Gene expression, function and ischemia tolerance in male and female rat hearts after sub-toxic levels of angiotensin II

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Abstract

To examine the response to chronic high-dose angiotensin II (Ang II) and a proposed milder response in female hearts with respect to gene expression and ischemic injury. Female and male litter-matched rats were treated with 400 ng kg-1 min-1 Ang II for 14 days. Hearts were isolated, subjected to 30-min ischemia and 30-min reperfusion in combination with functional monitoring and thereafter harvested for gene expression, WB and histology. Ang II-treated hearts showed signs of non-hypertrophic remodeling and had significantly higher end diastolic pressure after reperfusion, but no significant gender difference was detected. Ang II increased expression of genes related to heart function (ANF, β-MCH, Ankrd-1, PKC-α, PKC-δ TNF-α); fibrosis (Col I-α1, Col III-α1, Fn-1, Timp1) and apoptosis (P53, Casp-3) without changing heart weight but with 68% increase in collagen content. High (sub-toxic) dose of Ang II resulted in marked heart remodeling and diastolic dysfunction after ischemia without significant myocyte hypertrophy or ventricular chamber dilatation. Although there were some gender-dependent differences in gene expression, female gender did not protect against the overall response. © 2010 The Author(s).

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Aljabri, M. B., Lund, T., Höper, A. C., Andreasen, T. V., Al-Saad, S., Lindal, S., & Ytrehus, K. (2011). Gene expression, function and ischemia tolerance in male and female rat hearts after sub-toxic levels of angiotensin II. Cardiovascular Toxicology, 11(1), 38–47. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12012-010-9100-0

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