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Ablation of Potassium-Chloride Cotransporter Type 3 (Kcc3) in Mouse Causes Multiple Cardiovascular Defects and Isosmotic Polyuria

Inactivation of Kcc3 in a mixed 129/Sv×C57BL/6 mouse background has been previously found to increase systemic blood pressure (BP) through presumed neurogenic mechanisms. Yet, while this background is generally not considered ideal to investigate the cardiovascular system, KCC3 is also expressed in...

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Autores principales: Garneau, Alexandre P., Marcoux, Andrée-Anne, Noël, Micheline, Frenette-Cotton, Rachelle, Drolet, Marie-Claude, Couet, Jacques, Larivière, Richard, Isenring, Paul
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4864296/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27166674
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0154398
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author Garneau, Alexandre P.
Marcoux, Andrée-Anne
Noël, Micheline
Frenette-Cotton, Rachelle
Drolet, Marie-Claude
Couet, Jacques
Larivière, Richard
Isenring, Paul
author_facet Garneau, Alexandre P.
Marcoux, Andrée-Anne
Noël, Micheline
Frenette-Cotton, Rachelle
Drolet, Marie-Claude
Couet, Jacques
Larivière, Richard
Isenring, Paul
author_sort Garneau, Alexandre P.
collection PubMed
description Inactivation of Kcc3 in a mixed 129/Sv×C57BL/6 mouse background has been previously found to increase systemic blood pressure (BP) through presumed neurogenic mechanisms. Yet, while this background is generally not considered ideal to investigate the cardiovascular system, KCC3 is also expressed in the arterial wall and proximal nephron. In the current study, the effects of Kcc3 ablation was investigated in a pure rather than mixed C57BL/6J background under regular- and high-salt diets to determine whether they could be mediated through vasculogenic and nephrogenic mechanisms. Aortas were also assessed for reactivity to pharmacological agents while isolated from the influence of sympathetic ganglia. This approach led to the identification of unforeseen abnormalities such as lower pulse pressure, heart rate, aortic reactivity and aortic wall thickness, but higher diastolic BP, left ventricular mass and urinary output in the absence of increased catecholamine levels. Salt loading also led systolic BP to be higher, but to no further changes in hemodynamic parameters. Importantly, aortic vascular smooth muscle cells and cardiomyocytes were both found to express KCC3 abundantly in heterozygous mice. Hence, Kcc3 inactivation in our model caused systemic vascular resistance and ventricular mass to increase while preventing extracellular fluid volume to accumulate. Given that it also affected the physiological properties of aortas in vitro, vasculogenic mechanisms could therefore account for a number of the hemodynamic abnormalities observed.
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spelling pubmed-48642962016-05-18 Ablation of Potassium-Chloride Cotransporter Type 3 (Kcc3) in Mouse Causes Multiple Cardiovascular Defects and Isosmotic Polyuria Garneau, Alexandre P. Marcoux, Andrée-Anne Noël, Micheline Frenette-Cotton, Rachelle Drolet, Marie-Claude Couet, Jacques Larivière, Richard Isenring, Paul PLoS One Research Article Inactivation of Kcc3 in a mixed 129/Sv×C57BL/6 mouse background has been previously found to increase systemic blood pressure (BP) through presumed neurogenic mechanisms. Yet, while this background is generally not considered ideal to investigate the cardiovascular system, KCC3 is also expressed in the arterial wall and proximal nephron. In the current study, the effects of Kcc3 ablation was investigated in a pure rather than mixed C57BL/6J background under regular- and high-salt diets to determine whether they could be mediated through vasculogenic and nephrogenic mechanisms. Aortas were also assessed for reactivity to pharmacological agents while isolated from the influence of sympathetic ganglia. This approach led to the identification of unforeseen abnormalities such as lower pulse pressure, heart rate, aortic reactivity and aortic wall thickness, but higher diastolic BP, left ventricular mass and urinary output in the absence of increased catecholamine levels. Salt loading also led systolic BP to be higher, but to no further changes in hemodynamic parameters. Importantly, aortic vascular smooth muscle cells and cardiomyocytes were both found to express KCC3 abundantly in heterozygous mice. Hence, Kcc3 inactivation in our model caused systemic vascular resistance and ventricular mass to increase while preventing extracellular fluid volume to accumulate. Given that it also affected the physiological properties of aortas in vitro, vasculogenic mechanisms could therefore account for a number of the hemodynamic abnormalities observed. Public Library of Science 2016-05-11 /pmc/articles/PMC4864296/ /pubmed/27166674 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0154398 Text en © 2016 Garneau 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Garneau, Alexandre P.
Marcoux, Andrée-Anne
Noël, Micheline
Frenette-Cotton, Rachelle
Drolet, Marie-Claude
Couet, Jacques
Larivière, Richard
Isenring, Paul
Ablation of Potassium-Chloride Cotransporter Type 3 (Kcc3) in Mouse Causes Multiple Cardiovascular Defects and Isosmotic Polyuria
title Ablation of Potassium-Chloride Cotransporter Type 3 (Kcc3) in Mouse Causes Multiple Cardiovascular Defects and Isosmotic Polyuria
title_full Ablation of Potassium-Chloride Cotransporter Type 3 (Kcc3) in Mouse Causes Multiple Cardiovascular Defects and Isosmotic Polyuria
title_fullStr Ablation of Potassium-Chloride Cotransporter Type 3 (Kcc3) in Mouse Causes Multiple Cardiovascular Defects and Isosmotic Polyuria
title_full_unstemmed Ablation of Potassium-Chloride Cotransporter Type 3 (Kcc3) in Mouse Causes Multiple Cardiovascular Defects and Isosmotic Polyuria
title_short Ablation of Potassium-Chloride Cotransporter Type 3 (Kcc3) in Mouse Causes Multiple Cardiovascular Defects and Isosmotic Polyuria
title_sort ablation of potassium-chloride cotransporter type 3 (kcc3) in mouse causes multiple cardiovascular defects and isosmotic polyuria
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4864296/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27166674
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0154398
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