Agonistic autoantibody to the angiotensin II type I receptor (AT1-AA) is highly associated with preeclampsia by increasing the sensitivity of Ang II during pregnancy in rats, thus leading to a preeclampsia-like syndrome. However, the mechanism underlying this phenomenon remains unclear. The purpose of this study was to observe AT1-AA amplification of Ang II-induced vasoconstriction in rat thoracic aortic rings. It was found that exposure to low concentrations of AT1-AA (0.4 nM) caused a contraction of <5% of the maximal response to 60 mM KCl. In addition, the Ang II-induced contractile response was amplified in the presence of a threshold contraction to AT1-AA, as manifested by a leftward shift of the midpoint of the concentration-response curve with no change in the maximal response. These results showed that preincubation with low AT1-AA could amplify the Ang II dose-response curve, and this amplification could be attenuated markedly by 0.1 μM heptapeptide AFHYESQ. In calcium-free Krebs solution, 10 μM of 2-aminoethoxydiphenyl borate (an IP3 receptor inhibitor) both blocked the AT1-AA base contraction and completely abolished the amplification. Both 5 μM of U-73122 (a phospholipase C inhibitor) and 10 μM of εV1-2 (an εPKC inhibitor) could partially inhibit the Ang II-induced contractile response. εV1-2, but not U-73122, could completely inhibit the amplification response of AT1-AA to Ang II. These results suggest that AT1-AA is able to cause amplification response to Ang II probably via the calcium-independent protein kinase C pathway, which may provide a new therapy strategy for preeclampsia.
CITATION STYLE
Zhang, W., Zheng, Y., Liu, F., Wang, X., Jin, Z., & Zhi, J. (2015). Mechanism of agonistic angiotensin II type i receptor autoantibody-amplified contractile response to Ang II in the isolated rat thoracic aorta. Acta Biochimica et Biophysica Sinica, 47(10), 851–856. https://doi.org/10.1093/abbs/gmv088
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