Effects of Voluntary Sodium Consumption during the Perinatal Period on Renal Mechanisms, Blood Pressure, and Vasopressin Responses after an Osmotic Challenge in Rats.
Cintia Y PorcariAgustina MacagnoAndré S MecawiAgustín AnastasíaXimena E CaeiroAndrea GodinoPublished in: Nutrients (2023)
Cardiovascular control is vulnerable to forced high sodium consumption during the per-inatal period, inducing programming effects, with anatomical and molecular changes at the kidney, brain, and vascular levels that increase basal and induce blood pressure. However, the program- ming effects of the natriophilia proper of the perinatal period on blood pressure control have not yet been elucidated. In order to evaluate this, we studied the effect of a sodium overload challenge (SO) on blood pressure response and kidney and brain gene expression in adult offspring exposed to voluntary hypertonic sodium consumption during the perinatal period (PM-NaCl group). Male PM-NaCl rats showed a more sustained increase in blood pressure after SO than controls (PM-Ctrol). They also presented a reduced number of glomeruli, decreased expression of TRPV1, and increased expression of At1a in the kidney cortex. The relative expression of heteronuclear vaso- pressin (AVP hnRNA) and AVP in the supraoptic nucleus was unchanged after SO in PM-NaCl in contrast to the increase observed in PM-Ctrol. The data indicate that the availability of a rich source of sodium during the perinatal period induces a long-term effect modifying renal, cardiovascular, and neuroendocrine responses implicated in the control of hydroelectrolyte homeostasis.
Keyphrases
- blood pressure
- particulate matter
- air pollution
- hypertensive patients
- poor prognosis
- polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
- gene expression
- heart rate
- heavy metals
- pregnant women
- water soluble
- dna methylation
- blood glucose
- long non coding rna
- white matter
- binding protein
- magnetic resonance
- resting state
- risk assessment
- deep learning
- magnetic resonance imaging
- spinal cord injury
- type diabetes
- electronic health record
- cerebral ischemia
- single molecule