The moderately pyridoxine (vitamin B6)-deficient male rat was introduced by us as an animal model (B6DHT) for the study of hypertension. Hypertension in this rat is associated with increased sympathetic stimulation. Arterial segments from B6DHT rats maintained a higher resting tone. The influx of 45calcium into intracellular compartment of the vascular smooth muscle of the caudate artery of B6DHT rats was also enhanced. Administration of pyridoxine attenuated the hypertension in B6DHT rats as well as in genetic or dietary-induced moderately hypertensive conditions such as in the Zucker obese rat and sucrose or low calcium-fed rats. However, pyridoxine did not have any effect on the spontaneously hypertensive rat. All classes of calcium channel blockers were effective in lowering the systolic blood pressure of B6DHT rats. The increased in vitro influx of 45calcium into intracellular compartment of artery segments of B6DHT rats as well as the BAY K 8644-induced influx of 45calcium into artery segments from normal rats were blocked by pyridoxal phosphate as well as by dihydropyridine-sensitive calcium channel blockers (DHP). Pyridoxal phosphate (PLP) in vitro enhances the binding of calcium channel antagonists to membrane preparations from vascular tissue. PLP corrects the membrane abnormality in responsive hypertensive conditions and thus, could be an endogenous modulator of DHP-sensitive calcium channels.
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Mol Cell Biochem
November 1998
Institute of Cardiovascular Sciences, St. Boniface General Hospital Research Centre, Winnipeg, Canada.
The moderately pyridoxine (vitamin B6)-deficient male rat was introduced by us as an animal model (B6DHT) for the study of hypertension. Hypertension in this rat is associated with increased sympathetic stimulation. Arterial segments from B6DHT rats maintained a higher resting tone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Hypertens
December 1993
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada.
Objective: To compare the acute hypotensive effects of various calcium channel modulators in vitamin B6-deficient hypertensive (B6DHT) rats.
Methods: Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats were fed a vitamin B6-deficient diet for 7-10 weeks, during which systolic blood pressure (SBP) was measured in the B6DHT and control rats, using tail-cuff plethysmography. The effects of the calcium antagonists nifedipine, verapamil, diltiazem and (-)-202-791 on SBP were determined in conscious B6DHT rats.
Clin Exp Hypertens
May 1993
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Manitoba, Faculty of Medicine, Winnipeg, Canada.
In the vitamin B6 deficiency-induced hypertensive (B6DHT) rat there is an increased influx of calcium into the vascular smooth muscle. Vitamers which possess vitamin B6 activity blocked the in vitro calcium influx into the caudal artery of B6DHT rats and the BAY K 8644-induced influx into artery segments from vitamin B6-supplemented (control) rats. BAY K 8644 did not increase further the calcium influx into caudal artery segments from B6DHT rats.
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