| Literature DB >> 33144212 |
Hajrunisa Cubro1, Karl A Nath1, Sonja Suvakov1, Oscar Garcia-Valencia1, Santosh Parashuram1, Wendy M White2, Tracey L Weissgerber3, Meryl C Nath1, Natasa M Milic4, Fernando Sontag1, Livius V d'Uscio5, Yi Zhu6, James L Kirkland6, Tamar Tchkonia6, Mariam P Alexander7, Reade A Quinton7, Zvonimir S Katusic5, Joseph P Grande7, Vesna D Garovic8.
Abstract
Preeclampsia is a pregnancy-specific hypertensive disorder characterized by proteinuria, and vascular injury in the second half of pregnancy. We hypothesized that endothelium-dependent vascular dysfunction is present in a murine model of preeclampsia based on administration of human preeclamptic sera to interleukin-10-/- mice and studied mechanisms that underlie vascular injury. Pregnant wild type and IL-10-/- mice were injected with either normotensive or severe preeclamptic patient sera (sPE) during gestation. A preeclampsia-like phenotype was confirmed by blood pressure measurements; assessment of albuminuria; measurement of angiogenic factors; demonstration of foot process effacement and endotheliosis in kidney sections; and by accumulation of glycogen in placentas from IL-10-/- mice injected with sPE sera (IL-10-/-sPE). Vasomotor function of isolated aortas was assessed. The IL-10-/-sPE murine model demonstrated significantly augmented aortic contractions to phenylephrine and both impaired endothelium-dependent and, to a lesser extent, endothelium-independent relaxation compared to wild type normotensive mice. Treatment of isolated aortas with indomethacin, a cyclooxygenase inhibitor, improved, but failed to normalize contraction to phenylephrine to that of wild type normotensive mice, suggesting the additional contribution from nitric oxide downregulation and effects of indomethacin-resistant vasoconstricting factors. In contrast, indomethacin normalized relaxation of aortas derived from IL-10-/-sPE mice. Thus, our results identify the role of IL-10 deficiency in dysregulation of the cyclooxygenase pathway and vascular dysfunction in the IL-10-/-sPE murine model of preeclampsia and point towards a possible contribution of nitric oxide dysregulation. These compounds and related mechanisms may serve both as diagnostic markers and therapeutic targets for preventive and treatment strategies in preeclampsia.Entities:
Keywords: interleukin-10; mouse; preeclampsia; vascular reactivity
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33144212 PMCID: PMC7914163 DOI: 10.1016/j.kint.2020.09.034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Kidney Int ISSN: 0085-2538 Impact factor: 10.612