S. Verma et al., EFFECT OF CHRONIC ENDOTHELIN BLOCKADE IN HYPERINSULINEMIC HYPERTENSIVE RATS, American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology, 38(6), 1995, pp. 2017-2021
Evidence suggests that hyperinsulinemia may be causally related to the
development of high blood pressure (BP) in fructose-hypertensive (FH)
rats. Because plasma insulin has been shown to modulate endothelin (E
T) release in vivo, we hypothesized that hyperinsulinemia may provide
a continual stimulus for ET release, which could increase BP by alteri
ng plasma or blood vessel ET levels. To test this hypothesis, we studi
ed the effect of chronic ET-receptor blockade (by using bosentan, a no
ncompetitive ET antagonist) on plasma insulin levels, plasma ET levels
, blood vessel ET content, and BP in FH rats. Chronic oral bosentan tr
eatment (100 mg . kg(-1). day(-1)) was initiated in 6-wk-old Sprague-D
awley rats. One week after bosentan treatment was started, rats were f
ed either normal rat chow or a fructose-enriched diet. Plasma insulin,
plasma glucose, and systolic BP were measured weekly. At termination
(in 15-wk-old rats), plasma ET levels and total mesenteric ET content
were determined. Bosentan treatment caused a sustained decrease in BP
in the FH rats (treated 130 +/- 4 vs. untreated 149 +/- 2 mmHg, P < 0.
001) but had no effect in the normotensive control group. FH rats had
a higher total mesenteric ET content compared with the control group (
21.5 +/- 3.2 vs. 14.1 +/- 2.1 fmol, P < 0.05). Bosentan treatment did
not alter total mesenteric ET content (treated 18.8 +/- 5 fmol, P > 0.
05 vs. untreated) nor did it affect plasma insulin or ET levels in any
group. These data suggest that ET may be involved in the development
of high BP in FH rats. Whether ET represents an intermediate, linking
hyperinsulinemia to hypertension in rats, or is an independent hyperte
nsinogenic mechanism remains to be determined.