Loading…

Eplerenone Blocks Nongenomic Effects of Aldosterone on the Na super(+)/H super(+) Exchanger, Intracellular Ca super(2+) Levels, and Vasoconstriction in Mesenteric Resistance Vessels

There is increasing evidence for rapid nongenomic effects of aldosterone. Aldosterone has been demonstrated to alter intracellular pH and calcium in isolated cells. However, few studies have correlated these effects with aldosterone-mediated physiological responses. Therefore, we studied rapid effec...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Endocrinology (Philadelphia) 2005-03, Vol.146 (3), p.973-980
Main Authors: Michea, Luis, Delpiano, Ana M, Hitschfeld, Catalina, Lobos, Lorena, Lavandero, Sergio, Marusic, Elisa T
Format: Article
Language:English
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:There is increasing evidence for rapid nongenomic effects of aldosterone. Aldosterone has been demonstrated to alter intracellular pH and calcium in isolated cells. However, few studies have correlated these effects with aldosterone-mediated physiological responses. Therefore, we studied rapid effects of aldosterone on vascular reactivity, intracellular Ca super(2+), and pH in resistance vessels. Furthermore, we explored whether the new antimineralocorticoid drug eplerenone could effectively block nongenomic aldosterone-mediated effects. The vasoconstrictor action of aldosterone was examined directly by determining the diameter of small resistance mesenteric vessels (160-200 mu m resting diameter), simultaneously with intracellular pH or Ca super(2+). Aldosterone (10 nM) caused a rapid constriction of resistance vessels (8.1% +/-1.0% reduction in the diameter below control conditions, P < 0.05). Aldosterone potentiated phenylephrine-mediated constriction in small and large mesenteric vessels. Aldosterone induced a rapid increase of intracellular Ca super(2+) and cellular alkalinization. Vasoconstrictor action of aldosterone and nongenomic effects on the sodium-proton exchanger (NHE1) activity or intracellular Ca super(2+) responses was abolished by eplerenone. The vasoconstrictor response of aldosterone was related to phosphatidylinositol 3- kinase (PI3-K): the hormone decreased protein kinase B phosphorylation; pharmacological inhibition of PI3-K (10 mu M LY294002 or 1 mu M wortmannin) increased arterial contractility. Inhibitors of ERK 1/2 phosphorylation (15 mu M PD98059) had no effect on aldosterone-mediated vasoconstriction. Inhibition of protein kinase C with 1 mu M bi-sindolylmaleimide I and/or inhibition of NHE1 with 100 mu M amiloride abolished aldosterone vasoconstrictor action of resistance mesenteric arteries. We conclude that aldosterone-mediated increase in vascular tone is related to a nongenomic mechanism that involves protein kinase C, PI3-K, and NHE1 activity. Eplerenone is an effective blocker of nongenomic effects of aldosterone in vascular tissue.
ISSN:0013-7227