The obese ZDFxSHHF-fa/fa(cp) model was developed by crossing lean female Zucker Diabetic Fatty (ZDF +/fa) and lean male Spontaneously Hypertensive Heart Failure (SHHF/Mcc-fa(cp), +/fa) rats. The purpose of the present study was to determine renal function and morphology, hemodynamics, and metabolic status in ZDFxSHHF rats. Two sets of experiments were conducted. First, we evaluated heart and kidney function and metabolic status in aged (46 weeks old) male obese ZDFxSHHF and age matched obese SHHF rats, lean Spontaneously Hypertensive (SHR) and lean normotensive Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rats. In the second set of experiments, renal function and structure as well as metabolic and lipid status were determined in lean (LN) and obese (OB) adult (29-weeks of age) ZDFxSHHF rats. At 46 weeks of age ZDFxSHHF rats are hypertensive expressing marked cardiac hypertrophy associated with diastolic dysfunction and preserved contractile function. Fasted hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia are accompanied by moderate hypercholesterolemia and hypertriglyceridemia. Obese aged ZDFxSHHF have marked renal hypertrophy, a 3-8 fold decrease in creatinine clearance (compared with SHHF, SHR and WKY), a high percent of segmental + global glomerulosclerosis (59.8%+/-10.8), and severe tubulointerstitial and vascular changes. Obese ZDFxSHHF rats die at an early age (approximately 12 months) from end-stage renal failure. Studies conducted in 29-week animals showed that, although both LN and OB 29-week old animals are hypertensive, OB animals have more severely compromised renal function and structure as compared with lean litter-mates (kidney weight: 2.56+/-0.16 vs. 1.61+/-0.12 g; creatinine clearance: 0.42+/-0.04 vs. 1.24+/-0.13 L/g kid/day; renal vascular resistance 12.39+/-1.4 vs. 6.14+/-0.42 mmHg/mL/min/g kid; protein excretion: 556+/-16 vs. 159+/-9mg/day/g kid, p < 0.05, OB vs. LN, respectively). Obesity is also associated with hyperglycemia (424+/-37 vs. 115+/-11 mg/dL), hyperinsulinemia (117.2+/-8.8 vs. 42.3+/-3.5 microU/mL), hypertriglyceridemia (5200+/-702 vs. 194+/-23 mg/dL), hypercholesterolemia (632+/-39 vs. 109+/-4mg/dL), and presence of segmental + global glomerulosclerosis (20.1+/-3.2% vs. 0.1+/-0.1%) with prominent tubular and interstitial changes (p < 0.05, OB vs. LN, respectively). In summary, the present study indicates that the crossing of rat strains of nephropathy produces hybrids that carry a high risk for severe renal dysfunction. The ZDFxSHHF rats express insulin resistance, hypertension, dislipidemia and obesity and develop severe renal dysfunction. In addition, the hybrids do not develop some of the complications (hydronephrosis or congestive heart failure) common for the parental strains that may compromise studies of renal function and structure. Therefore, the ZDFxSHHF rat may be a useful model fore valuating risk factors and pharmacological interventions in chronic renal failure.
The present study provides the first evidence that caffeine (despite improving insulin sensitivity) exacerbates renal failure in obese, diabetic ZSF1 rats. Further mechanistic studies of adverse renal effects of caffeine in chronic renal failure associated with metabolic syndrome are warranted.
Song, Jin, Curtis K. Kost Jr., and Douglas S. Martin. Androgens augment renal vascular responses to ANG II in New Zealand genetically hypertensive rats. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 290: R1608 -R1615, 2006. First published February 9, 2006 doi:10.1152/ajpregu.00364.2005.-Males develop higher blood pressure than do females. This study tested the hypothesis that androgens enhance responsiveness to ANG II during the development of hypertension in New Zealand genetically hypertensive (NZGH) rats. Male NZGH rats were obtained at 5 wk of age and subjected to sham operation (Sham) or castration (Cas) then studied at three age groups: 6 -7, 11-12, and 16 -17 wk. Mean arterial blood pressure (MAP), heart rate (HR), and renal blood flow (RBF) measurements were recorded under Inactin anesthesia. These variables were measured after enalapril (1 mg/kg) treatment and during intravenous ANG II infusion (20, 40, and 80 ng/kg/min). Plasma testosterone was measured by ELISA. Angiotensin type 1 (AT1) receptor expression was assessed by Western blot analysis and RT-PCR. ANG II-induced MAP responses were significantly attenuated in Cas NZGH rats. At the highest ANG II dose, MAP increased by 40 Ϯ 4% in Sham vs. 22 Ϯ 1% in Cas NZGH rats of 16 -17 wk of age. Similarly, renal vascular resistance (RVR) responses to ANG II were reduced by castration (209 Ϯ 20% in Sham vs. 168 Ϯ 10% in Cas NZGH rats at 16 -17 wk of age). Castration also reduced MAP recorded in conscious NZGH rats of this age group. Testosterone replacement restored baseline MAP and the pressor and RVR responses to ANG II. Castration reduced testosterone concentrations markedly. Testosterone treatment restored these concentrations. Neither castration nor castrationϩtestosterone treatment affected AT1 receptor mRNA or protein expression. Collectively, these data suggest that androgens modulate renal and systemic vascular responsiveness to ANG II, which may contribute to androgen-induced facilitation of NZGH rat hypertension.angiotensin; sex steroids; kidney; hypertension MALES DEVELOP HIGHER BLOOD pressure than do age-matched, premenopausal females. Gender-associated differences in blood pressure regulation have been demonstrated in both human and animal studies (31). The relative contribution of estrogens and androgens to these gender differences remains unclear (11,20,31). Nevertheless, several observations suggest that androgens play an important role in gender differences of blood pressure regulation. For example, castration attenuated the development of hypertension in several animal models (2, 15), whereas androgen treatment restored hypertension in castrated males (21, 36). The mechanism(s) of this prohypertensive effect of androgens remain(s) to be fully established.The kidneys are critical in regulating sodium and water balance and play an important role in controlling the long-term level of arterial pressure (17). Evidence from the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) model suggested that aging males showed exacerbated glomerular injury, increased prote...
1. Arterial baroreceptor denervation produces acute hypertension, but chronically denervated animals have an average arterial pressure that is similar to that of baroreceptor intact animals. 2. Although cardiopulmonary baroreceptors and renal compensations have been suggested to mediate the restoration of a normal average arterial pressure in sino-aortic denervated rats, such mechanisms are inconsistent with the available data. 3. At present the processes involved in the restoration and long-term maintenance of a normal average arterial pressure in chronic baroreceptor denervated animals are not known. An understanding of the regulation of arterial pressure that occurs in the absence of arterial baroreceptor reflexes may provide important new insights into the mechanisms underlying the long-term regulation of arterial pressure.
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