Undernutrition in utero augments systolic blood pressure and cardiac remodeling in adult mouse offspring: Possible involvement of local cardiac angiotensin system in developmental origins of cardiovascular disease

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Abstract

Evidence has emerged that undernutrition in utero is a risk factor for cardiovascular disorders in adulthood, along with genetic and environmental factors. Recently, the local expression of angiotensinogen and related bioactive substances has been demonstrated to play a pivotal role in cardiac remodeling, i.e. fibrosis and hypertrophy. The aim of the present study was to clarify the possible involvement of the local cardiac angiotensin system in fetal undernutrition-induced cardiovascular disorders. We developed a mouse model of undernutrition in utero by maternal food restriction, in which offspring (UN offspring) showed an increase in systolic blood pressure (8 wk of age, P < 0.05; and 16 wk, P < 0.01), perivascular fibrosis of the coronary artery (16 wk, P < 0.05) and cardiac cardiomegaly (16 wk, P < 0.01), and cardiomyocyte enlargement, concomitant with a significant augmentation of angiotensinogen (P < 0.05) and endothelin-1 (P < 0.01) mRNA expression and a tendency to increase in immunostaining for both angiotensin II and endothelin-1 in the left ventricles (16 wk). These findings suggest that fetal undernutrition activated the local cardiac angiotensin system-associated bioactive substances, which contributed, at least partly, to the development of cardiac remodeling in later life, in concert with the effects of increase in blood pressure. Copyright © 2007 by The Endocrine Society.

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Kawamura, M., Itoh, H., Yura, S., Mogami, H., Suga, S. I., Makino, H., … Fujii, S. (2007). Undernutrition in utero augments systolic blood pressure and cardiac remodeling in adult mouse offspring: Possible involvement of local cardiac angiotensin system in developmental origins of cardiovascular disease. Endocrinology, 148(3), 1218–1225. https://doi.org/10.1210/en.2006-0706

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