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Gender differences in the development of uremic cardiomyopathy following partial nephrectomy: Role of progesterone

Gender difference has been suggested as a risk factor for developing cardiovascular and renal diseases in humans and experimental animals. As a major sex hormone, progesterone was reported to compete with cardiotonic steroid binding to Na/K-ATPase. Our previous publication demonstrated that cardioto...

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Autores principales: Drummond, Christopher A, Buddny, George, Haller, Steven T, Liu, Jiang, Yan, Yanling, Xie, Zijian, Malhotra, Deepak, Shapiro, Joseph I, Tian, Jiang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3880896/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24404431
http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2167-1095.1000109
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author Drummond, Christopher A
Buddny, George
Haller, Steven T
Liu, Jiang
Yan, Yanling
Xie, Zijian
Malhotra, Deepak
Shapiro, Joseph I
Tian, Jiang
author_facet Drummond, Christopher A
Buddny, George
Haller, Steven T
Liu, Jiang
Yan, Yanling
Xie, Zijian
Malhotra, Deepak
Shapiro, Joseph I
Tian, Jiang
author_sort Drummond, Christopher A
collection PubMed
description Gender difference has been suggested as a risk factor for developing cardiovascular and renal diseases in humans and experimental animals. As a major sex hormone, progesterone was reported to compete with cardiotonic steroid binding to Na/K-ATPase. Our previous publication demonstrated that cardiotonic steroids (e.g., marinobufagenin) play an important role in the development of experimental uremic cardiomyopathy. We also observed that the putative mineralocorticoid antagonists, spironolactone and its major metabolite canrenone, antagonize binding of cardiotonic steroids to Na/K-ATPase in a competitive manner and also ameliorate experimental uremic cardiomyopathy induced by partial nephrectomy. In the following studies, we noted that progesterone displayed competitive inhibition of cardiotonic steroid binding to Na/K-ATPase and partially inhibited collagen synthesis induced by marinobufagenin in cultured cardiac fibroblasts. Therefore, we sought to examine whether female rats displayed less uremic cardiomyopathy than male rats when subjected to partial nephrectomy. Although partial nephrectomy caused the induction of smaller increases in blood pressure of female rats, they appeared to be similarly susceptible to cardiac remodeling induced by partial nephrectomy in terms of hypertrophy and fibrosis as age-matched male rats. The possible explanations for our findings are therefore discussed.
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spelling pubmed-38808962014-01-06 Gender differences in the development of uremic cardiomyopathy following partial nephrectomy: Role of progesterone Drummond, Christopher A Buddny, George Haller, Steven T Liu, Jiang Yan, Yanling Xie, Zijian Malhotra, Deepak Shapiro, Joseph I Tian, Jiang J Hypertens (Los Angel) Article Gender difference has been suggested as a risk factor for developing cardiovascular and renal diseases in humans and experimental animals. As a major sex hormone, progesterone was reported to compete with cardiotonic steroid binding to Na/K-ATPase. Our previous publication demonstrated that cardiotonic steroids (e.g., marinobufagenin) play an important role in the development of experimental uremic cardiomyopathy. We also observed that the putative mineralocorticoid antagonists, spironolactone and its major metabolite canrenone, antagonize binding of cardiotonic steroids to Na/K-ATPase in a competitive manner and also ameliorate experimental uremic cardiomyopathy induced by partial nephrectomy. In the following studies, we noted that progesterone displayed competitive inhibition of cardiotonic steroid binding to Na/K-ATPase and partially inhibited collagen synthesis induced by marinobufagenin in cultured cardiac fibroblasts. Therefore, we sought to examine whether female rats displayed less uremic cardiomyopathy than male rats when subjected to partial nephrectomy. Although partial nephrectomy caused the induction of smaller increases in blood pressure of female rats, they appeared to be similarly susceptible to cardiac remodeling induced by partial nephrectomy in terms of hypertrophy and fibrosis as age-matched male rats. The possible explanations for our findings are therefore discussed. 2013-01-31 /pmc/articles/PMC3880896/ /pubmed/24404431 http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2167-1095.1000109 Text en Copyright: © 2013 Drummond CA, et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Article
Drummond, Christopher A
Buddny, George
Haller, Steven T
Liu, Jiang
Yan, Yanling
Xie, Zijian
Malhotra, Deepak
Shapiro, Joseph I
Tian, Jiang
Gender differences in the development of uremic cardiomyopathy following partial nephrectomy: Role of progesterone
title Gender differences in the development of uremic cardiomyopathy following partial nephrectomy: Role of progesterone
title_full Gender differences in the development of uremic cardiomyopathy following partial nephrectomy: Role of progesterone
title_fullStr Gender differences in the development of uremic cardiomyopathy following partial nephrectomy: Role of progesterone
title_full_unstemmed Gender differences in the development of uremic cardiomyopathy following partial nephrectomy: Role of progesterone
title_short Gender differences in the development of uremic cardiomyopathy following partial nephrectomy: Role of progesterone
title_sort gender differences in the development of uremic cardiomyopathy following partial nephrectomy: role of progesterone
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3880896/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24404431
http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2167-1095.1000109
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