Background: Acute exposure to high altitude stimulates free radical formation in lowlanders, yet whether this persists during chronic exposure in healthy, well-adapted and maladapted highlanders suffering from chronic mountain sickness (CMS) remains to be established.
Methods: Oxidative-nitrosative stress (as determined by the presence of the biomarkers ascorbate radical [A •- ], via electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, and nitrite [NO 2 2 ], via ozone-based chemiluminescence) was assessed in venous blood of 25 male highlanders in Bolivia living at 3,600 m with CMS (n 5 13, CMS 1 ) and without CMS (n 5 12, CMS 2 ). Twelve age- and activity-matched, healthy, male lowlanders were examined at sea level and during acute hypoxia.
Background: Assisted reproductive technology (ART) involves the manipulation of early embryos at a time when they may be particularly vulnerable to external disturbances. Environmental influences during the embryonic and fetal development influence the individual's susceptibility to cardiovascular disease, raising concerns about the potential consequences of ART on the long-term health of the offspring.
Methods And Results: We assessed systemic (flow-mediated dilation of the brachial artery, pulse-wave velocity, and carotid intima-media thickness) and pulmonary (pulmonary artery pressure at high altitude by Doppler echocardiography) vascular function in 65 healthy children born after ART and 57 control children.
Background: Chronic mountain sickness (CMS) is a major public health problem characterized by exaggerated hypoxemia and erythrocytosis. In more advanced stages, patients with CMS often present with functional and structural changes of the pulmonary circulation, but there is little information on the systemic circulation. In patients with diseases associated with chronic hypoxemia at low altitude, systemic vascular function is altered.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol
July 2011
Insults during the fetal period predispose the offspring to systemic cardiovascular disease, but little is known about the pulmonary circulation and the underlying mechanisms. Maternal undernutrition during pregnancy may represent a model to investigate underlying mechanisms, because it is associated with systemic vascular dysfunction in the offspring in animals and humans. In rats, restrictive diet during pregnancy (RDP) increases oxidative stress in the placenta.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Adverse events in utero may predispose to cardiovascular disease in adulthood. The underlying mechanisms are unknown. During preeclampsia, vasculotoxic factors are released into the maternal circulation by the diseased placenta.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObesity and insulin resistance represent a problem of utmost clinical significance worldwide. Insulin-resistant states are characterized by the inability of insulin to induce proper signal transduction leading to defective glucose uptake in skeletal muscle tissue and impaired insulin-induced vasodilation. In various pathophysiological models, melatonin interacts with crucial molecules of the insulin signaling pathway, but its effects on glucose homeostasis are not known.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe specific sensitization of tumor cells to the apoptotic response induced by genotoxins is a promising way of increasing the efficacy of chemotherapies. The RasGAP-derived fragment N2, while not regulating apoptosis in normal cells, potently sensitizes tumor cells to cisplatin- and other genotoxin-induced cell death. Here we show that fragment N2 in living cells is mainly located in the cytoplasm and only minimally associated with specific organelles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCx40-deficient mice (Cx40-/-) are hypertensive due to increased renin secretion. We evaluated the renal expression of neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) and cyclooxygenases COX-1 and COX-2, three macula densa enzymes. The levels of nNOS were increased in kidneys of Cx40-/- mice, as well as in those of wild-type (WT) mice subjected to the two-kidney one-clip model of hypertension.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeroxynitrite synthesis is increased in insulin resistant animals and humans. Peroxynitirite-induced nitration of insulin signalling proteins impairs insulin action in vitro, but the role of peroxynitrite in the pathogenesis of insulin resistance in vivo is not known. We therefore assessed the effects of a 1-week treatment with the peroxynitrite decomposition catalyst FeTPPS on insulin sensitivity in insulin resistant high fat diet-fed (HFD) and control mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMetabolic syndrome is a constellation of major risk factors for cardiovascular disease. In affected individuals with this syndrome, the independent contribution of low high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol and increased triglyceride levels to the development of atherosclerosis remains to be clarified. We assessed the relationship between these 2 parameters and several surrogate markers for atherosclerosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Recent observations indicate that the delivery of nitric oxide by endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) is not only critical for metabolic homeostasis, but could also be important for mitochondrial biogenesis, a key organelle for free fatty acid (FFA) oxidation and energy production. Because mice deficient for the gene of eNOS (eNOS(-/-)) have increased triglycerides and FFA levels, in addition to hypertension and insulin resistance, we hypothesized that these knockout mice may have decreased energy expenditure and defective beta-oxidation.
Research Design And Methods: Several markers of mitochondrial activity were assessed in C57BL/6J wild-type or eNOS(-/-) mice including the energy expenditure and oxygen consumption by indirect calorimetry, in vitro beta-oxidation in isolated mitochondria from skeletal muscle, and expression of genes involved in fatty acid oxidation.
Corticosteroids (aldosterone, cortisol/corticosterone) exert direct functional effects on cardiomyocytes. However, gene networks activated by corticosteroids in cardiomyocytes, as well as the involvement of the mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) vs the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) in these effects, remain largely unknown. Here we characterized the corticosteroid-dependent transcriptome in primary culture of neonatal mouse cardiomyocytes treated with 10(-6) M aldosterone, a concentration predicted to occupy both MR and GR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase (JNK) pathway of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling cascade regulates cell function and survival after stress stimulation. Equally robust studies reported dichotomous results suggesting both protective and detrimental effects of JNK during myocardial ischemia-reperfusion (I/R). The lack of a highly specific JNK inhibitor contributed to this controversy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProtein kinases are directly implicated in many human diseases; therefore, kinase inhibitors show great promises as new therapeutic drugs. In an effort to facilitate the screening and the characterization of kinase inhibitors, a novel application of the AlphaScreen technology was developed to monitor JNK activity from (1) purified kinase preparations and (2) endogenous kinase from cell lysates preactivated with different cytokines. The authors confirmed that both adenosine triphosphate (ATP) competitive as well as peptide-based JNK inhibitors were able to block the activity of both recombinant and HepG2 endogenous JNK activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, obesity and smoking are highly prevalent among patients with familial premature coronary artery disease (FP-CAD). Whether these risk factors equally affect other family members remains unknown.
Methods: We examined 222 FP-CAD patients, 158 unaffected sibs, 197 offspring and 94 spouses in 108 FP-CAD families (> or = 2 sibs having survived CAD diagnosed before age 51 (M)/56 (F)), and compared them to population controls.
Objective: Intimal hyperplasia is a vascular remodelling process that occurs after a vascular injury. The mechanisms involved in intimal hyperplasia are proliferation, dedifferentiation, and migration of medial smooth muscle cells towards the subintimal space. We postulated that gap junctions, which coordinate physiologic processes such as cell growth and differentiation, might participate in the development of intimal hyperplasia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe emergence of multicellular organisms has necessitated the development of mechanisms for interactions between adjacent and distant cells. A consistent feature of this network is the expression of gap junction channels between the secretory cells of all glands so far investigated in vertebrates. Here, we reviewed the distribution of the gap junctions proteins, named connexins, in a few mammalian glands, and discussed the recent evidence pointing to the participation of these proteins in the functioning of endocrine and exocrine cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGap junctions are highly conserved structures that provide cells with a direct pathway for sharing ions, nutrients and other intracellular messengers, thus participating to the homeostasis of various tissues. Research on transgenic mice has revealed a major involvement of gap junctions proteins (connexins) in several cellular functions. At the same time, an increasing number of mutations of connexin genes has been linked to several hereditary diseases, including peripheral neuropathies, skin diseases, genetic deafness, cataracts and some forms of epilepsy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: A distinctive feature of sepsis is a pleiotropic modification of membrane protein expression in the vascular endothelium, associated with diminished endothelium-dependent relaxation (endothelial dysfunction). In cultured endothelial cells, inflammatory stimuli alter expression of connexins (Cx), proteins that make up the gap junctions responsible for intercellular communication. In the present study, we tested whether the polymicrobial sepsis induced by cecal ligation and perforation in the rat alters the expression of the connexins present in the vascular endothelium (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPulmonary oedema results from an imbalance between the forces driving fluid into the airspace and the biological mechanisms for its removal. In mice lacking the alpha-subunit of the amiloride-sensitive sodium channel (alphaENaC(-/-)), impaired sodium transport-mediated lung liquid clearance at birth results in neonatal death. Transgenic expression of alphaENaC driven by a cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoter (alphaENaC(-/-)Tg+) rescues the lethal pulmonary phenotype, but only partially restores respiratory sodium transport in vitro.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNitric oxide (NO) plays a major role in the regulation of cardiovascular and metabolic homeostasis, as evidenced by insulin resistance and arterial hypertension in endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) null mice. Extrapolation of these findings to humans is difficult, however, because eNOS gene deficiency has not been reported. eNOS gene polymorphism and impaired NO synthesis, however, have been reported in several cardiovascular disease states and could predispose to insulin resistance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Since the management of atrial fibrillation may be difficult in the individual patient, our purpose was to develop simple clinical recommendations to help the general internist manage this common clinical problem.
Data Sources: Systematic review of the literature with evaluation of data-related evidence and framing of graded recommendations.
Data Synthesis: Atrial fibrillation affects some 1% of the population in Western countries and is linked to a significant increase in morbidity and mortality.
Gap junction channels provide an enclosed conduit for direct exchanges of signalling molecules, including ions and small metabolites between cells. This system of communication allows cells to monitor the functional state of their neighbours, and is rapidly modulated to continuously adapt to the immediate needs of groups of coupled cells. In the major arteries, endothelial cells may express three connexins isotypes, namely Connexin 37 (Cx37), Cx40 and Cx43, whereas the underlying smooth muscle cells may express Cx37, Cx40, Cx43 and Cx45.
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