| Literature DB >> 30354705 |
Hao Luo1, Caiyu Chen1, Li Guo1, Zaicheng Xu1, Xiaoyu Peng1, Xinquan Wang1, Jialiang Wang1, Na Wang1, Chuanwei Li1, Xiaoli Luo1, Hongyong Wang1, Pedro A Jose2, Chunjiang Fu1, Yu Huang3, Weibin Shi1, Chunyu Zeng1.
Abstract
Epidemiological and experimental studies suggest that maternal diabetes mellitus programs hypertension that is associated with impaired sodium excretion in the adult offspring. However, the underlying mechanisms are not clear. Because dopamine receptor function is involved in the pathogenesis of hypertension, we hypothesized that impaired renal dopamine D1 receptor function is also involved in the hypertension in offspring of maternal diabetes mellitus. Maternal diabetes mellitus was induced by a single intraperitoneal injection of streptozotocin (35 mg/kg) to pregnant Sprague-Dawley rats at day 0 of gestation. Compared with the offspring of mothers injected with citrate buffer (control mother offspring), the diabetic mother offspring (DMO) had increased systolic blood pressure and impaired D1 receptor-mediated diuresis and natriuresis, accompanied by increased renal PKC (protein kinase C) expression and activity, GRK-2 (G protein-coupled receptor kinase-2) expression, D1 receptor phosphorylation, D1 receptor/Gαs uncoupling, and loss of D1 receptor-mediated inhibition of Na+-K+-ATPase activity in renal proximal tubule cells from DMO. Inhibition of PKC reduced the increased GRK-2 expression and normalized D1 receptor function in primary cultures of renal proximal tubule cells from DMO. In addition, DMO, relative to control mother offspring, in vivo, had increased oxidative stress, indicated by decreased renal glutathione and increased renal malondialdehyde and urine 8-isoprostane. Normalization of oxidative stress with tempol also normalized the renal D1 receptor phosphorylation, D1 receptor-mediated diuresis and natriuresis, and blood pressure in DMO. Our present study indicates that maternal diabetes mellitus-programed hypertension in the offspring is caused by impaired renal D1 receptor function because of oxidative stress that is mediated by increased PKC-GRK-2 activity.Entities:
Keywords: diabetes mellitus; dopamine; hypertension; oxidative stress; protein kinase C
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30354705 PMCID: PMC6207228 DOI: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.118.10908
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hypertension ISSN: 0194-911X Impact factor: 10.190