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Striatin heterozygous mice are more sensitive to aldosterone-induced injury

Aldosterone modulates the activity of both epithelial (specifically renal) and non-epithelial cells. Binding to the mineralocorticoid receptor (MR), activates two pathways: the classical genomic and the rapidly activated non-genomic that is substantially modulated by the level of striatin. We hypoth...

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Autores principales: Garza, Amanda E, Trefts, Elijah, Katayama Rangel, Isis A, Brooks, Danielle, Baudrand, Rene, Moize, Burhanuddin, Romero, Jose R, Ranjit, Sanjay, Treesaranuwattana, Thitinan, Yao, Tham M, Adler, Gail K, Pojoga, Luminita H, Williams, Gordon H
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Bioscientifica Ltd 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7219220/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32229698
http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/JOE-19-0562
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author Garza, Amanda E
Trefts, Elijah
Katayama Rangel, Isis A
Brooks, Danielle
Baudrand, Rene
Moize, Burhanuddin
Romero, Jose R
Ranjit, Sanjay
Treesaranuwattana, Thitinan
Yao, Tham M
Adler, Gail K
Pojoga, Luminita H
Williams, Gordon H
author_facet Garza, Amanda E
Trefts, Elijah
Katayama Rangel, Isis A
Brooks, Danielle
Baudrand, Rene
Moize, Burhanuddin
Romero, Jose R
Ranjit, Sanjay
Treesaranuwattana, Thitinan
Yao, Tham M
Adler, Gail K
Pojoga, Luminita H
Williams, Gordon H
author_sort Garza, Amanda E
collection PubMed
description Aldosterone modulates the activity of both epithelial (specifically renal) and non-epithelial cells. Binding to the mineralocorticoid receptor (MR), activates two pathways: the classical genomic and the rapidly activated non-genomic that is substantially modulated by the level of striatin. We hypothesized that disruption of MR’s non-genomic pathway would alter aldosterone-induced cardiovascular/renal damage. To test this hypothesis, wild type (WT) and striatin heterozygous knockout (Strn(+/)(−)) littermate male mice were fed a liberal sodium (1.6% Na(+)) diet and randomized to either protocol one: 3 weeks of treatment with either vehicle or aldosterone plus/minus MR antagonists, eplerenone or esaxerenone or protocol two: 2 weeks of treatment with either vehicle or L-NAME/AngII plus/minus MR antagonists, spironolactone or esaxerenone. Compared to the WT mice, basally, the Strn(+/)(−) mice had greater (~26%) estimated renal glomeruli volume and reduced non-genomic second messenger signaling (pAkt/Akt ratio) in kidney tissue. In response to active treatment, the striatin-associated-cardiovascular/renal damage was limited to volume effects induced by aldosterone infusion: significantly increased blood pressure (BP) and albuminuria. In contrast, with aldosterone or L-NAME/AngII treatment, striatin deficiency did not modify aldosterone-mediated damage: in the heart and kidney, macrophage infiltration, and increases in aldosterone-induced biomarkers of injury. All changes were near-normalized following MR blockade with spironolactone or esaxerenone, except increased BP in the L-NAME/AngII model. In conclusion, the loss of striatin amplified aldosterone-induced damage suggesting that aldosterone’s non-genomic pathway is protective but only related to effects likely mediated via epithelial, but not non-epithelial cells.
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spelling pubmed-72192202020-05-18 Striatin heterozygous mice are more sensitive to aldosterone-induced injury Garza, Amanda E Trefts, Elijah Katayama Rangel, Isis A Brooks, Danielle Baudrand, Rene Moize, Burhanuddin Romero, Jose R Ranjit, Sanjay Treesaranuwattana, Thitinan Yao, Tham M Adler, Gail K Pojoga, Luminita H Williams, Gordon H J Endocrinol Research Aldosterone modulates the activity of both epithelial (specifically renal) and non-epithelial cells. Binding to the mineralocorticoid receptor (MR), activates two pathways: the classical genomic and the rapidly activated non-genomic that is substantially modulated by the level of striatin. We hypothesized that disruption of MR’s non-genomic pathway would alter aldosterone-induced cardiovascular/renal damage. To test this hypothesis, wild type (WT) and striatin heterozygous knockout (Strn(+/)(−)) littermate male mice were fed a liberal sodium (1.6% Na(+)) diet and randomized to either protocol one: 3 weeks of treatment with either vehicle or aldosterone plus/minus MR antagonists, eplerenone or esaxerenone or protocol two: 2 weeks of treatment with either vehicle or L-NAME/AngII plus/minus MR antagonists, spironolactone or esaxerenone. Compared to the WT mice, basally, the Strn(+/)(−) mice had greater (~26%) estimated renal glomeruli volume and reduced non-genomic second messenger signaling (pAkt/Akt ratio) in kidney tissue. In response to active treatment, the striatin-associated-cardiovascular/renal damage was limited to volume effects induced by aldosterone infusion: significantly increased blood pressure (BP) and albuminuria. In contrast, with aldosterone or L-NAME/AngII treatment, striatin deficiency did not modify aldosterone-mediated damage: in the heart and kidney, macrophage infiltration, and increases in aldosterone-induced biomarkers of injury. All changes were near-normalized following MR blockade with spironolactone or esaxerenone, except increased BP in the L-NAME/AngII model. In conclusion, the loss of striatin amplified aldosterone-induced damage suggesting that aldosterone’s non-genomic pathway is protective but only related to effects likely mediated via epithelial, but not non-epithelial cells. Bioscientifica Ltd 2020-03-31 /pmc/articles/PMC7219220/ /pubmed/32229698 http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/JOE-19-0562 Text en © 2020 The authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research
Garza, Amanda E
Trefts, Elijah
Katayama Rangel, Isis A
Brooks, Danielle
Baudrand, Rene
Moize, Burhanuddin
Romero, Jose R
Ranjit, Sanjay
Treesaranuwattana, Thitinan
Yao, Tham M
Adler, Gail K
Pojoga, Luminita H
Williams, Gordon H
Striatin heterozygous mice are more sensitive to aldosterone-induced injury
title Striatin heterozygous mice are more sensitive to aldosterone-induced injury
title_full Striatin heterozygous mice are more sensitive to aldosterone-induced injury
title_fullStr Striatin heterozygous mice are more sensitive to aldosterone-induced injury
title_full_unstemmed Striatin heterozygous mice are more sensitive to aldosterone-induced injury
title_short Striatin heterozygous mice are more sensitive to aldosterone-induced injury
title_sort striatin heterozygous mice are more sensitive to aldosterone-induced injury
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7219220/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32229698
http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/JOE-19-0562
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