Cargando…

Efferent Pathways in Sodium Overload-Induced Renal Vasodilation in Rats

Hypernatremia stimulates the secretion of oxytocin (OT), but the physiological role of OT remains unclear. The present study sought to determine the involvement of OT and renal nerves in the renal responses to an intravenous infusion of hypertonic saline. Male Wistar rats (280–350 g) were anesthetiz...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Amaral, Nathalia O., de Oliveira, Thiago S., Naves, Lara M., Filgueira, Fernando P., Ferreira-Neto, Marcos L., Schoorlemmer, Gerard H. M., de Castro, Carlos H., Freiria-Oliveira, André H., Xavier, Carlos H., Colugnati, Diego B., Rosa, Daniel A., Blanch, Graziela T., Borges, Clayton L., Soares, Célia M. A., Reis, Angela A. S., Cravo, Sergio L., Pedrino, Gustavo R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4184892/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25279805
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0109620
_version_ 1782337937386504192
author Amaral, Nathalia O.
de Oliveira, Thiago S.
Naves, Lara M.
Filgueira, Fernando P.
Ferreira-Neto, Marcos L.
Schoorlemmer, Gerard H. M.
de Castro, Carlos H.
Freiria-Oliveira, André H.
Xavier, Carlos H.
Colugnati, Diego B.
Rosa, Daniel A.
Blanch, Graziela T.
Borges, Clayton L.
Soares, Célia M. A.
Reis, Angela A. S.
Cravo, Sergio L.
Pedrino, Gustavo R.
author_facet Amaral, Nathalia O.
de Oliveira, Thiago S.
Naves, Lara M.
Filgueira, Fernando P.
Ferreira-Neto, Marcos L.
Schoorlemmer, Gerard H. M.
de Castro, Carlos H.
Freiria-Oliveira, André H.
Xavier, Carlos H.
Colugnati, Diego B.
Rosa, Daniel A.
Blanch, Graziela T.
Borges, Clayton L.
Soares, Célia M. A.
Reis, Angela A. S.
Cravo, Sergio L.
Pedrino, Gustavo R.
author_sort Amaral, Nathalia O.
collection PubMed
description Hypernatremia stimulates the secretion of oxytocin (OT), but the physiological role of OT remains unclear. The present study sought to determine the involvement of OT and renal nerves in the renal responses to an intravenous infusion of hypertonic saline. Male Wistar rats (280–350 g) were anesthetized with sodium thiopental (40 mg. kg(−1), i.v.). A bladder cannula was implanted for collection of urine. Animals were also instrumented for measurement of mean arterial pressure (MAP) and renal blood flow (RBF). Renal vascular conductance (RVC) was calculated as the ratio of RBF by MAP. In anesthetized rats (n = 6), OT infusion (0.03 µg • kg(−1), i.v.) induced renal vasodilation. Consistent with this result, ex vivo experiments demonstrated that OT caused renal artery relaxation. Blockade of OT receptors (OXTR) reduced these responses to OT, indicating a direct effect of this peptide on OXTR on this artery. Hypertonic saline (3 M NaCl, 1.8 ml • kg(−1) b.wt., i.v.) was infused over 60 s. In sham rats (n = 6), hypertonic saline induced renal vasodilation. The OXTR antagonist (AT; atosiban, 40 µg • kg(−1) • h(−1), i.v.; n = 7) and renal denervation (RX) reduced the renal vasodilation induced by hypernatremia. The combination of atosiban and renal denervation (RX+AT; n = 7) completely abolished the renal vasodilation induced by sodium overload. Intact rats excreted 51% of the injected sodium within 90 min. Natriuresis was slightly blunted by atosiban and renal denervation (42% and 39% of load, respectively), whereas atosiban with renal denervation reduced sodium excretion to 16% of the load. These results suggest that OT and renal nerves are involved in renal vasodilation and natriuresis induced by acute plasma hypernatremia.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4184892
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2014
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-41848922014-10-07 Efferent Pathways in Sodium Overload-Induced Renal Vasodilation in Rats Amaral, Nathalia O. de Oliveira, Thiago S. Naves, Lara M. Filgueira, Fernando P. Ferreira-Neto, Marcos L. Schoorlemmer, Gerard H. M. de Castro, Carlos H. Freiria-Oliveira, André H. Xavier, Carlos H. Colugnati, Diego B. Rosa, Daniel A. Blanch, Graziela T. Borges, Clayton L. Soares, Célia M. A. Reis, Angela A. S. Cravo, Sergio L. Pedrino, Gustavo R. PLoS One Research Article Hypernatremia stimulates the secretion of oxytocin (OT), but the physiological role of OT remains unclear. The present study sought to determine the involvement of OT and renal nerves in the renal responses to an intravenous infusion of hypertonic saline. Male Wistar rats (280–350 g) were anesthetized with sodium thiopental (40 mg. kg(−1), i.v.). A bladder cannula was implanted for collection of urine. Animals were also instrumented for measurement of mean arterial pressure (MAP) and renal blood flow (RBF). Renal vascular conductance (RVC) was calculated as the ratio of RBF by MAP. In anesthetized rats (n = 6), OT infusion (0.03 µg • kg(−1), i.v.) induced renal vasodilation. Consistent with this result, ex vivo experiments demonstrated that OT caused renal artery relaxation. Blockade of OT receptors (OXTR) reduced these responses to OT, indicating a direct effect of this peptide on OXTR on this artery. Hypertonic saline (3 M NaCl, 1.8 ml • kg(−1) b.wt., i.v.) was infused over 60 s. In sham rats (n = 6), hypertonic saline induced renal vasodilation. The OXTR antagonist (AT; atosiban, 40 µg • kg(−1) • h(−1), i.v.; n = 7) and renal denervation (RX) reduced the renal vasodilation induced by hypernatremia. The combination of atosiban and renal denervation (RX+AT; n = 7) completely abolished the renal vasodilation induced by sodium overload. Intact rats excreted 51% of the injected sodium within 90 min. Natriuresis was slightly blunted by atosiban and renal denervation (42% and 39% of load, respectively), whereas atosiban with renal denervation reduced sodium excretion to 16% of the load. These results suggest that OT and renal nerves are involved in renal vasodilation and natriuresis induced by acute plasma hypernatremia. Public Library of Science 2014-10-03 /pmc/articles/PMC4184892/ /pubmed/25279805 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0109620 Text en © 2014 Amaral et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ 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 properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Amaral, Nathalia O.
de Oliveira, Thiago S.
Naves, Lara M.
Filgueira, Fernando P.
Ferreira-Neto, Marcos L.
Schoorlemmer, Gerard H. M.
de Castro, Carlos H.
Freiria-Oliveira, André H.
Xavier, Carlos H.
Colugnati, Diego B.
Rosa, Daniel A.
Blanch, Graziela T.
Borges, Clayton L.
Soares, Célia M. A.
Reis, Angela A. S.
Cravo, Sergio L.
Pedrino, Gustavo R.
Efferent Pathways in Sodium Overload-Induced Renal Vasodilation in Rats
title Efferent Pathways in Sodium Overload-Induced Renal Vasodilation in Rats
title_full Efferent Pathways in Sodium Overload-Induced Renal Vasodilation in Rats
title_fullStr Efferent Pathways in Sodium Overload-Induced Renal Vasodilation in Rats
title_full_unstemmed Efferent Pathways in Sodium Overload-Induced Renal Vasodilation in Rats
title_short Efferent Pathways in Sodium Overload-Induced Renal Vasodilation in Rats
title_sort efferent pathways in sodium overload-induced renal vasodilation in rats
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4184892/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25279805
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0109620
work_keys_str_mv AT amaralnathaliao efferentpathwaysinsodiumoverloadinducedrenalvasodilationinrats
AT deoliveirathiagos efferentpathwaysinsodiumoverloadinducedrenalvasodilationinrats
AT naveslaram efferentpathwaysinsodiumoverloadinducedrenalvasodilationinrats
AT filgueirafernandop efferentpathwaysinsodiumoverloadinducedrenalvasodilationinrats
AT ferreiranetomarcosl efferentpathwaysinsodiumoverloadinducedrenalvasodilationinrats
AT schoorlemmergerardhm efferentpathwaysinsodiumoverloadinducedrenalvasodilationinrats
AT decastrocarlosh efferentpathwaysinsodiumoverloadinducedrenalvasodilationinrats
AT freiriaoliveiraandreh efferentpathwaysinsodiumoverloadinducedrenalvasodilationinrats
AT xaviercarlosh efferentpathwaysinsodiumoverloadinducedrenalvasodilationinrats
AT colugnatidiegob efferentpathwaysinsodiumoverloadinducedrenalvasodilationinrats
AT rosadaniela efferentpathwaysinsodiumoverloadinducedrenalvasodilationinrats
AT blanchgrazielat efferentpathwaysinsodiumoverloadinducedrenalvasodilationinrats
AT borgesclaytonl efferentpathwaysinsodiumoverloadinducedrenalvasodilationinrats
AT soaresceliama efferentpathwaysinsodiumoverloadinducedrenalvasodilationinrats
AT reisangelaas efferentpathwaysinsodiumoverloadinducedrenalvasodilationinrats
AT cravosergiol efferentpathwaysinsodiumoverloadinducedrenalvasodilationinrats
AT pedrinogustavor efferentpathwaysinsodiumoverloadinducedrenalvasodilationinrats