Preglomerular Sudanophilia in L-NAME Hypertensive Rats

Author:

Bouriquet Nathalie1,Dupont Madeleine1,Herizi Abderraouf1,Mimran Albert1,Casellas Daniel1

Affiliation:

1. From the Groupe Rein et Hypertension, Hôpital Saint-Charles, Montpellier, France.

Abstract

Abstract To characterize alterations of renal vessels occurring during systemic hypertension elicited in rats by 5, 10, and 25 days of treatment by the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor N G -nitro- l -arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) (20 mg/kg daily), preglomerular vasculatures, consisting of arcuate arteries and their branches, interlobular arteries, and afferent arterioles, were isolated by HCl maceration. Blockade of nitric oxide synthase significantly increased tail-cuff systolic blood pressure by 21±2% and 42±3% after 5 and 25 days, respectively. Medias of hypertensive arcuate arterial branches and interlobular arteries but not of afferent arterioles had focal deposits of Sudan black–positive lipid droplets. At 25 days, vessel wall thickness increased by 72±6% along the sudanophilic areas. Immunostaining of sudanophilic lesions with a panel of antibodies unveiled medial cell proliferation, macrophage invasion, immunoreactive vascular cell adhesion molecule-1, and low-density lipoprotein. The frequency of sudanophilic lesions increased with time to affect 26±2% and 36±3% of arcuate arterial branches and interlobular arteries, respectively, at 25 days. Hypertensive L-NAME–treated rats developed glomerular injury probed by albuminuria and glomerular immunostaining for α-smooth muscle actin. Administration of the nonselective endothelin antagonist bosentan (30 mg/kg daily) blunted the development of sudanophilic lesions during L-NAME treatment without affecting arterial hypertension or degree of glomerular injury. Therefore, L-NAME hypertension leads to rapid development of focal, inflammatory, proliferative, and sudanophilic lesions along preglomerular vessels, suggesting atherosclerosis-like processes. Furthermore, endothelin is a likely mediator in the development of these lesions.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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