Intrarenal dopamine attenuates deoxycorticosterone acetate/high salt-induced blood pressure elevation in part through activation of a medullary cyclooxygenase 2 pathway

27Citations
Citations of this article
9Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Locally produced dopamine in the renal proximal tubule inhibits salt and fluid reabsorption, and a dysfunctional intrarenal dopaminergic system has been reported in essential hypertension and experimental hypertension models. Using catechol-O-methyl-transferase knockout (COMT) mice, which have increased renal dopamine because of deletion of the major renal dopamine-metabolizing enzyme, we investigated the effect of intrarenal dopamine on the development of hypertension in the deoxycorticosterone acetate/high-salt (DOCA/HS) model. DOCA/HS led to significant increases in systolic blood pressure in wild-type mice (from 115±2 to 153±4 mm Hg), which was significantly attenuated in COMT mice (from 114±2 to 135±3 mm Hg). In DOCA/HS COMT mice, the D1-like receptor antagonist SCH-23390 increased systolic blood pressure (156±2 mm Hg). DOCA/HS COMT mice also exhibited more urinary sodium excretion (COMT versus wild-type: 3038±430 versus 659±102 μmol/L per 24 hours; P<0.01). Furthermore, DOCA/HS-induced renal oxidative stress was significantly attenuated in COMT mice. COX-2-derived prostaglandins in the renal medulla promote sodium excretion, and dopamine stimulates medullary prostaglandin production. Renal medullary COX-2 expression and urinary prostaglandin E2 excretion were significantly higher in COMT than in wild-type mice after DOCA/HS treatment. In DOCA/HS-treated COMT mice, the COX-2 inhibitor SC-58236 reduced urinary sodium and prostaglandin E2 excretion and increased systolic blood pressure (153±2 mm Hg). These studies indicate that an activated renal dopaminergic system attenuates the development of hypertension, at least in large part through activating medullary COX-2 expression/activity, and also decreases oxidative stress resulting from DOCA/HS. © 2009 American Heart Association, Inc.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Yao, B., Harris, R. C., & Zhang, M. Z. (2009). Intrarenal dopamine attenuates deoxycorticosterone acetate/high salt-induced blood pressure elevation in part through activation of a medullary cyclooxygenase 2 pathway. Hypertension, 54(5), 1077–1083. https://doi.org/10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.109.137174

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free