Estrogen Regulation of Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme mRNA

Author:

Gallagher Patricia E.1,Li Ping1,Lenhart John R.1,Chappell Mark C.1,Brosnihan K. Bridget1

Affiliation:

1. From The Hypertension and Vascular Disease Center, Division of Surgical Sciences, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC.

Abstract

Abstract —Estrogen replacement therapy is cardioprotective in postmenopausal women; however, the precise molecular mechanisms for this modulation are not fully elucidated. We previously showed that chronic estrogen replacement therapy reduced angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) activity in tissue extracts and serum with an associated reduction in plasma angiotensin II. A reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction assay was developed to determine whether estrogen treatment regulates tissue ACE mRNA concentration. Total RNA was isolated from kidney cortex, kidney medulla, lung, and aorta of ovariectomized Sprague-Dawley rats after 21 days of chronic 17β-estradiol replacement therapy (5 mg pellet per rat SC) or placebo. A marked decrease in densitometric intensity ratios of amplified ACE cDNA to elongation factor-1α control cDNA was observed in all tissues from placebo-treated rats compared with the estradiol-treated rats (renal cortex: 0.29±0.04 versus 0.14±0.02; renal medulla: 0.37±0.04 versus 0.24±0.03; lung: 4.49±0.37 versus 2.49±0.59; and aorta: 0.41±0.04 versus 0.29±0.02; all P <0.05). A comparable reduction in ACE activity was detected in tissue extracts from kidney cortex, kidney medulla, and lung of hormone-treated animals. Incubation of purified rat lung ACE with 1 or 10 μmol/L 17β-estradiol had no effect on enzyme activity. These results suggest that estrogen treatment regulates tissue ACE activity by reducing ACE mRNA concentrations. Thus, the beneficial cardiovascular effects of estrogen may be mediated in part by downregulation of ACE with a consequent reduction in the circulating levels of the vasoconstrictor angiotensin II, a decrease in the metabolism of the vasodilator bradykinin, and an increase in the production of the vasorelaxant angiotensin-(1–7).

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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