| Literature DB >> 24251033 |
Kengo Sato1, Rena Watanabe, Fumiko Itoh, Masayoshi Shichiri, Takuya Watanabe.
Abstract
Human salusin- α and salusin- β are related peptides produced from prosalusin. Bolus injection of salusin- β into rats induces more profound hypotension and bradycardia than salusin- α . Central administration of salusin- β increases blood pressure via release of norepinephrine and arginine-vasopressin. Circulating levels of salusin- α and salusin- β are lower in patients with essential hypertension. Salusin- β exerts more potent mitogenic effects on human vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) and fibroblasts than salusin- α . Salusin- β accelerates inflammatory responses in human endothelial cells and monocyte-endothelial adhesion. Human macrophage foam cell formation is stimulated by salusin- β but suppressed by salusin- α . Chronic salusin- β infusion into apolipoprotein E-deficient mice enhances atherosclerotic lesions; salusin- α infusion reduces lesions. Salusin- β is expressed in proliferative neointimal lesions of porcine coronary arteries after stenting. Salusin- α and salusin- β immunoreactivity have been detected in human coronary atherosclerotic plaques, with dominance of salusin- β in macrophage foam cells, VSMCs, and fibroblasts. Circulating salusin- β levels increase and salusin- α levels decrease in patients with coronary artery disease. These findings suggest that salusin- β and salusin- α may contribute to proatherogenesis and antiatherogenesis, respectively. Increased salusin- β and/or decreased salusin- α levels in circulating blood and vascular tissue are closely linked with atherosclerosis. Salusin- α and salusin- β could be candidate biomarkers and therapeutic targets for atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24251033 PMCID: PMC3819761 DOI: 10.1155/2013/965140
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hypertens Impact factor: 2.420
Figure 1Comparison of circulating levels of salusin-α and salusin-β between normotensive subjects and hypertensive (HT) patients.
Figure 2Modulatory effects of salusin-α and salusin-β on atherogenesis in vascular cells. Mo = monocyte, Mϕ = macrophage.
Atherogenic effects of salusins on human vascular cells.
| Salusin- | Salusin- | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| EC | |||
| IL-1 | → | ↑ | [ |
| MCP-1 expression | → | ↑ | [ |
| ICAM-1 expression | → | ↑ | [ |
| VCAM-1 expression | → | ↑ | [ |
| Monocyte | |||
| Adhesion to EC | → | ↑ | [ |
| Macrophage | |||
| Foam cell formation | ↓ | ↑ | [ |
| ACAT1 expression | ↓ | ↑ | [ |
| SR-A expression | → | → | [ |
| ABCA1 expression | → | → | [ |
| VSMC | |||
| Proliferation |
| ↑ | [ |
| Fibroblast | |||
| Proliferation |
| ↑ | [ |
Arrows indicate the stimulatory (↑, ↗), suppressive (↓), or negative (→) effects listed in the right column.
Figure 3Comparison of circulating levels of salusin-α and salusin-β between non-CAD subjects and CAD patients.
Figure 4ROC curves of salusin-α and salusin-β for detecting CAD.