| Literature DB >> 18514509 |
Chunyuan Fan1, Yasuyuki Kawai, Satoru Inaba, Kenichiro Arakawa, Masato Katsuyama, Kouji Kajinami, Toshihiro Yasuda, Chihiro Yabe-Nishimura, Tadashi Konoshita, Isamu Miyamori.
Abstract
Aldosterone and excessive salt intake are obviously implicated in human arteriosclerosis. Aldosterone activates NADPH oxidase that induces superoxide production and cardiovascular cell hypertrophy. The activity of NADPH oxidase is influenced by the expression of its subunit, through which, vasoactive agents activate in the enzyme. Here, we show that aldosterone elicited overexpression of the NOX1 catalytic subunit of NADPH oxidase in the presence of high salt in A7r5 vascular smooth muscle cells. We also showed that NOX1 is a key subunit involved in physiological aldosterone-induced NADPH oxidase activation. Aldosterone dose-dependently increased NOX1 expression and NADPH activity, which subsequently caused superoxide over-production and A7r5 cell hypertrophy. However, aldosterone had little effect on any of NOX1, superoxide over-production and cell hypertrophy in NOX1 knock-down A7r5 cells. These results suggest that the aldosterone-induced effects are mainly generated through NOX1. Aldosterone-induced NOX1 over-expression was augmented by 145 mM sodium chloride, as compared with control medium containing 135 mM NaCl. However, NOX1 over-expression was not induced in the absence of aldosterone, even in the presence of 185 mM NaCl. The mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist, eplerenone, completely abolished NOX1 over-expression, indicating that aldosterone is essential for this process.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18514509 DOI: 10.1016/j.jsbmb.2008.02.012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol ISSN: 0960-0760 Impact factor: 4.292