Alpha1A- and Beta3-Adrenoceptors Interplay in Adipose Multipotent Mesenchymal Stromal Cells: A Novel Mechanism of Obesity-Driven Hypertension.
Vadim ChechekhinAnastasia IvanovaKonstantin Y KulebyakinVeronika Yu SysoevaDaria NaidaMikhail ArbatskyNataliya BasalovaMaxim KaragyaurMariya SkryabinaAnastasia Yu EfimenkoOlga GrigorievaNatalia I KalininaVsevolod TkachukPyotr A Tyurin-KuzminPublished in: Cells (2023)
Hypertension is a major risk factor for cardiovascular diseases, such as strokes and myocardial infarctions. Nearly 70% of hypertension onsets in adults can be attributed to obesity, primarily due to sympathetic overdrive and the dysregulated renin-angiotensin system. Sympathetic overdrive increases vasoconstriction via α1-adrenoceptor activation on vascular cells. Despite the fact that a sympathetic outflow increases in individuals with obesity, as a rule, there is a cohort of patients with obesity who do not develop hypertension. In this study, we investigated how adrenoceptors' expression and functioning in adipose tissue are affected by obesity-driven hypertension. Here, we demonstrated that α1A is a predominant isoform of α1-adrenoceptors expressed in the adipose tissue of patients with obesity, specifically by multipotent mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs). These cells respond to prolonged exposure to noradrenaline in the model of sympathetic overdrive through the elevation of α1A-adrenoceptor expression and signaling. The extent of MSCs' response to noradrenaline correlates with a patient's arterial hypertension. scRNAseq analysis revealed that in the model of sympathetic overdrive, the subpopulation of MSCs with contractile phenotype expanded significantly. Elevated α1A-adrenoceptor expression is triggered specifically by beta3-adrenoceptors. These data define a novel pathophysiological mechanism of obesity-driven hypertension by which noradrenaline targets MSCs to increase microvessel constrictor responsivity.
Keyphrases
- insulin resistance
- adipose tissue
- blood pressure
- metabolic syndrome
- weight loss
- high fat diet induced
- type diabetes
- weight gain
- arterial hypertension
- poor prognosis
- skeletal muscle
- mesenchymal stem cells
- high fat diet
- cardiovascular disease
- bone marrow
- heart failure
- body mass index
- umbilical cord
- high resolution
- oxidative stress
- binding protein
- atrial fibrillation
- case report
- cell death
- left ventricular
- coronary artery disease