Literature DB >> 18356487

Female rats fed a high-fat diet were associated with vascular dysfunction and cardiac fibrosis in the absence of overt obesity and hyperlipidemia: therapeutic potential of resveratrol.

Marie-Claude Aubin1, Claude Lajoie, Robert Clément, Hugues Gosselin, Angelino Calderone, Louis P Perrault.   

Abstract

It remains presently unknown whether vascular reactivity is impaired and whether maladaptive cardiac remodeling occurs before the onset of overt obesity and in the absence of hyperlipidemia. Normal female rats were fed a high-fat diet for 8 weeks and were associated with a modest nonsignificant increase of body weight (standard diet, 300 +/- 10, versus high-fat diet, 329 +/- 14 g) and a normal plasma lipid profile. In rats fed a high-fat diet, systolic (171 +/- 7 mm Hg) and diastolic blood pressures (109 +/- 3) were increased compared to a standard diet (systolic blood pressure, 134 +/- 8; diastolic blood pressure, 96 +/- 5 mm Hg), and acetylcholine-dependent relaxation of isolated aortic rings (high-fat diet, 22 +/- 5%, versus standard diet, 53 +/- 8%) was significantly reduced. Furthermore, perivascular fibrosis was detected in the heart of rats fed a high-fat diet. The exogenous addition of resveratrol (trans-3,5,4'-trihydroxystilbene) (0.1 microM) to aortic rings isolated from rats fed a high-fat diet restored acetylcholine-mediated relaxation (47 +/- 9%). The administration of resveratrol (20 mg/kg/day for 8 weeks) to rats fed a high-fat diet prevented the increase in blood pressure and preserved acetylcholine-dependent relaxation of isolated aortic rings. However, resveratrol therapy failed to attenuate the perivascular fibrotic response. These data have demonstrated that a high-fat diet fed to normal female rats can elicit a hypertensive response and induce perivascular fibrosis before the development of overt obesity and in the absence of hyperlipidemia. Resveratrol therapy can prevent the hypertensive response in female rats fed a high-fat diet but is without effect on the progression of perivascular fibrosis.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18356487     DOI: 10.1124/jpet.107.135061

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pharmacol Exp Ther        ISSN: 0022-3565            Impact factor:   4.030


  36 in total

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Review 3.  Mass Spectrometry-based Metabolomics in Translational Research.

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7.  Red grape berry-cultured cells reduce blood pressure in rats with metabolic-like syndrome.

Authors:  A Leibowitz; Z Faltin; A Perl; Y Eshdat; Y Hagay; E Peleg; E Grossman
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Authors:  Seon-Min Jeon; Seung-A Lee; Myung-Sook Choi
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Review 9.  Resveratrol and clinical trials: the crossroad from in vitro studies to human evidence.

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