Salt-sensitive (Rapp) rats from Envigo spontaneously develop accelerated hypertension independent of ovariectomy on a low-sodium diet.

Autor: Pai AV; Department of Biochemistry and Molecular and Cellular Biology, Georgetown University , Washington, District of Columbia., West CA; Department of Medicine, Georgetown University , Washington, District of Columbia., A de Souza AM; Department of Medicine, Georgetown University , Washington, District of Columbia., Cheng X; Center for Hypertension and Personalized Medicine, Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, University of Toledo College of Medicine and Life Sciences , Toledo, Ohio., West DA Jr; Department of Medicine, Georgetown University , Washington, District of Columbia., Ji H; Department of Medicine, Georgetown University , Washington, District of Columbia., Wu X; Department of Medicine, Georgetown University , Washington, District of Columbia., Baylis C; Department of Physiology and Functional Genomics, University of Florida , Gainesville, Florida., Sandberg K; Department of Biochemistry and Molecular and Cellular Biology, Georgetown University , Washington, District of Columbia.; Department of Medicine, Georgetown University , Washington, District of Columbia.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology [Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol] 2018 Nov 01; Vol. 315 (5), pp. R915-R924. Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 Jul 19.
DOI: 10.1152/ajpregu.00449.2017
Abstrakt: Inbred salt-sensitive (SS) rats developed by John Rapp and distributed by Harlan (SS/JrHsd) were shown to model ovariectomy-induced hypertension because on a low-sodium (LS) diet, ovariectomized SS (SS-OVX) animals became hypertensive in contrast to their sham-operated (SS-SHAM) normotensive littermates. After Harlan merged with Envigo in 2015, inconsistencies in the LS normotensive phenotype were reported. To further investigate these inconsistencies, we studied the effects of ovariectomy on SS and salt-resistant (SR) rats purchased from Envigo (SS/JrHsd/Env) between 2015 and 2017. The mean arterial pressure (MAP) in SS rats on a LS diet exceeded 160 mmHg at 7 mo old. Ovariectomy at 3 mo had no detectable effect on MAP from 4 to 7 mo, nor did ovariectomy at 1.5 mo significantly affect MAP at 10 mo in either strain; only strain differences in MAP were observed [MAP: SR-SHAM ( n = 7 rats), 102 ± 3 mmHg; SR-OVX ( n = 6 rats), 114 ± 1 mmHg; SS-SHAM ( n = 7 rats), 177 ± 6 mmHg; SS-OVX ( n = 5 rats), 190 ± 12 mmHg; where P < 0.0001 vs. SR, same ovarian-status for SS-SHAM and SS-OVX, respectively]. Whole genome sequencing revealed more genomic variants of SS/JrHsd/Env, including single nucleotide and insertion deletion polymorphisms and higher heterozygous/homozygous ratios compared with the reference genome, than for SS/JrHsd/Mcwi and SS/Jr rats maintained in Milwaukee, WI and Toledo, OH, respectively, and which still exhibit normal blood pressure on a LS diet. These findings demonstrate that the female SS/JrHsd/Env rat has genetically diverged from the original phenotype, which was normotensive on a LS diet when the ovaries were intact but rapidly developed hypertension when the ovaries were removed. Nonetheless, the SS/JrHsd/Env rat could be a valuable model that complements other animal models of spontaneous hypertension used to investigate mechanisms of essential hypertension.
Databáze: MEDLINE