Deletion of the myeloid endothelin-B receptor confers long-term protection from angiotensin II-mediated kidney, eye and vessel injury.

Kidney Int

Paris Cardiovascular Research Centre-PARCC, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Université de Paris, Paris, France; University/BHF Centre of Research Excellence, University of Edinburgh, The Queen's Medical Research Institute, Edinburgh, UK. Electronic address:

Published: November 2020

The endothelin system may be an important player in hypertensive end-organ injury as endothelin-1 increases blood pressure and is pro-inflammatory. The immune system is emerging as an important regulator of blood pressure and we have shown that the early hypertensive response to angiotensin-II infusion was amplified in mice deficient of myeloid endothelin-B (ET) receptors (LysM-CreEdnrblox/lox). Hypothesizing that these mice would display enhanced organ injury, we gave angiotensin-II to LysM-CreEdnrblox/lox and littermate controls (Ednrblox/lox) for six weeks. Unexpectedly, LysM-CreEdnrblox/lox mice were significantly protected from organ injury, with less proteinuria, glomerulosclerosis and inflammation of the kidney compared to controls. In the eye, LysM-CreEdnrblox/lox mice had fewer retinal hemorrhages, less microglial activation and less vessel rarefaction. Cardiac remodeling and dysfunction were similar in both groups at week six but LysM-CreEdnrblox/lox mice had better endothelial function. Although blood pressure was initially higher in LysM-CreEdnrblox/lox mice, this was not sustained. A natriuretic switch at about two weeks, due to enhanced ET signaling in the kidney, induced a hypertensive reversal. By week six, blood pressure was lower in LysM-CreEdnrblox/lox mice than in controls. At six weeks, macrophages from LysM-CreEdnrblox/lox mice were more anti-inflammatory and had greater phagocytic ability compared to the macrophages of Ednrblox/lox mice. Thus, myeloid cell ET receptor signaling drives this injury both through amplifying hypertension and by inflammatory polarization of macrophages.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7652550PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.kint.2020.05.042DOI Listing

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Deletion of the myeloid endothelin-B receptor confers long-term protection from angiotensin II-mediated kidney, eye and vessel injury.

Kidney Int

November 2020

Paris Cardiovascular Research Centre-PARCC, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Université de Paris, Paris, France; University/BHF Centre of Research Excellence, University of Edinburgh, The Queen's Medical Research Institute, Edinburgh, UK. Electronic address:

The endothelin system may be an important player in hypertensive end-organ injury as endothelin-1 increases blood pressure and is pro-inflammatory. The immune system is emerging as an important regulator of blood pressure and we have shown that the early hypertensive response to angiotensin-II infusion was amplified in mice deficient of myeloid endothelin-B (ET) receptors (LysM-CreEdnrblox/lox). Hypothesizing that these mice would display enhanced organ injury, we gave angiotensin-II to LysM-CreEdnrblox/lox and littermate controls (Ednrblox/lox) for six weeks.

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