We employed next-generation, transcriptome-wide RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq) technology to assess the effects of two different exercise training protocols on transcriptional profiles in diaphragm second-order arterioles (D2a) and in the diaphragm feed artery (DFA) from Otsuka Long Evans Tokushima Fatty (OLETF) rats. Arterioles were isolated from the diaphragm of OLETF rats that underwent an endurance exercise training program (EX; n = 13), interval sprint training program (SPRINT; n = 14), or remained sedentary (Sed; n = 12). Our hypothesis was that exercise training would have similar effects on gene expression in the diaphragm and soleus muscle arterioles because diaphragm blood flow increases during exercise to a similar extent as in soleus. Results reveal that several canonical pathways that were significantly altered by exercise in limb skeletal muscles were not among the pathways significantly changed in the diaphragm arterioles including actin cytoskeleton signaling, role of NFAT in regulation of immune response, protein kinase A signaling, and protein ubiquitination pathway. EX training altered the expression of a smaller number of genes than did SPRINT in the DFA but induced a larger number of genes with altered expression in the D2a than did SPRINT. In fact, FDR differential expression analysis (FDR, 10%) indicated that only two genes exhibited altered expression in D2a of SPRINT rats. Very few of the genes that exhibited altered expression in the DFA or D2a were also altered in limb muscle arterioles. Finally, results indicate that the 2a arterioles of soleus muscle (S2a) from endurance-trained animals and the DFA of SPRINT animals exhibited the largest number of genes with altered expression.
Unilateral renal artery plication in dogs reduced renal blood flow by 80% and produced a sustained elevation in arterial pressure whereas plasma renin activity increased for only 4 days. Sodium was retained for 3 days after plication, but this response is similar to that after a sham operation. Of seven dogs studied chronically, elevated arterial pressure was sustained for 27 days or longer in six animals. In three dogs hypertension continued for 2 mo before collateral vessels developed and arterial pressure fell; ligation of these collaterals restored hypertension. Arterial pressure was unaffected by an infusion of [1-sarcosine, 8-alanine] angiotensin II in chronic hypertensive dogs on a normal sodium intake. This angiotensin antagonist lowered arterial pressure after sodium depletion, but became ineffective following rapid sodium repletion. Chronic hypertensive dogs showed normal responses to deoxycorticosterone acetate. These findings suggest that the renin-angiotensin system is not critically involved in maintenace of chronic two-kidney renovascular hypertension in the dog. The data also show that the homeostatic role played by the renin-angiotensin system in the maintenance of arterial pressure remained intact in chronic hypertension.
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