(Hypertension. 2000;35:413.)
© 2000 American Heart Association, Inc.
Scientific Contributions |
From the Second Department of Internal Medicine, Nihon University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan (S.I., K.K., K.T.), and Department of Neuroscience, University of Pittsburgh (Pa) (S.I., A.F.S.).
Correspondence to Dr Alan F. Sved, 446 Crawford Hall, Department of Neuroscience, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260. E-mail sved{at}brain.bns.pitt.edu
| Abstract |
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40 mm Hg. After inhibition of the caudal ventrolateral medulla, which similarly increased arterial pressure in both strains, injection of KYN into the RVLM reduced mean arterial pressure to the same level as produced by autonomic blockade. These results suggest that the balance of excitatory and inhibitory influences on RVLM vasomotor neurons driven by tonically active EAA-mediated inputs to the RVLM is disrupted in SHR and may contribute to the hypertension in SHR.
Key Words: brain hypertension, experimental glutamate neurotransmitter amino acid rats, inbred SHR
| Introduction |
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The balance between the tonically active excitatory and inhibitory inputs to RVLM vasomotor neurons affects resting AP. If the excitatory input to these neurons was high relative to the inhibitory input, AP should be elevated. Indeed, there are suggestions in the literature that such an imbalance is responsible for the elevated AP in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). For example, Smith and Barron7 8 reported that inhibition of the CVLM or blockade of its GABAergic inhibitory input to the RVLM by injection of a
-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptor antagonist into the RVLM caused a smaller increase in AP in SHR than in normotensive Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY). These results suggest that AP in SHR may be elevated because of a disinhibition of the RVLM, leading to a relative excess of excitatory drive of RVLM vasomotor neurons. Therefore, in SHR, in contrast to normotensive rats, blockade of EAA receptors in the RVLM may produce a decrease in AP. The present studies were conducted to test this hypothesis.
| Methods |
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For measuring AP, mean AP (MAP), and heart rate (HR) during injections of substances into the ventrolateral medulla, rats were prepared as previously described.6 Briefly, rats were initially anesthetized with halothane, and cannulas were inserted into a femoral artery and a femoral vein. The trachea was cannulated, and the rat was connected to a ventilator. The rat was placed in a stereotaxic frame with the incisor bar set 11 mm below the interaural point, and the dorsal surface of the medulla was exposed. After completion of all surgery, the rat was injected with
-chloralose (60 mg/kg IV), and the halothane was terminated. Additional chloralose (20 mg/kg IV) was administered hourly. Rats were injected with tubocurarine (0.5 mg/kg, supplemented hourly with 0.2 mg/kg) and ventilated with 100% oxygen for the remainder of the experiment. Injections of solutions into the brain stem were made with single-barrel glass micropipettes; all injections were in a volume of 100 nL artificial cerebrospinal fluid vehicle administered during several seconds with a PicoPump (WPI). KYN was initially dissolved in 100 mmol/L sodium bicarbonate and then diluted in artificial cerebrospinal fluid. Bilateral injections were made 1 side at a time, with
30 seconds separating the 2 injections. Coordinates for injections into the CVLM were 1.2 mm rostral to the caudal tip of the area postrema, 2.0 mm lateral to the midline, and 2.4 mm below the dorsal surface of the brain stem. Coordinates for injections into the RVLM were, with the pipette tip angled 20° rostrally, 1.8 mm rostral to the caudal tip of the area postrema, 1.8 mm lateral to the midline, and 2.9 mm below the dorsal surface of the brain stem. In each case, test injections of 1 nmol of glutamate in 100 nL were made into the CVLM and/or RVLM on each side of the brain stem to verify that the coordinates were within the functional depressor and pressor regions of the CVLM and RVLM, respectively. If an injection did not alter MAP by
25 mm Hg in the appropriate direction, then the coordinates were changed by 0.3 mm in 1 direction at a time until an acceptable physiological response was obtained. In most rats of each strain, the coordinates did not need to be adjusted, and there was no significant difference in the average coordinates between SHR and WKY.
At the conclusion of the experiment,
20 nL of 1% Fast Green dye was injected into the RVLM for histological verification of the center of the microinjection site. All RVLM injection sites were located in the rostral medulla, just ventral to the compact portion of nucleus ambiguus, similar to the injection sites that we have published previously.9 Injections into the CVLM were located in the ventrolateral medulla at the approximate rostral-caudal level of the obex.
In other SHR and WKY, the effects of injection of the ganglionic blocking drug hexamethonium (20 mg/kg IV) on MAP and HR were determined.
KYN, muscimol, and hexamethonium were purchased from Sigma Chemical Co; all other drugs and chemicals were obtained from standard commercial suppliers.
Data are expressed as mean±SEM. Responses in SHR and WKY were compared by t test or ANOVA with the use of Statisica software.
| Results |
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Bilateral injection of KYN into the RVLM of chloralose-anesthetized WKY had no effect on baseline AP or HR (Figures 1 and 2), as previously noted in Sprague-Dawley rats.6 In contrast, bilateral injection of 2.7 nmol KYN into the RVLM of SHR produced a decrease in AP of
40 mm Hg, with no significant change in HR (Figures 1 and 2). The decrease in AP occurred rapidly and lasted for
20 minutes. Even unilateral injection of KYN into the RVLM of SHR resulted in a significant decrease in AP (-18±3 mm Hg; n=6). Bilateral injection of a smaller dose of KYN (1.35 nmol) into the RVLM of SHR still evoked a decrease in MAP, although the response was significantly smaller than with the larger dose of KYN (Figure 2).
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Bilateral injection of muscimol into the CVLM in WKY increased AP by 82±3 mm Hg (n=7) (Figures 3 and 4). When AP had reached its peak,
3 minutes after injection of muscimol, injection of KYN into the RVLM markedly decreased AP to
65 mm Hg (Figures 3 and 4), a level similar to that produced by autonomic blockade with intravenous injection of hexamethonium (Figure 4). Similarly, in SHR, injection of muscimol into the CVLM increased AP by 85±3 mm Hg (n=9), and the subsequent injection of KYN into RVLM reduced AP to the same extent as autonomic blockade (Figures 3 and 4).
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| Discussion |
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After inhibition of the CVLM, with consequent withdrawal of prominent inhibitory control of RVLM sympathoexcitatory neurons,1 2 injection of KYN into the RVLM reduced AP to the same extent as total autonomic blockade in both SHR and WKY. We have previously reported a similar response in Sprague-Dawley rats.6 Indeed, it was largely this observation in Sprague-Dawley rats that prompted us to propose a model in which the balance between tonic EAA-mediated excitation of RVLM vasomotor neurons and indirect inhibition of RVLM vasomotor neurons driven by an EAA-mediated input to the RVLM plays a critical role in determining resting AP.6 This model predicts that chronically elevated sympathetic vasomotor tone would result from either increased EAA-mediated excitation of RVLM vasomotor neurons or from decreased inhibition of RVLM vasomotor neurons. In either case, this shift of balance toward excitation of RVLM vasomotor neurons would be reversed by injection of an EAA antagonist. Thus, in hypertensive rats injection of KYN into the RVLM should reduce AP. The present observations made in SHR are totally consistent with this model, as is a previous report that KYN injected into the RVLM decreased AP in rats made hypertensive by constriction of the renal artery (Goldblatt hypertensive rats).10
In Sprague-Dawley rats, after bilateral injection of muscimol into the CVLM, injection of KYN into the RVLM reduces AP to the same level as produced by total autonomic blockade.6 Because under these conditions KYN reduced AP not just to baseline levels before inhibition of the CVLM but to much lower levels, we suggested that the CVLM must normally provide a nonEAA-mediated excitatory input to RVLM vasomotor neurons6 in addition to the well-known inhibitory input.1 2 In the present study, similar data were obtained in SHR and WKY; after injection of muscimol into the CVLM, injection of KYN into the RVLM reduced AP to the same extent as total autonomic blockade in each strain. These data are consistent with the model presented above in which the balance between direct EAA-mediated excitation of RVLM vasomotor neurons and indirect EAA-mediated inhibition of these neurons is shifted toward excitation in SHR.
This model of RVLM function in SHR would predict that the activity of RVLM sympathoexcitatory neurons is elevated under baseline conditions in anesthetized rats. Indeed, this has been observed in some studies11 but not others12 ; these different results might relate to the anesthetic agent used or the specific population of cells that were recorded.
On the basis of these data, it appears that the balance between excitatory and inhibitory inputs to RVLM vasomotor neurons that are influenced by EAA-mediated transmission in the RVLM are shifted toward excitatory influences in the SHR. However, the issue of whether this results from excitation or disinhibition is not completely clear. Several studies have reported differences in cardiovascular responses to pharmacological alteration of either the CVLM or RVLM in SHR compared with WKY, although in most cases the studies are difficult to interpret and the literature is often contradictory. For example, many studies, including the present one, report that the decrease in AP caused by injection of EAA agonists into the CVLM is larger in SHR than in WKY,7 8 13 14 and some authors7 8 13 have suggested that this reflects a decrease in basal inhibitory drive of the RVLM from the CVLM. However, because baseline AP is different between these 2 strains of rats, it is difficult to interpret these data; AP might fall more in SHR because it starts out higher. If, instead, these data are compared on the basis of the decrease in MAP as a percentage of the decrease in MAP produced by autonomic blockade, then the values become quite similar (
85% to 90%).
Some investigators have reported that disruption of the inhibitory input to the RVLM from the CVLM, either by injection of the GABA antagonist bicuculline into the RVLM or by injection of the neuroinhibitory agent tetrodotoxin into the CVLM, produces a much larger increase in AP in WKY than in SHR.7 8 13 This observation has been taken as evidence that the inhibitory input to the RVLM from the CVLM is much less active in SHR than it is in WKY. Again, these data are difficult to interpret because of the difference in baseline AP values. Furthermore, Muratani et al14 observed that bicuculline injected into the RVLM produced a similar large increase in MAP in both SHR and WKY. The present data showing similar large increases in MAP after injection of muscimol into the CVLM are consistent with the results of Muratani et al.14 The reason for the large difference between these 2 groups of data is not clear at present. However, large doses of glutamate or other EAA injected into the RVLM produce increases in MAP of similar magnitude in SHR and WKY,7 8 14 15 suggesting that the tonic inhibitory control of RVLM sympathoexcitatory neurons is not grossly abnormal since we have previously noted that disruption of this inhibitory input enhances the pressor response to injection of glutamate into the RVLM.6
In summary, the present data show that blockade of EAA receptors in the RVLM of SHR, but not WKY, decreases AP. This qualitative difference in the central neural control of AP between SHR and WKY is consistent with the hypothesis that there is a relative increase in EAA-mediated drive of RVLM vasomotor neurons in this model of hypertension.
| Acknowledgments |
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Received September 14, 1999; first decision October 11, 1999; accepted October 22, 1999.
| References |
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