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on April 20, 2009

Hypertension. 2009
Published online before print April 20, 2009, doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.108.121830
A more recent version of this article appeared on June 1, 2009
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Submitted on August 19, 2008
Revised on September 7, 2008

Prenatal Cocaine Exposure Differentially Causes Vascular Dysfunction in Adult Offspring

DaLiao Xiao; Xiaohui Huang; Zhice Xu; Shumei Yang; and Lubo Zhang*

From the Center for Perinatal Biology (D.X., X.H., Z.X., L.Z.), Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Loma Linda University School of Medicine, Loma Linda, Calif; Perinatal Biology Center (Z.X., L.Z.), Soochow University School of Medicine, Suzhou, People's Republic of China; and the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry (S.Y.), California State University, San Bernardino.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: lzhang{at}llu.edu.

Abstract—Epidemiological studies have shown a clear association of adverse intrauterine environment and an increased risk of cardiovascular diseases and hypertension in adult life. The present study tested the hypothesis that prenatal cocaine exposure causes reprogramming of vascular reactivity, leading to an increased risk of hypertension in adult offspring. Pregnant rats received cocaine (30 mg kg-1 day-1) or saline from days 15 to 21 of gestational age, and experiments were conducted in 3-month-old offspring. Cocaine had no effect on the baseline blood pressure but significantly increased norepinephrine-stimulated blood pressure and decreased the baroreflex sensitivity in male but not female offspring. The cocaine treatment significantly increased norepinephrine-induced contractions in pressurized resistance–sized mesenteric arteries but not in aortas, which was primarily because of a loss of endothelial NO synthase–mediated inhibition and an enhanced Ca2+ sensitivity in mesenteric arteries. In addition, the cocaine treatment significantly attenuated the endothelium-dependent relaxation in mesenteric arteries in male but not female offspring. Endothelial NO synthase protein levels in aortas but not mesenteric arteries were significantly increased in the cocaine-treated animals. However, cocaine significantly decreased phosphorylation levels of endothelial NO synthase in both aortas and mesenteric arteries. The results suggest that prenatal cocaine exposure programs vascular contractility via changes in endothelial NO synthase–regulated Ca2+ sensitivity of myofilaments in the sex- and tissue-dependent manners in resistance arteries leading to an increased risk of hypertension in male offspring.


Key words: cocaine • fetal programming • Ca2+ sensitivity • eNOS • vascular contractility • rat




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D. Xiao, S. Yang, and L. Zhang
Prenatal Cocaine Exposure Causes Sex-Dependent Impairment in the Myogenic Reactivity of Coronary Arteries in Adult Offspring
Hypertension, November 1, 2009; 54(5): 1123 - 1128.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]