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Acute Intravenous Injection of Serelaxin (Recombinant Human Relaxin‐2) Causes Rapid and Sustained Bradykinin‐Mediated Vasorelaxation

BACKGROUND: A recent clinical trial (RELAXin in Acute Heart Failure [RELAX‐AHF]) demonstrated that 48 hours of continuous intravenous infusion of the vasorelaxant peptide serelaxin (recombinant human relaxin‐2) to patients with acute heart failure reduced cardiovascular mortality at 180 days. The pe...

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Autores principales: Leo, Chen Huei, Jelinic, Maria, Parkington, Helena C., Tare, Marianne, Parry, Laura J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3959707/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24584737
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.113.000493
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author Leo, Chen Huei
Jelinic, Maria
Parkington, Helena C.
Tare, Marianne
Parry, Laura J.
author_facet Leo, Chen Huei
Jelinic, Maria
Parkington, Helena C.
Tare, Marianne
Parry, Laura J.
author_sort Leo, Chen Huei
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: A recent clinical trial (RELAXin in Acute Heart Failure [RELAX‐AHF]) demonstrated that 48 hours of continuous intravenous infusion of the vasorelaxant peptide serelaxin (recombinant human relaxin‐2) to patients with acute heart failure reduced cardiovascular mortality at 180 days. The persistence of a vasorelaxant response as a potential mechanism for this long‐term benefit and the vascular effects of a bolus intravenous injection of serelaxin have not been examined. This study investigates changes in resistance artery reactivity and passive mechanical wall properties following an intravenous serelaxin injection and whether these vascular effects persist in the absence of detectable circulating serelaxin. METHODS AND RESULTS: Male rats were injected with 13.3 μg/kg serelaxin into the tail vein; mesenteric arteries were assessed 3 and 24 hours after treatment by using wire‐myography. Serelaxin increased basal nitric oxide synthase activity and reduced maximal contraction to endothelin‐1 at 3 hours after administration. Serelaxin treatment also selectively enhanced bradykinin‐mediated endothelium‐dependent relaxation. This effect was sustained for 24 hours in the absence of circulating serelaxin. Serelaxin‐mediated augmentation of bradykinin‐evoked relaxation involved endothelium‐derived hyperpolarization after 3 hours and prostacyclin‐mediated relaxation after 24 hours. Furthermore, upregulation of inducible nitric oxide synthase, phosphorylation of protein kinase B at Ser473 and endothelial nitric oxide synthase at Ser1177 was observed at 24 hours after serelaxin injection. There were no effects of serelaxin on passive arterial wall stiffness. CONCLUSION: Our data show that a bolus intravenous injection of serelaxin modulates endothelial vasodilator function 3 hours after administration, an effect that was sustained for 24 hours. The prolonged bradykinin‐mediated vasorelaxation is principally mediated through prostacyclin.
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spelling pubmed-39597072014-03-20 Acute Intravenous Injection of Serelaxin (Recombinant Human Relaxin‐2) Causes Rapid and Sustained Bradykinin‐Mediated Vasorelaxation Leo, Chen Huei Jelinic, Maria Parkington, Helena C. Tare, Marianne Parry, Laura J. J Am Heart Assoc Original Research BACKGROUND: A recent clinical trial (RELAXin in Acute Heart Failure [RELAX‐AHF]) demonstrated that 48 hours of continuous intravenous infusion of the vasorelaxant peptide serelaxin (recombinant human relaxin‐2) to patients with acute heart failure reduced cardiovascular mortality at 180 days. The persistence of a vasorelaxant response as a potential mechanism for this long‐term benefit and the vascular effects of a bolus intravenous injection of serelaxin have not been examined. This study investigates changes in resistance artery reactivity and passive mechanical wall properties following an intravenous serelaxin injection and whether these vascular effects persist in the absence of detectable circulating serelaxin. METHODS AND RESULTS: Male rats were injected with 13.3 μg/kg serelaxin into the tail vein; mesenteric arteries were assessed 3 and 24 hours after treatment by using wire‐myography. Serelaxin increased basal nitric oxide synthase activity and reduced maximal contraction to endothelin‐1 at 3 hours after administration. Serelaxin treatment also selectively enhanced bradykinin‐mediated endothelium‐dependent relaxation. This effect was sustained for 24 hours in the absence of circulating serelaxin. Serelaxin‐mediated augmentation of bradykinin‐evoked relaxation involved endothelium‐derived hyperpolarization after 3 hours and prostacyclin‐mediated relaxation after 24 hours. Furthermore, upregulation of inducible nitric oxide synthase, phosphorylation of protein kinase B at Ser473 and endothelial nitric oxide synthase at Ser1177 was observed at 24 hours after serelaxin injection. There were no effects of serelaxin on passive arterial wall stiffness. CONCLUSION: Our data show that a bolus intravenous injection of serelaxin modulates endothelial vasodilator function 3 hours after administration, an effect that was sustained for 24 hours. The prolonged bradykinin‐mediated vasorelaxation is principally mediated through prostacyclin. Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2014-02-28 /pmc/articles/PMC3959707/ /pubmed/24584737 http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.113.000493 Text en © 2014 The Authors. Published on behalf of the American Heart Association, Inc., by Wiley Blackwell. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution‐NonCommercial (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Original Research
Leo, Chen Huei
Jelinic, Maria
Parkington, Helena C.
Tare, Marianne
Parry, Laura J.
Acute Intravenous Injection of Serelaxin (Recombinant Human Relaxin‐2) Causes Rapid and Sustained Bradykinin‐Mediated Vasorelaxation
title Acute Intravenous Injection of Serelaxin (Recombinant Human Relaxin‐2) Causes Rapid and Sustained Bradykinin‐Mediated Vasorelaxation
title_full Acute Intravenous Injection of Serelaxin (Recombinant Human Relaxin‐2) Causes Rapid and Sustained Bradykinin‐Mediated Vasorelaxation
title_fullStr Acute Intravenous Injection of Serelaxin (Recombinant Human Relaxin‐2) Causes Rapid and Sustained Bradykinin‐Mediated Vasorelaxation
title_full_unstemmed Acute Intravenous Injection of Serelaxin (Recombinant Human Relaxin‐2) Causes Rapid and Sustained Bradykinin‐Mediated Vasorelaxation
title_short Acute Intravenous Injection of Serelaxin (Recombinant Human Relaxin‐2) Causes Rapid and Sustained Bradykinin‐Mediated Vasorelaxation
title_sort acute intravenous injection of serelaxin (recombinant human relaxin‐2) causes rapid and sustained bradykinin‐mediated vasorelaxation
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3959707/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24584737
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.113.000493
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