Hypertension, Vol 5, 409-414, Copyright © 1983 by American Heart Association
S Koutouzov, P Marche, A Girard and P Meyer
The metabolism of inositol phospholipids of the erythrocyte membrane was
compared in normotensive Wistar-Kyoto (WKY), spontaneously hypertensive
(SHR), and stroke-prone SHR (SHR-SP) rats. This was performed on isolated
ghost membranes by measuring the incorporation of 32P from [ gamma-32P ]
adenosine triphosphate (ATP) into the diphosphoinositides (DPI) and the
triphosphoinositides (TPI) which were the only 32P-labeled phospholipids.
32P-labeling of TPI was altered in adult and 3-week-old SHR as well as in
SHR-SP compared to WKY controls; the radioactivity associated with TPI in
hypertensive rats was about 30% lower than that associated with TPI in
age-matched normotensive controls. By contrast, the radioactivity
associated with DPI was similar in both hypertensive and normotensive rats.
Measurement of the phosphoinositide distribution in both SHR and WKY
indicates that the change observed in 32P-TPI could not be accounted for by
a reduced phosphatidylinositol content in SHR membrane. Measurement of the
Mg2+- activated TPI-phosphomonoesterase and of the Ca2+-activated
polyphosphoinositide phosphodiesterase activities did not show any
significant difference between SHR and WKY. It thus appears that the
altered phosphoinositide metabolism observed in hypertensive rats was a
consequence of some alteration in the activity of kinases which are
responsible for the conversion of phosphatidylinositol into DPI and TPI.
These results also suggest that the defect in phosphoinositide metabolism
observed in genetically hypertensive rats was not a consequence of the
blood pressure elevation and could be related to the pathogenesis of
hypertension.
ARTICLES
Altered turnover of polyphosphoinositides in the erythrocyte membrane of the spontaneously hypertensive rat
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