Maternal protein restriction leads to hyperresponsiveness to stress and salt-sensitive hypertension in male offspring

Author:

Augustyniak Robert A.1234,Singh Karan1,Zeldes Daniel1,Singh Melissa1,Rossi Noreen F.13

Affiliation:

1. Departments of 1Medicine and

2. Physiology, Wayne State University, Detroit;

3. John D. Dingell Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Detroit; and

4. Department of Biomedical Sciences, Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine, Rochester, Michigan

Abstract

Low birth weight humans often exhibit hypertension during adulthood. Studying the offspring of rat dams fed a maternal low-protein diet is one model frequently used to study the mechanisms of low birth weight-related hypertension. It remains unclear whether this model replicates key clinical findings of hypertension and increased blood pressure responsiveness to stress or high-salt diet. We measured blood pressure via radiotelemetry in 13-wk-old male offspring of maternal normal- and low-protein dams. Neither group exhibited hypertension at baseline; however, 1 h of restraint was accompanied by a significantly greater blood pressure response in low-protein compared with normal-protein offspring. To enhance the effect of a high-salt diet on blood pressure, normal- and low-protein offspring underwent right uninephrectomy, while controls underwent sham surgery. After 5 weeks on a high-salt diet (4% NaCl), mean arterial pressure in the Low-Protein+Sham offspring was elevated by 6 ± 2 mmHg ( P < 0.05 vs. baseline), while it remained unchanged in the normal-protein offspring. In the two uninephrectomized groups, blood pressure increased further, but was of similar magnitude. Glomerular filtration rate in the low-protein uninephrectomized offspring was 50% less than that in normal-protein offspring with intact kidneys. These data indicate that, while male low-protein offspring are not hypertensive during young adulthood, their blood pressure is hyperresponsive to restraint stress and is salt sensitive, and their glomerular filtration rate is more sensitive to hypertension-causing insults. Collectively, these may predispose for the development of hypertension later in life.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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