TASK-3 Channel Deletion in Mice Recapitulates Low-Renin Essential Hypertension

Author:

Guagliardo Nick A.1,Yao Junlan1,Hu Changlong1,Schertz Elaine M.1,Tyson David A.1,Carey Robert M.1,Bayliss Douglas A.1,Barrett Paula Q.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Departments of Pharmacology (N.A.G., C.H., E.M.S., D.A.T., D.A.B., P.Q.B.), and Medicine (R.M.C.), University of Virginia, School of Medicine, Charlottesville, VA; School of Life Sciences (C.H.), State Key Laboratory of Medical Neurobiology and Institutes of Brain Science, Fudan University, Shanghai, China.

Abstract

Idiopathic primary hyperaldosteronism (IHA) and low-renin essential hypertension (LREH) are common forms of hypertension, characterized by an elevated aldosterone-renin ratio and hypersensitivity to angiotensin II. They are suggested to be 2 states within a disease spectrum that progresses from LREH to IHA as the control of aldosterone production by the renin-angiotensin system is weakened. The mechanism(s) that drives this progression remains unknown. Deletion of Twik-related acid-sensitive K + channels (TASK) subunits, TASK-1 and TASK-3, in mice (T1T3KO) produces a model of human IHA. Here, we determine the effect of deleting only TASK-3 (T3KO) on the control of aldosterone production and blood pressure. We find that T3KO mice recapitulate key characteristics of human LREH, salt-sensitive hypertension, mild overproduction of aldosterone, decreased plasma-renin concentration with elevated aldosterone:renin ratio, hypersensitivity to endogenous and exogenous angiotensin II, and failure to suppress aldosterone production with dietary sodium loading. The relative differences in levels of aldosterone output and aldosterone:renin ratio and in autonomy of aldosterone production between T1T3KO and T3KO mice are reminiscent of differences in human hypertensive patients with LREH and IHA. Our studies establish a model of LREH and suggest that loss of TASK channel activity may be one mechanism that advances the syndrome of low renin hypertension.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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