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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Exacerbation of adverse cardiovascular effects of aircraft noise in an animal model of arterial hypertension
Katie FrenisMiroslava KvandovaAndreas DaiberKonstantina FilippouKamil KusRainer SchulzSebastian StevenKerstin BoenglerOmar HahadSanela KalinovicChiara TrevisanKatrin FrauenknechtMette SørensenKlaus-dieter SchlüterJohanna HelmstädterStefan ChlopickiMatthias OelzeThomas MünzelSwenja Kröller-schönsubject
0301 basic medicineAircraftmedicine.medical_treatmentClinical BiochemistryBlood Pressure1308 Clinical Biochemistrymedicine.disease_causeBiochemistryMice0302 clinical medicineMedicineEndothelial dysfunctionlcsh:QH301-705.5lcsh:R5-920NADPH oxidasebiologyCytokineHypertensionmedicine.symptomlcsh:Medicine (General)Arterial hypertensionmedicine.medical_specialtyArticles from the Special Issue on Impact of environmental pollution and stress on redox signaling and oxidative stress pathways; Edited by Thomas Münzel and Andreas Daiber10208 Institute of Neuropathology610 Medicine & healthInflammation03 medical and health sciencesInternal medicineEnvironmental noise exposureAnimalsNeuroinflammationInflammationbusiness.industryOrganic ChemistryEndothelial functionmedicine.diseaseAngiotensin IIMice Inbred C57BLOxidative Stress030104 developmental biologyEndocrinologyBlood pressurelcsh:Biology (General)Vascular oxidative stressbiology.protein570 Life sciences; biologyEndothelium Vascularbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryOxidative stress1605 Organic Chemistrydescription
Arterial hypertension is the most important risk factor for the development of cardiovascular disease. Recently, aircraft noise has been shown to be associated with elevated blood pressure, endothelial dysfunction, and oxidative stress. Here, we investigated the potential exacerbated cardiovascular effects of aircraft noise in combination with experimental arterial hypertension. C57BL/6J mice were infused with 0.5 mg/kg/d of angiotensin II for 7 days, exposed to aircraft noise for 7 days at a maximum sound pressure level of 85 dB(A) and a mean sound pressure level of 72 dB(A), or subjected to both stressors. Noise and angiotensin II increased blood pressure, endothelial dysfunction, oxidative stress and inflammation in aortic, cardiac and/or cerebral tissues in single exposure models. In mice subjected to both stressors, most of these risk factors showed potentiated adverse changes. We also found that mice exposed to both noise and ATII had increased phagocytic NADPH oxidase (NOX-2)-mediated superoxide formation, immune cell infiltration (monocytes, neutrophils and T cells) in the aortic wall, astrocyte activation in the brain, enhanced cytokine signaling, and subsequent vascular and cerebral oxidative stress. Exaggerated renal stress response was also observed. In summary, our results show an enhanced adverse cardiovascular effect between environmental noise exposure and arterial hypertension, which is mainly triggered by vascular inflammation and oxidative stress. Mechanistically, noise potentiates neuroinflammation and cerebral oxidative stress, which may be a potential link between both risk factors. The results indicate that a combination of classical (arterial hypertension) and novel (noise exposure) risk factors may be deleterious for cardiovascular health.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-07-01 | Redox Biology |