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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Drugs used mainly for the treatment of
hypertension
, such as angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, can cause pancytopenia. The underlying cause of this side effect remains unknown. In the present study, long-term bone marrow cultures (LTBMCs) were utilized to evaluate the role of captopril (D-3-mercapto-2-methylpropionyl-L-proline), one of the potent
ACE
inhibitors, in regulating hematopoietic stem/progenitor cell proliferation. Captopril (10(-6) M final concentration) was added to LTBMCs at the beginning of the culture period and at weekly intervals for six weeks. There was no toxicity to the bone marrow cells as measured by the unchanged cell number in the nonadherent layer during the whole culture period, and there was an increased cellularity of the adherent layer at the end of the six weeks of treatment. However, captopril decreased the proportion of granulocyte-macrophage colony-forming cells (GM-CFCs) in S phase at weeks 2 and 3 as well as that of high proliferative potential colony-forming cells (HPP-CFCs) at week 3 in the nonadherent layer. There was no change in the kinetics of the GM-CFCs and HPP-CFCs present in the adherent layer. These results suggest that captopril causes myelosuppression by inhibiting hematopoietic cell proliferation of progenitor and stem cells rather than depleting cells of the bone marrow microenvironment.
...
PMID:Captopril inhibits the proliferation of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells in murine long-term bone marrow cultures. 1060 62
Inhibitors of angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE) are very efficacious in the potentiation of the actions of bradykinin (BK) and are able to provoke a B(2) receptor-mediated vasodilation even after desensitization of this receptor. Because this activity cannot be easily explained only by an inhibition of kinin degradation, direct interactions of
ACE
inhibitors with the B(2) receptor or its signal transduction have been hypothesized. To clarify the significance of degradation-independent potentiation, we studied the vasodilatory effects of BK and 2 degradation-resistant B(2) receptor agonists in the isolated rat heart, a model in which
ACE
and aminopeptidase P (APP) contribute equally to the degradation of BK. Coronary vasodilation to BK and to a peptidic (B6014) and a nonpeptidic (FR190997) degradation-resistant B(2) agonist was assessed in the presence or absence of the
ACE
inhibitor ramiprilat, the APP inhibitor mercaptoethanol, or both. Ramiprilat or mercaptoethanol induced leftward shifts in the BK dose-response curve (EC(50)=3.4 nmol/L) by a factor of 4.6 or 4.9, respectively. Combined inhibition of
ACE
and APP reduced the EC(50) of BK to 0.18 nmol/L (ie, by a factor of 19) but potentiated the activity of B6014 (EC(50)=1.9 nmol/L) only weakly without altering that of FR190997 (EC(50)=0.34 nmol/L). Desensitization of B(2) receptors was induced by the administration of BK (0.2 micromol/L) or FR190997 (0.1 micromol/L) for 30 minutes; the vascular reactivity to ramiprilat or increasing doses of BK was tested thereafter. After desensitization with BK, but not FR190997, an additional application of ramiprilat provoked a B(2) receptor-mediated vasodilation. High BK concentrations were still effective at the desensitized receptor. The process of desensitization was not altered by ramiprilat. These results show that in this model, all potentiating actions of
ACE
inhibitors on kinin-induced vasodilation are exclusively related to the reduction in BK breakdown and are equivalently provoked by APP inhibition. The desensitization of B(2) receptors is overcome by increasing BK concentrations, either directly or through the inhibition of
ACE
. These observations do not suggest any direct interactions of
ACE
inhibitors with the B(2) receptor or its signal transduction but point to a very high activity of BK degradation in the vicinity of the B(2) receptor in combination with a stimulation-dependent reduction in receptor affinity.
Hypertension
2000 Jan
PMID:Potentiation of the vascular response to kinins by inhibition of myocardial kininases. 1064 71
The renin-angiotensin system plays a critical role in the control of blood pressure (BP), and its hyperactivity is associated with the development and maintenance of
hypertension
. Although traditional pharmacological therapies targeted toward the inhibition of the renin-angiotensin system are effective in the control of this disease, they pose significant limitations. We used an antisense gene delivery strategy to circumvent these limitations and established that a single intracardiac administration of angiotensin type 1 receptor antisense (AT(1)R-AS) causes permanent prevention of
hypertension
in the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR), an animal model of primary human
hypertension
. Our objectives in this study were 2-fold: to determine (1) whether the targeting of angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE) mRNA by a similar antisense strategy would prevent the SHR from developing
hypertension
and (2) whether the antihypertensive phenotype is transmitted to the offspring from the antisense-treated parents. Administration of a retroviral vector containing
ACE
antisense (LNSV-
ACE
-AS) caused a modest yet significant attenuation of high BP ( approximately 15+/-2 mm Hg) exclusively in the SHR. This was associated with a complete prevention of cardiac and renovascular pathophysiological alterations that are characteristic of
hypertension
. Like their parents, the F(1) generation offspring of the LNSV-
ACE
-AS-treated SHR expressed lower BP, decreased cardiac hypertrophy, and normalization of renal arterial excitation-coupling compared with offspring derived from the LNSV-
ACE
-tS (truncated sense)-treated SHR. In addition, the endothelial dysfunction commonly observed in the SHR renal arterioles was significantly prevented in both parents and offspring of the LNSV-
ACE
-AS-treated SHR. Polymerase chain reaction followed by Southern analysis revealed that the
ACE
-AS was integrated into the SHR genome and transmitted to the offspring. These observations suggest that transmission of
ACE
-AS by retroviral vector may be responsible for the transference of normotensive phenotypes in the SHR offspring.
Hypertension
2000 Jan
PMID:Angiotensin I-converting enzyme antisense gene therapy causes permanent antihypertensive effects in the SHR. 1461 46
The renin-angiotensin system plays a critical role in the control of blood pressure, and its hyperactivity is associated with the development of human primary hypertension. Because low-dose angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors cause small reductions in blood pressure that are associated with the complete reversal of altered vascular pathophysiology, our objective in this study was to determine whether
ACE
antisense (ACE-AS) gene delivery prevents alterations in renal vascular physiology in the parents and F(1) offspring of AS-treated spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). A single bolus intracardiac injection of
ACE
-AS (2x10(8) colony-forming units) in SHR neonates caused a modest (18+/-3 mm Hg, n=7 to 9) lowering of blood pressure, which was maintained in the F(1) generation offspring (n=7 to 9). Alterations in renal vascular reactivity, electrophysiology, and [Ca(2+)](i) homeostasis are underlying mechanisms associated with the development and establishment of
hypertension
. Renal resistance arterioles from truncated
ACE
sense-treated SHR showed a significantly enhanced contractile response to KCl and phenylephrine (n=24 rings from 6 animals, P<0.01) and significantly attenuated acetylcholine-induced relaxations (n=24 rings from 6 animals, P<0.01) compared with arterioles from
ACE
-AS-treated SHR. In addition, compared with cells dissociated from arterioles of
ACE
-AS-treated SHR, cells from truncated
ACE
sense-treated animal vessels had a resting membrane potential that was 22+/-4 mV more depolarized (n=38, P<0.01), an enhanced L-type Ca(2+) current density (2.2+/-0.3 versus 1.2+/-0.2 pA/pF, n=23, P<0.01), a decreased Kv current density (16.2+/-1.3 versus 5.4+/-2.2 pA/pF, n=34, P<0.01), and increased Ang II-dependent changes in [Ca(2+)](i) (n=142, P<0.01). Similar effects of
ACE
-AS treatment were observed in the F(1) offspring. These results demonstrate that
ACE
-AS permanently prevents alterations in renal vascular pathophysiology in spite of the modest effect that
ACE
-AS had on
high blood pressure
in SHR.
Hypertension
2000 Jan
PMID:Angiotensin I-converting enzyme antisense prevents altered renal vascular reactivity, but not high blood pressure, in spontaneously hypertensive rats. 1461 46
FMRFamide, a cardioexcitatory neuropeptide, directly activates a newly cloned amiloride-sensitive sodium channel that is expressed specifically in the brain and blocked by benzamil hydrochloride. In the present study, we investigated the effects of short- and long-term intracerebroventricular infusion of FMRFamide on arterial pressure, sympathetic activity, vasopressin release, and brain renin-angiotensin system genes in rats and studied the role of FMRFamide-activated brain sodium channels in salt-sensitive
hypertension
. The intracerebroventricular preinjection of FMRFamide and subsequent intracerebroventricular infusion of 0.15 mol/L NaCl increased mean arterial pressure (FMRFamide: 30 nmol/kg +13+/-2.6 mm Hg, P<0.01; 100 nmol/kg +21+/-1.8 mm Hg, P<0.01), heart rate, abdominal sympathetic activity, and plasma vasopressin concentration compared with vehicle. The intracerebroventricular copreinjection with either benzamil or CV-11974 abolished these increases. In rats administered a high-salt diet (8% NaCl), the continuous intracerebroventricular infusion of FMRFamide (50 and 200 nmol. kg(-1). d(-1)) for 5 days increased mean arterial pressure, heart rate, urinary excretion of vasopressin and norepinephrine, and mRNAs of renin,
angiotensin I-converting enzyme
, and angiotensin II type 1 receptor in hypothalamus and brain stem compared with vehicle. These increases were abolished by intracerebroventricular coinfusion of benzamil. In rats administered a low-salt diet (0.3% NaCl), however, increases in these variables were smaller than those in rats receiving a high-salt diet. Together, these findings suggest that brain FMRFamide-activated sodium channels may be involved in the mechanism of salt-sensitive
hypertension
through regulation of the brain renin-angiotensin system.
Hypertension
2000 Jan
PMID:Role of FMRFamide-activated brain sodium channel in salt-sensitive hypertension. 1064 39
We analyzed the association of 2 biallelic polymorphisms of CYP11B2 (P450c11AS) gene (1 in the Lys(173)Arg of exon 3 and the other in the promoter at position -344T/C) with
hypertension
in 73 hypertensive patients and 134 normotensive subjects. The association between low-renin
hypertension
and angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE) gene was also analyzed. An elevated ratio of plasma aldosterone concentration to plasma renin activity was used to identify low-renin
hypertension
. Genotypes for CYP11B2 and
ACE
were determined through polymerase chain reactions. The Arg(173) allele frequency did not differ between hypertensive patients considered as 1 group (34%) and normotensive control subjects (37%). However, only 22% of 58 CYP11B2 alleles studied in 29 patients with low-renin
hypertension
were Arg(173) alleles, whereas the frequency of this allele was 41% in patients with normal- or high-renin
hypertension
(P=0.033). An analysis of the distribution of -344C and Arg(173) genotypes indicated that these 2 variants were in complete linkage disequilibrium: -344C was present in a subset of chromosomes carrying the Arg(173) (P<0.001 in low-renin
hypertension
). Therefore, the frequency of the -344C allele was low in the patients with low-renin
hypertension
compared with those with normal- or high-renin
hypertension
. Deletion (D) allele frequencies of the
ACE
gene were 31% in the patients with low-renin
hypertension
, 39% in the patients with normal- or high-renin
hypertension
, and 29% in normotensive control subjects. We detected an association between the CYP11B2 gene polymorphisms and low-renin
hypertension
with inappropriate elevation of aldosterone. The decreased frequencies of the Arg(173) and -344C variants in the CYP11B2 appear to be genetically linked to low-renin
hypertension
in the Japanese population studied.
Hypertension
2000 Mar
PMID:Lys(173)Arg and -344T/C variants of CYP11B2 in Japanese patients with low-renin hypertension. 1072 May 81
Angiotensinogen (AGT) and angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE) are heritable traits, but whether the environmental context influences heritability has not been examined. Known genetic factors explain only a portion of variation in AGT and
ACE
, and levels of both proteins are influenced by the environment. The African diaspora provides an opportunity to compare these traits in genetically related populations in contrasting environments. As part of a study of the genetics of
hypertension
, we examined families that included 1449 Nigerians and 1147 African Americans. Body mass index (weight [kg]/height [m](2)) was 21 kg/m(2) in Nigeria and 29 kg/m(2) in the United States, which is consistent with a large environmental contrast. AGT was considerably higher among African Americans (1919 versus 1396, P<0.01), whereas
ACE
was higher in Nigerians (630 versus 517, P<0.01). A household effect was observed among the Nigerian families (spouse correlations 0.30 for AGT, 0.18 for
ACE
), and correlations among first-degree relatives were large (0.42 to 0. 51 and 0.36 to 0.38 for AGT and
ACE
, respectively). Among African Americans, the familial aggregations of AGT and
ACE
were very limited, and the familial correlation for AGT was not different from zero. Heritability was 77% for AGT and 67% for
ACE
in Nigeria and 18% for AGT and
ACE
in the United States. The familial patterns of body mass index and blood pressure were similar among both family sets. In conclusion, less familial aggregation was observed for AGT and
ACE
in the United States than in Nigeria, most likely reflecting a greater random individual environmental effect on these traits. Variation in heritability of traits could influence the power of epidemiological studies to identify genetic effects.
Hypertension
2000 May
PMID:Heritability of angiotensin-converting enzyme and angiotensinogen: A comparison of US blacks and Nigerians. 1081 78
The aim of this study was to assess the antihypertensive activity of fasidotril, a dual inhibitor of neprilysin (NEP) and angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE), in various models of
hypertension
in rats (spontaneously hypertensive rats [SHR]; renovascular Goldblatt 2-kidney, 1-clip rats; and deoxycorticosterone acetate [DOCA]-salt hypertensive rats) and in patients with mild-to-moderate essential hypertension. Fasidotril treatment (100 mg/kg PO twice daily for 3 weeks) resulted in a progressive and sustained decrease in systolic blood pressure (-20 to -30 mm Hg) in SHR and Goldblatt rats compared with vehicle-treated rats and prevented the progressive rise in blood pressure in DOCA-salt hypertensive rats. After a 4-week placebo run-in period, 57 patients with essential hypertension were included in a randomized double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group study and received orally either fasidotril (100 mg twice daily) or placebo for 6 weeks. Blood pressure was measured during the 6 hours after the first intake and then at trough (12 hours after the last intake) on days 7, 28, and 42. The first dose of fasidotril had no significant effect on blood pressure. After 42 days, compared with placebo, fasidotril lowered supine systolic and diastolic blood pressures by 7.4/5.4 mm Hg and standing blood pressure by 7.6/6.8 mm Hg. Fasidotril, a dual NEP/
ACE
inhibitor, was an effective oral antihypertensive agent during chronic treatment in high-renin renovascular rats, normal-renin SHR, and low-renin DOCA-salt hypertensive rats and in patients with essential hypertension.
Hypertension
2000 May
PMID:Antihypertensive effects of fasidotril, a dual inhibitor of neprilysin and angiotensin-converting enzyme, in rats and humans. 1081 79
1. The effect of food collagen, cattle bone collagen-derived (CBC) peptides, on ovariectomy induced increases in blood pressure was examined in stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRSP). 2. Long-term administration of CBC peptides to ovariectomized SHRSP suppressed the
hypertension
compared with ovariectomized SHRSP fed standard chow. 3. The CBC peptides showed an inhibitory activity (IC50 = 40 microg/mL) for angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE) in vitro. Furthermore, pre-incubation of CBC peptides with gastrointestinal proteases did not change this inhibitory activity of CBC for
ACE
. 4. These results indicate that CBC peptides may prevent increases in blood pressure in ovariectomized SHRSP by a possible mechanism of an inhibitory action against
ACE
.
...
PMID:Antihypertensive effect of cattle bone collagen-derived peptides in ovariectomized stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats. 1083 Dec 46
The circulating levels of angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE) are linked with a 287-base pair insertion/deletion (I/D) polymorphism at intron 16 of the
ACE
gene. Thus, the homozygous deletion (D/D genotype) could cause chronic vasoconstriction, arterial
hypertension
and, possibly, coronary artery disease. Also, the increase in plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 level and impaired fibrinolysis were related with the D/D genotype. The D allele has been recently associated with venous thrombosis among African-American men as well as among patients that underwent elective total hip replacement. We assess the risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) linked with each genotype of the I/D
ACE
gene polymorphism in a Caucasian population by means of a case-control study. We genotyped the
ACE
gene in a series of 148 patients aged 45.0 +/- 16.0 years (range, 11-80 years), objectively diagnosed in our centre of deep-vein thrombosis or pulmonary embolism, and in 240 thrombosis-free subjects (25-75 years) from the same geographic area. The observed difference in D allele frequencies between patients (0.56) and controls (0.62) was nonsignificant overall; however, statistical significance (P = 0.05) was found by considering the recessive hypothesis (D/D versus I/ D + I/I) [odds ratio (OR) = 0.64, 95% confidence interval (CI95) = 0.42-0.99]. The OR was 0.88 (CI95 = 0.51-1.53; P = 0.65) for the dominant hypothesis (D/D + I/D versus I/I genotypes). The relative risk for the D allele was close to 1 for the dominant hypothesis, both considering gender and recurrent tendency; however, it was protective in men regarding the recessive hypothesis (OR = 0.53, CI95 = 0.29-0.97, P = 0.04). The I/D
ACE
allele distribution was similar among the 46 thrombophilic patients (antithrombin, protein C or protein S deficiencies, factor V R506Q, factor II G20210A or lupus anticoagulant). In conclusion, among (Spanish) Caucasians, this study does not support the hypothesis that the deletion allele (D) of the
ACE
gene could be a significant risk factor for VTE, being protective in men.
...
PMID:Risk of venous thromboembolism associated with the insertion/deletion polymorphism in the angiotensin-converting enzyme gene. 1093 9
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