Background: Malignant hypertension is a life-threatening condition, and its pathophysiology is still poorly understood. The present study was designed to evaluate the role of interaction of the renin-angiotensin system with 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (20-HETE), a product of cytochrome P450 (CYP)-dependent ω-hydroxylase pathway, in the pathophysiology of angiotensin II (ANG II)-dependent malignant hypertension in Cyp1a1-Ren-2 transgenic rats.
Methods: Malignant hypertension was induced by 12 days׳ dietary administration of 0.3 % indole-3-carbinol (I3C), a natural xenobiotic that activates a mouse renin gene. We hypothesized that chronic administration of fenofibrate, 190mg/kg body weight, a lipid-lowering drug, should increase renal production of 20-HETE, a tubular transport inhibitor; an expected increase in sodium excretion would oppose the development of ANG II-dependent malignant hypertension. Blood pressure was monitored by radiotelemetry, and at the end of the experiment rats were prepared for renal functional studies to evaluate in vivo the pressure-natriuresis relationship in response to stepwise reductions in renal arterial pressure (RAP).
Results: In I3C-induced rats, the treatment with fenofibrate significantly attenuated hypertension and improved the slope of the pressure-natriuresis relationship. Although fenofibrate treatment increased kidney gene and protein expression of CYP4A1, a major isoform responsible for 20-HETE formation, it did not increase renal 20-HETE concentration. On the contrary, fenofibrate treatment significantly suppressed renin gene expression, plasma renin activity and plasma and kidney ANG II levels.
Conclusions: Fenofibrate treatment significantly attenuated the course of malignant hypertension in I3C-induced CYP1a1-Ren-2 transgenic rats, and the mechanism responsible for antihypertensive action was fenofibrate-induced suppression of renin-angiotensin system activity.
Keywords: 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid; Cytochrome P450 metabolites; Malignant hypertension; Renin-angiotensin system.
Copyright © 2016 Southern Society for Clinical Investigation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.