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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sleep disorders are a form of stress associated with increased sympathetic activity, and they are a risk factor for the occurrence of cardiovascular disease. Given that nitric oxide (NO) may play an inhibitory role in the regulation of sympathetic tone, this study set out to determine the NO synthase (NOS) reactivity in the primary cardiovascular afferent neurons (i.e. nodose neurons) following total sleep deprivation (TSD). TSD was performed by the disc-on-water method. Following 5 days of TSD, all experimental animals were investigated for quantitative nicotinamine adenine dinucleotide phosphate-diaphorase (NADPH-d, a co-factor of NOS) histochemistry, neuronal NOS immunohistochemistry and neuronal NOS activity assay. In order to evaluate the endogenous metabolic activity of nodose neurons,
cytochrome oxidase
(
COX
) reactivity was further tested. All the above-mentioned reactivities were objectively assessed by computerized image analysis. The clinical significance of the reported changes was demonstrated by alterations of mean arterial blood pressure (MAP). The results indicated that in normal untreated rats, numerous NADPH-d/NOS- and
COX
-reactive neurons were found in the nodose ganglion (NG). Following TSD, however, both the labelling and staining intensity of NADPH-d/NOS as well as
COX
reactivity were drastically reduced in the NG compared with normal untreated ganglions. MAP was significantly higher in TSD rats (136+/-4 mmHg) than in normal untreated rats (123+/-2 mmHg). NO may serve as an important sympathoinhibition messenger released by the NG neurons, and decrease of NOS immunoexpression following TSD may account for the decrease in NOS content. In association with the reduction of NOS activity, a defect in NOS expression in the primary cardiovascular afferent neurons would enhance clinical
hypertension
, which might serve as a potential risk factor in the development of TSD-relevant cardiovascular disturbances.
...
PMID:Total sleep deprivation inhibits the neuronal nitric oxide synthase and cytochrome oxidase reactivities in the nodose ganglion of adult rats. 1687 2
The renal and cardiac benefits of renin-angiotensin system (RAS) inhibition in
hypertension
exceed those attributable to blood pressure reduction, and seem to involve mitochondrial function changes. To investigate whether mitochondrial changes associated with RAS inhibition are related to changes in nitric oxide (NO) metabolism, four groups of male Wistar rats were treated during 2 wk with a RAS inhibitor, enalapril (10 mg x kg(-1) x day(-1); Enal), or a NO synthase (NOS) inhibitor, N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) (1 mg x kg(-1) x day(-1)), or both (Enal+L-NAME), or were untreated (control). Blood pressure and body weight were lower in Enal than in control. Electron transfer through complexes I to III and
cytochrome oxidase
activity were significantly lower, and uncoupling protein-2 content was significantly higher in kidney mitochondria isolated from Enal than in those from control. All of these changes were prevented by L-NAME cotreatment and were accompanied by a higher production/bioavailability of kidney NO. L-NAME abolished mitochondrial NOS activity but failed to inhibit extra-mitochondrial kidney NOS, underscoring the relevance of mitochondrial NO in those effects of enalapril that were suppressed by L-NAME cotreatment. In Enal, kidney mitochondria H(2)O(2) production rate and MnSOD activity were significantly lower than in control, and these effects were not prevented by L-NAME cotreatment. These findings may clarify the role of NO in the interactions between RAS and mitochondrial metabolism and can help to unravel the mechanisms involved in renal protection by RAS inhibitors.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial function and nitric oxide metabolism are modified by enalapril treatment in rat kidney. 1718 9
Although linked with cardiac dysfunction, the association of MELAS (mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes) and pulmonary artery
hypertension
(PAH) has not been previously described. PAH and right ventricular heart failure were identified by echocardiography in a 3-year-old boy with a history of hypotonia, microcephaly and developmental delay. He initially presented with a 10-day history of dyspnoea, dependent oedema and reduced oral intake. Lactic acidosis was noted on serial arterial blood sampling and cerebrospinal fluid. Muscle biopsy demonstrated
cytochrome-c oxidase
-positive 'ragged-red' fibres consistent with MELAS; subsequent analyses revealed the m.3243A>G point mutation most commonly associated with MELAS. The mutation was heteroplasmic, representing 92% of the total mtDNA from a lung sample. Nitric oxide and epoprostenol were administered without significant clinical or echocardiographic improvement of his PAH. A 'mitochondrial cocktail' including biotin, riboflavin, carnitine and coenzyme Q10 also was provided. Five months after presentation, he developed seizures; MRI imaging of his brain demonstrated multiple focal lesions. His clinical status worsened with increasing cardiopulmonary failure. He died two months later. Although therapy for both MELAS and PAH remains limited, recent investigations suggest a beneficial role for l-arginine in both conditions, implying a possible common pathophysiology. Mitochondrial diseases such as MELAS should be considered in cases of idiopathic PAH, particularly when associated with multisystem involvement including short stature, hearing loss, renal dysfunction, retinopathy, diabetes mellitus, migraines, seizures, ophthalmoplegia, fatigability and weakness.
...
PMID:Pulmonary artery hypertension in a child with MELAS due to a point mutation of the mitochondrial tRNA((Leu)) gene (m.3243A>G). 1818 Oct 29
The systemic and nonmuscular adaptive response to moderate exercise is reviewed and compared with muscle responses to moderate and exhaustive exercise. Rats participating in voluntary wheel running and mice subjected to treadmill exercise on a lifelong basis showed 10-19% increased median life span. Mice also showed improved neurological functions, such as better (35-216%) neuromuscular coordination (tightrope test) and better (11-27%) exploratory activity (T maze). These effects are consistent with the systemic effects of moderate exercise lowering hyperglycemia, hypercholesterolemia, and
hypertension
. Mitochondria isolated from brain, liver, heart, and kidney of exercised mice show a 12-32% selectively increased
complex IV
activity, with a significant correlation between
complex IV
activity and performance in the tightrope test. Chronic exercise decreases (10-20%) the mitochondrial content of TBARS and protein carbonyls in the four organs after 24 weeks of training. Protein carbonyls were linearly and negatively related to
complex IV
activity. Exercise increased the levels of nNOSmu in human muscle and of nNOS in mouse brain. It is concluded that chronic moderate exercise exerts a whole-body beneficial effect that exceeds muscle adaptation, likely through mechanosensitive afferent nerves and beta-endorphin release to brain and plasma that promote mitochondrial biogenesis in distant organs.
...
PMID:Systemic and mitochondrial adaptive responses to moderate exercise in rodents. 1819 58
Exercise training improves functional capacity and quality of life in patients with heart failure. However, the long-term effects of exercise on mortality associated with hypertensive heart disease have not been well defined. In the present study, we investigated the effect of low-intensity exercise training on disease progression and survival in female spontaneously hypertensive heart failure rats. Animals with severe
hypertension
(16 months old) were treadmill trained (14.5 m/min, 45 min/d, 3 d/wk) until they developed terminal heart failure or were euthanized because of age-related complications. Exercise delayed mortality resulting from heart failure (P<0.001) and all causes (P<0.05) and transiently attenuated the systolic hypertension and contractile dysfunction observed in the sedentary animals but had no effect on cardiac morphology or contractile function in end-stage heart failure. Training had no effect on terminal myocardial protein expression of antioxidant enzymes, calcium handling proteins, or myosin heavy chain isoforms but was associated with higher
cytochrome oxidase
activity in cardiac mitochondria (P<0.05) and a greater mitochondrial content of cardiolipin, a phospholipid that is essential for optimal mitochondrial energy metabolism. In conclusion, low-intensity exercise training significantly delays the onset of heart failure and improves survival in female hypertensive heart failure rats without eliciting sustained improvements in blood pressure, cardiac function, or expression of several myocardial proteins associated with the cardiovascular benefits of exercise. The effects of exercise on
cytochrome oxidase
and cardiolipin provide novel evidence that training may improve prognosis in hypertensive heart disease by preserving mitochondrial energy metabolism.
Hypertension
2008 Apr
PMID:Low-intensity exercise training delays heart failure and improves survival in female hypertensive heart failure rats. 1825 16
We studied whether mitochondrial functions and Ca2+ metabolism were altered in Wistar Kyoto normotensive (WKY) and spontaneous hypertensive rats (SHR). Ca2+ uptake was decreased in SHR compared to WKY rats. Accumulation of Ca2+ was more efficient in WKY than in SHR rats. mDeltaPsi was lower in SHR compared to WKY rats. Basal
complex IV
activity was higher in SHR than WKY rats, whereas basal L-citrulline production, an indicator of nitric oxide synthesis, was decreased in SHR and dependent on Ca2+ concentration (p<0.05). Impact of Ca2+ was counteracted by EGTA. These data show an age-dependent decreased mitochondrial functions in brain mitochondria during
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Changes in mitochondrial functionality and calcium uptake in hypertensive rats as a function of age. 1854 59
These investigations are part of an attempt to study and interpret the intermediary metabolism of the kidneys in experimental renal hypertension.
Hypertension
was produced in dogs by the clamping procedure of Goldblatt and associates or by the silk perinephritis method of Page. Enzymatic studies were made by means of Warburg's manometric method. Cytochrome c was in addition determined spectrophotometrically. Tissue slices, homogenized tissue, and tissue extracts were used. A study of the cytochrome c concentration and the activities of the
cytochrome oxidase
and succinic dehydrogenase systems of kidneys from normal dogs and dogs with experimental renal hypertension was made. It was found that the cytochrome c concentration and the activities of the
cytochrome oxidase
and succinic dehydrogenase systems were markedly lower in the kidney slices and in the tissue suspensions from hypertensive dogs. Tissue suspensions and extracts of kidneys from hypertensive dogs showed an inhibitory effect on the activity of the
cytochrome oxidase
and succinic dehydrogenase, and the amine oxidase systems. Renin preparations also showed a marked inhibitory effect on the activities of
cytochrome oxidase
, succinic dehydrogenase, l-amino acid oxidase, and amine oxidase systems. A significant increase was found in the kidney of dogs whose other kidney had been removed or subjected to Goldblatt's or Page's technique in the activities of the cytochrome-
cytochrome oxidase
system, the succinic dehydrogenase system, and in the concentration of nucleotide-bound phosphorus, of flavin-adenine dinucleotide, and of the nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotides (coenzymes I and II). From the results of these studies it can be concluded that an increase in the concentration and activity of the respiratory enzymes precedes hypertrophy of the kidney. This can be explained by the assumption that an increase in the activity of the respiratory biocatalysts acts as a stimulus for cell growth and multiplication.
...
PMID:THE METABOLISM OF THE KIDNEY IN EXPERIMENTAL RENAL HYPERTENSION : II. THE CONCENTRATION OF CYTOCHROME C AND THE ACTIVITIES OF THE CYTOCHROME OXIDASE AND OF THE SUCCINIC DEHYDROGENASE SYSTEMS IN THE KIDNEY OF DOGS WITH EXPERIMENTAL RENAL HYPERTENSION. THE INHIBITORY EFFECT OF RENIN AND OF KIDNEY TISSUE PREPARATIONS FROM HYPERTENSIVE DOGS ON THE RESPIRATORY ENZYMES. 1987 97
Increased production of free radicals and impairment of mitochondrial function are important factors in the pathogenesis of
hypertension
. This study examined the impact of
hypertension
on mitochondrial respiratory chain function, coenzyme Q(9) (CoQ(9)), coenzyme Q(10) (CoQ(10)), and alpha-tocopherol content in brain mitochondria, and the effect of blockade of angiotensin II type 1 receptors (AT1R) in the prehypertensive period on these parameters. In addition, blood pressure, heart and brain weight to body weight ratios, and the geometry of the basilar artery supplying the brain were evaluated. In the 9th week blood pressure and heart weight/body weight ratio were significantly increased and brain weight/body weight ratio was significantly decreased in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) when compared to Wistar rats (WR). The cross-sectional area of the basilar artery was increased in SHR. Glutamate-supported respiration, the rate of ATP production, and concentrations of CoQ(9), CoQ(10), and alpha-tocopherol were decreased in SHR. The succinate-supported function and
cytochrome oxidase
activity were not changed. The treatment of SHR with losartan (20 mg/kg/day) from 4th to 9th week of age exerted preventive effect against
hypertension
, heart and arterial wall hypertrophy, and brain weight/body weight decline. After the therapy, the rate of ATP production and the concentration of CoQ increased in comparison to untreated SHR. The impairment of energy production and decreased level of lipid-soluble antioxidants in brain mitochondria as well as structural alterations in the basilar artery may contribute to increased vulnerability of brain tissue in
hypertension
. Long-term treatment with AT1R blockers may prevent brain dysfunction in
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Losartan improved respiratory function and coenzyme Q content in brain mitochondria of young spontaneously hypertensive rats. 2014 91
Myocardial remodeling and dysfunction are serious complications of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Factors controlling their development are not well established. To specifically address the role of the mitochondrial genome, we developed novel conplastic rat strains, i.e. strains with the same nuclear genome but a different mitochondrial genome. The new animals were named T2DN(mtFHH) and T2DN(mtWistar), where the acronym T2DN denotes their common nuclear genome (type 2 diabetic nephropathy (T2DN) rats) and mtFHH or mtWistar the origin of their mitochondria, Fawn Hooded Hypertensive (FHH) or Wistar rats, respectively. The T2DN(mtFHH) and T2DN(mtWistar) showed a similar progression of diabetes as determined by HbA1c, cholesterol, and triglycerides with normal blood pressure, thus enabling investigation of the specific role of the mitochondrial genome in cardiac function without the confounding effects of obesity or
hypertension
found in other models of diabetes. Echocardiographic analysis of 12-week-old animals showed no abnormalities, but at 12 months of age the T2DN(mtFHH) showed left ventricular remodeling that was verified by histology. Decreased complex I and
complex IV
but not complex II activity within the electron transport chain was found only in T2DN(mtFHH), which was not explained by differences in protein content. Decreased cardiac ATP levels in T2DN(mtFHH) were in agreement with a lower ATP synthetic capacity by isolated mitochondria. Together, our data provide experimental evidence that mtDNA sequence variations have an additional role in energetic heart deficiency. The mitochondrial DNA background may explain the increased susceptibility of certain T2DM patients to develop myocardial dysfunction.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial DNA variant for complex I reveals a role in diabetic cardiac remodeling. 2254 50
Elevated blood pressure (BP) is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease. Several studies have noted a consistent maternal effect on BP; consequently, mitochondrial DNA variation has become an additional target of investigation of the missing BP heritability. Analyses of common mitochondrial DNA polymorphisms, however, have not found evidence of association with
hypertension
. To explore associations of uncommon (frequency>5%) mitochon drial DNA variants with BP, we identified uncommon/rare variants through sequencing the entire mitochondrial genome in 32 unrelated individuals with extreme-high BP in the Framingham Heart Study and genotyped 40 mitochondrial single nucleotide polymorphisms in 7219 Framingham Heart Study participants. The nonsynonymous mitochondrial single nucleotide polymorphism 5913G>A (Asp4Asn) in the cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 of respiratory
complex IV
demonstrated significant associations with BP and fasting blood glucose (FBG) levels. Individuals with the rare 5913A allele had, on average, 7-mm Hg higher systolic BP at baseline (Pempirical=0.05) and 17-mg/dL higher mean FBG over 25 years of follow-up (Pempirical=0.009). Significant associations with FBG levels were also detected for nonsynonymous mitochondrial single nucleotide polymorphism 3316G>A (Ala4Thr) in the NADH dehydrogenase subunit 1 of complex I. On average, individuals with rare allele 3316A had 17- and 25-mg/dL higher FBG at baseline (Pempirical=0.01) and over 25 years of follow-up (Pempirical=0.007). Our findings provide the first evidence of putative association of variants in the mitochondrial genome with systolic BP and FBG in the general population. Replication in independent samples, however, is needed to confirm these putative associations.
Hypertension
2012 Oct
PMID:Association of genetic variation in the mitochondrial genome with blood pressure and metabolic traits. 2294 35
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