Elevated dietary sodium intake exacerbates myocardial hypertrophy associated with cardiac-specific overproduction of angiotensin II

Introduction/hypothesis Cardiac hypertrophy is an independent risk factor predictive of cardiovascular disease and is significantly associated with morbidity and mortality. The mechanism by which angiotensin II (Ang II) and dietary sodium exert additive effects on the development of cardiac hypertro...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Enzo R Porrello, Catherine E Huggins, Claire L Curl, Andrea A Domenighetti, Thierry Pedrazzini, Leanne MD Delbridge, Trefor O Morgan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publications 2004-12-01
Series:Journal of the Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3317/jraas.2004.036
_version_ 1797284466447613952
author Enzo R Porrello
Catherine E Huggins
Claire L Curl
Andrea A Domenighetti
Thierry Pedrazzini
Leanne MD Delbridge
Trefor O Morgan
author_facet Enzo R Porrello
Catherine E Huggins
Claire L Curl
Andrea A Domenighetti
Thierry Pedrazzini
Leanne MD Delbridge
Trefor O Morgan
author_sort Enzo R Porrello
collection DOAJ
description Introduction/hypothesis Cardiac hypertrophy is an independent risk factor predictive of cardiovascular disease and is significantly associated with morbidity and mortality. The mechanism by which angiotensin II (Ang II) and dietary sodium exert additive effects on the development of cardiac hypertrophy is unclear. The goal of this study was to evaluate the hypothesis that, where there is a genetic predisposition to Ang II-dependent hypertrophy, there is also an increased susceptibility to sodium-induced hypertrophy mediated by AT 1 -receptor expression. Methods Diets of low sodium (LS, 0.3% w:w) and high sodium (HS, 4.0% w:w) content were fed to adult (age 25 weeks) control wild-type mice (WT) and to weeks) control wild-type mice (WT) and to transgenic mice exhibiting cardiac specific overexpression of angiotensinogen (TG). At the conclusion of a 40-day dietary treatment period, cardiac tissue weights were compared and the relative expression levels of Ang II receptor subtypes (AT 1A and AT 2 ) were evaluated using RT-PCR. Results WT and TG mice fed HS and LS diets maintained comparable weight gains during the treatment period. The normalised heart weights of TG mice were elevated compared to WT, and the extent of the increase was greater for mice maintained on the HS diet treatments (WT 12% vs. TG 41% increase in cardiac weight index). While a similar pattern of growth was observed for ventricular tissues, the atrial weight parameters demonstrated an additional significant effect of dietary sodium intake on tissue weight, independent of animal genetic type. No differences in the relative (GAPDH normalised) expression levels of AT 1A - and AT 2 -receptor mRNA were observed between diet or animal genetic groups. Conclusion This study demonstrates that, where there is a pre-existing genetic condition of Ang II-dependent cardiac hypertrophy, the pro-growth effect of elevated dietary sodium intake is selectively augmented. In TG and WT mice, this effect was evident with a relatively short dietary treatment intervention (40 days). Evaluation of the levels of Ang II receptor mRNA further demonstrated that this differential growth response was not associated with an altered relative expression of either AT 1A - or AT 2 -receptor subtypes. The cellular mechanistic bases for this specific Ang II-dietary sodium interaction remain to be elucidated.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T17:49:25Z
format Article
id doaj.art-01c56f277fa8438fbc76de8d2bdbe0c9
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1470-3203
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T17:49:25Z
publishDate 2004-12-01
publisher SAGE Publications
record_format Article
series Journal of the Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System
spelling doaj.art-01c56f277fa8438fbc76de8d2bdbe0c92024-03-02T14:19:29ZengSAGE PublicationsJournal of the Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System1470-32032004-12-01510.3317/jraas.2004.036Elevated dietary sodium intake exacerbates myocardial hypertrophy associated with cardiac-specific overproduction of angiotensin IIEnzo R PorrelloCatherine E HugginsClaire L CurlAndrea A DomenighettiThierry PedrazziniLeanne MD DelbridgeTrefor O MorganIntroduction/hypothesis Cardiac hypertrophy is an independent risk factor predictive of cardiovascular disease and is significantly associated with morbidity and mortality. The mechanism by which angiotensin II (Ang II) and dietary sodium exert additive effects on the development of cardiac hypertrophy is unclear. The goal of this study was to evaluate the hypothesis that, where there is a genetic predisposition to Ang II-dependent hypertrophy, there is also an increased susceptibility to sodium-induced hypertrophy mediated by AT 1 -receptor expression. Methods Diets of low sodium (LS, 0.3% w:w) and high sodium (HS, 4.0% w:w) content were fed to adult (age 25 weeks) control wild-type mice (WT) and to weeks) control wild-type mice (WT) and to transgenic mice exhibiting cardiac specific overexpression of angiotensinogen (TG). At the conclusion of a 40-day dietary treatment period, cardiac tissue weights were compared and the relative expression levels of Ang II receptor subtypes (AT 1A and AT 2 ) were evaluated using RT-PCR. Results WT and TG mice fed HS and LS diets maintained comparable weight gains during the treatment period. The normalised heart weights of TG mice were elevated compared to WT, and the extent of the increase was greater for mice maintained on the HS diet treatments (WT 12% vs. TG 41% increase in cardiac weight index). While a similar pattern of growth was observed for ventricular tissues, the atrial weight parameters demonstrated an additional significant effect of dietary sodium intake on tissue weight, independent of animal genetic type. No differences in the relative (GAPDH normalised) expression levels of AT 1A - and AT 2 -receptor mRNA were observed between diet or animal genetic groups. Conclusion This study demonstrates that, where there is a pre-existing genetic condition of Ang II-dependent cardiac hypertrophy, the pro-growth effect of elevated dietary sodium intake is selectively augmented. In TG and WT mice, this effect was evident with a relatively short dietary treatment intervention (40 days). Evaluation of the levels of Ang II receptor mRNA further demonstrated that this differential growth response was not associated with an altered relative expression of either AT 1A - or AT 2 -receptor subtypes. The cellular mechanistic bases for this specific Ang II-dietary sodium interaction remain to be elucidated.https://doi.org/10.3317/jraas.2004.036
spellingShingle Enzo R Porrello
Catherine E Huggins
Claire L Curl
Andrea A Domenighetti
Thierry Pedrazzini
Leanne MD Delbridge
Trefor O Morgan
Elevated dietary sodium intake exacerbates myocardial hypertrophy associated with cardiac-specific overproduction of angiotensin II
Journal of the Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System
title Elevated dietary sodium intake exacerbates myocardial hypertrophy associated with cardiac-specific overproduction of angiotensin II
title_full Elevated dietary sodium intake exacerbates myocardial hypertrophy associated with cardiac-specific overproduction of angiotensin II
title_fullStr Elevated dietary sodium intake exacerbates myocardial hypertrophy associated with cardiac-specific overproduction of angiotensin II
title_full_unstemmed Elevated dietary sodium intake exacerbates myocardial hypertrophy associated with cardiac-specific overproduction of angiotensin II
title_short Elevated dietary sodium intake exacerbates myocardial hypertrophy associated with cardiac-specific overproduction of angiotensin II
title_sort elevated dietary sodium intake exacerbates myocardial hypertrophy associated with cardiac specific overproduction of angiotensin ii
url https://doi.org/10.3317/jraas.2004.036
work_keys_str_mv AT enzorporrello elevateddietarysodiumintakeexacerbatesmyocardialhypertrophyassociatedwithcardiacspecificoverproductionofangiotensinii
AT catherineehuggins elevateddietarysodiumintakeexacerbatesmyocardialhypertrophyassociatedwithcardiacspecificoverproductionofangiotensinii
AT clairelcurl elevateddietarysodiumintakeexacerbatesmyocardialhypertrophyassociatedwithcardiacspecificoverproductionofangiotensinii
AT andreaadomenighetti elevateddietarysodiumintakeexacerbatesmyocardialhypertrophyassociatedwithcardiacspecificoverproductionofangiotensinii
AT thierrypedrazzini elevateddietarysodiumintakeexacerbatesmyocardialhypertrophyassociatedwithcardiacspecificoverproductionofangiotensinii
AT leannemddelbridge elevateddietarysodiumintakeexacerbatesmyocardialhypertrophyassociatedwithcardiacspecificoverproductionofangiotensinii
AT treforomorgan elevateddietarysodiumintakeexacerbatesmyocardialhypertrophyassociatedwithcardiacspecificoverproductionofangiotensinii