Temporal changes in cardiac oxidative stress, inflammation and remodeling induced by exercise in hypertension: Role for local angiotensin II reduction.
Sebastião D SilvaZaira P JaraRoseli PeresLarissa S LimaCristóforo ScavoneAugusto C MontezanoRhian M TouyzDulce E CasariniLisete C MicheliniPublished in: PloS one (2017)
Exercise training reduces renin-angiotensin system (RAS) activation, decreases plasma and tissue oxidative stress and inflammation in hypertension. However, the temporal nature of these phenomena in response to exercise is unknown. We sought to determine in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and age-matched WKY controls the weekly effects of training on blood pressure (BP), plasma and left ventricle (LV) Ang II and Ang-(1-7) content (HPLC), LV oxidative stress (DHE staining), gene and protein expression (qPCR and WB) of pro-inflammatory cytokines, antioxidant enzymes and their consequence on hypertension-induced cardiac remodeling. SHR and WKY were submitted to aerobic training (T) or maintained sedentary (S) for 8 weeks; measurements were made at weeks 0, 1, 2, 4 and 8. Hypertension-induced cardiac hypertrophy was accompanied by acute plasma Ang II increase with amplified responses during the late phase of LV hypertrophy. Similar pattern was observed for oxidative stress markers, TNF alpha and interleukin-1β, associated with cardiomyocytes' diameter enlargement and collagen deposition. SHR-T exhibited prompt and marked decrease in LV Ang II content (T1 vs T4 in WKY-T), normalized oxidative stress (T2), augmented antioxidant defense (T4) and reduced both collagen deposition and inflammatory profile (T8), without changing cardiomyocytes' diameter and LV hypertrophy. These changes were accompanied by decreased plasma Ang II content (T2-T4) and reduced BP (T8). SHR-T and WKY-T showed parallel increases in LV and plasma Ang-(1-7) content. Our data indicate that early training-induced downregulation of LV ACE-AngII-AT1 receptor axis is a crucial mechanism to reduce oxidative/pro-inflammatory profile and improve antioxidant defense in SHR-T, showing in addition this effect precedes plasma RAS deactivation.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- angiotensin ii
- diabetic rats
- blood pressure
- angiotensin converting enzyme
- dna damage
- high glucose
- vascular smooth muscle cells
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- induced apoptosis
- physical activity
- hypertensive patients
- high intensity
- virtual reality
- gene expression
- heart rate
- left ventricular
- skeletal muscle
- ms ms
- drug induced
- anti inflammatory
- gestational age
- cell proliferation
- liver failure
- intensive care unit
- genome wide
- pulmonary arterial hypertension
- insulin resistance
- atrial fibrillation
- copy number
- pulmonary hypertension
- type diabetes
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- data analysis
- solid phase extraction
- coronary artery
- tissue engineering