Author:
Ji Hong,Pesce Carlo,Zheng Wei,Kim James,Zhang Yinghua,Menini Stefano,Haywood Joseph R.,Sandberg Kathryn
Abstract
To investigate the faster rate of renal disease progression in men compared with women, we addressed the following questions in the renal wrap (RW) model of hypertension: 1) Do sex differences exist in RW-induced renal injury, which are independent of sex differences in blood pressure? 2) Do sex differences in nitric oxide (NO) production exist in RW hypertension? Male (M) and female (F) rats underwent sham-operated (M-Sham, n = 7; F-Sham, n = 10) or RW (M-RW, n = 13; F-RW, n = 14) surgery for 9 wk. Markers of renal injury, including the glomerulosclerosis index (F-RW, 0.70 ± 0.1 vs. M-RW, 2.2 ± 0.6; P < 0.05), mean glomerular volume (F-RW, 1.05 ± 0.050 × 106 vs. M-RW, 1.78 ± 0.15 × 106 μm3; P < 0.001), and proteinuria (F-RW, 68.7 ± 15 vs. M-RW, 124 ± 7.7 mg/day; P < 0.001) were greater in RW males compared with RW females. Endothelial NO synthase protein expression was elevated in the renal cortex (3.2-fold) and medulla (2.2-fold) 9 wk after RW in males, whereas no differences were observed in females. Neuronal NO synthase protein expression was unchanged in the renal cortex in males and in both the renal cortex and medulla in females, whereas in the male medulla, neuronal NOS was decreased by 57%. These data suggest the degree of renal injury is greater in male compared with female rats in RW hypertension despite similar degrees of hypertension and renal function and may involve sex differences in renal NO metabolism.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
44 articles.
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