(Hypertension. 2000;36:89.)
© 2000 American Heart Association, Inc.
Scientific Contributions |
From the Cell Biology Laboratory, Baker Medical Research Institute and Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Correspondence to Dr Alex Bobik, Cell Biology Laboratory, Baker Medical Research Institute and Alfred Hospital, St Kilda Road Central, Melbourne, Victoria 8008, Australia. E-mail alex.bobik{at}baker.edu.au
AbstractBlood flow participates
in vascular remodeling during development and growth by regulating cell
apoptosis and proliferation. However, its significance in the
development of vascular hypertrophy and vascular remodeling
in hypertensive patients is not known. We investigated how changing
blood flow through the common carotid artery (CA) of young adult rats
rendered hypertensive via aortic coarctation affects CA
hypertrophy and/or remodeling responses to hypertension.
Blood flow was reduced by
50% as a result of ligation of the
external CA immediately after hypertension was induced, and the effects
of that procedure were compared with those in similarly treated
normotensive rats. Reducing blood flow in the hypertensive animals
markedly augmented the development of CA hypertrophy over
the ensuing 14 days by increasing the vessel wall cross-sectional area.
In those animals, CA lumen size was unaltered by reducing blood flow,
as was CA structure in normotensive animals. The greater
hypertrophy in the hypertensive animals with reduced blood
flow was associated with enhanced smooth muscle cell (SMC)
proliferation 3 days after the hemodynamic changes were
induced. There also appeared to be more extensive remodeling of the
endothelium in the hypertensive animals with normal
flow; this was indicated by the greater frequency of apoptotic
endothelial cells at that time. This reduction in blood
flow also attenuated endothelial cell nitric oxide
synthase expression in hypertensive animals but not in normotensive
animals. Severe reductions in blood flow (
90%) were required to
reduce endothelial cell nitric oxide synthase in the
normotensive animals. Increasing CA nitric oxide levels by
perivascular application of
S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine (SNAP) to
the CAs of hypertensive animals with reduced
endothelial cell nitric oxide synthase attenuated the
greater SMC proliferation. Thus, reduced blood flow in hypertensive
animals promotes hypertrophy by enhancing SMC proliferation
via mechanisms that reduce the inhibitory effects of nitric
oxide on SMC proliferation.
Key Words: hypertension, experimental blood flow vascular hypertrophy SNAP apoptosis
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