Heart Association, 4(1). https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.114.001266

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