Endothelin Modulates Rhythm Disturbances and Autonomic Responses to Acute Emotional Stress in Rats

Author:

Mouchtouri Eleni-Taxiarchia12ORCID,Konstantinou Thomas12,Lekkas Panagiotis2ORCID,Lianopoulou Alexandra3,Kotsaridou Zoi3,Mourouzis Iordanis4,Pantos Constantinos4,Kolettis Theofilos M.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiology, Medical School, University of Ioannina, 45500 Ioannina, Greece

2. Cardiovascular Research Institute, 45500 Ioannina, Greece

3. School of Applied Biology and Biotechnology, Agricultural University of Athens, 10447 Athens, Greece

4. Department of Pharmacology, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 11527 Athens, Greece

Abstract

The ubiquitous peptide endothelin is currently under investigation as a modulatory factor of autonomic responses to acute emotional stress. Baseline plasma levels of endothelin alter blood pressure responses, but it remains unclear whether autonomic activity and arrhythmogenesis (i.e., brady- or tachyarrhythmias) are affected. We recorded sympathetic and vagal indices (derived from heart rate variability analysis), rhythm disturbances, voluntary motion, and systolic blood pressure after acute emotional stress in conscious rats with implanted telemetry devices. Two strains were compared, namely wild-type and ETB-deficient rats, the latter displaying elevated plasma endothelin. No differences in heart rate or blood pressure were evident, but sympathetic responses were blunted in ETB-deficient rats, contrasting prompt activation in wild-type rats. Vagal withdrawal was observed in both strains at the onset of stress, but vagal activity was subsequently restored in ETB-deficient rats, accompanied by low voluntary motion during recovery. Reflecting such distinct autonomic patterns, frequent premature ventricular contractions were recorded in wild-type rats, as opposed to sinus pauses in ETB-deficient rats. Thus, chronically elevated plasma endothelin levels blunt autonomic responses to acute emotional stress, resulting in vagal dominance and bradyarrhythmias. Our study provides further insights into the pathophysiology of stress-induced tachyarrhythmias and syncope.

Funder

Cardiovascular Research Institute, Ioannina and Athens, Greece

Greece and the European Union

the Act “Enhancing Human Resources Research Potential by undertaking a Doctoral Research” Sub-action 2: IKY Scholarship Programme for PhD candidates in the Greek Universities

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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