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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Role of angiotensin II in arterial pressure and renal hemodynamics in rats with altered renal development: age- and sex-dependent differences

M. Teresa LlinasVirginia ReverteJuan GambiniF. Javier SalazarGoretti BaileAntonio TapiaIgnacio Gimenez

subject

MaleAgingmedicine.medical_specialtyPhysiologyTetrazolesRenal functionKidneyAge and sexmedicine.disease_causeReceptor Angiotensin Type 1Rats Sprague-DawleyInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsArterial PressureRenal hemodynamicsFetal programmingAdverse effectSex CharacteristicsChemistryAngiotensin IIBiphenyl CompoundsAngiotensin IIMesenteric ArteriesRatsOxidative StressEndocrinologyBlood pressureBenzimidazolesFemaleAngiotensin II Type 1 Receptor BlockersOxidative stress

description

Numerous studies have demonstrated that angiotensin II (ANG II) is involved in hypertension and renal changes occurring as a consequence of an adverse event during renal development. However, it was unknown whether this involvement is sex and age dependent. This study examines whether the increments in arterial pressure (AP) and in the renal sensitivity to ANG II are sex and age dependent in rats with altered renal development. It also evaluates whether the ANG II effects are accompanied by increments in AT1 receptors and oxidative stress. Experiments were performed in 3- to 4- and 10- to 11-mo-old rats treated with vehicle or an AT1 receptor antagonist (ARAnp) during the nephrogenic period. ARAnp-treated rats were hypertensive, but an age-dependent rise in AP was only found in males. Three days of treatment with candesartan (7 mg·kg−1·day−1) led to a fall of AP that was greater ( P < 0.05) in male than in female 10- to 11-mo-old ARAnp-treated rats. Oxidated proteins were elevated ( P < 0.05), and the decrease in AP elicited by candesartan was reduced ( P < 0.05) when these rats are also treated with tempol (18 mg·kg−1·day−1). Hypertension was not maintained by an elevation of AT1 receptors in kidneys and mesenteric arteries. The acute renal hemodynamic response to ANG II (30 ng·kg−1·min−1) was similarly enhanced ( P < 0.05) in both sexes of ARAnp-treated rats at 3–4 but not at 10–11 mo of age. Our results suggest that an adverse event during the nephrogenic period induces an ANG II-dependent increment in AP that is aggravated only in males during aging and that oxidative stress but not an increase in AT1 receptor contributes to the rise in AP. This study also shows that the renal hemodynamic sensitivity to ANG II is transitorily enhanced in both sexes of rats with altered renal development.

https://doi.org/10.1152/ajprenal.00424.2012