In the present study we examined sympathetic function and baroreceptor reflex sensitivity in adult spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) after a selective transection of afferent renal nerves in the prehypertensive and established phases of hypertension. Renal deafferentation performed between 3 and 4 weeks after birth did not influence the course of the development of high blood pressure when compared with sham-operated rats. Mean arterial pressure, heart rate, and plasma norepinephrine concentrations were similar in both groups when measured at 13 weeks after renal deafferentation. However, blood pressure responses to gangUonk blockade with hexamethonium were significantly reduced in the renal deafferented SHR. Baroreceptor reflex sensitivity, assessed by heart rate responses to blood pressure changes induced by phenylephrine and nitroprusside, was significantly enhanced in these rats. When renal deafferentation was performed in adult SHR with established hypertension, mean arterial pressure decreased slightly but significantly by 5%. Heart rate, plasma norepinephrine concentrations, and responses to hexamethonium were not affected by this procedure. However, in the renal deafferented adult SHR, heart rate responses to phenylephrine but not to nitroprusside were significantly increased. Thus, in contrast to efferent renal nerves, afferent renal nerves do not play an important role in the development and maintenance of high blood pressure in SHR, but may contribute to the mechanisms that alter sympathetic function and baroreceptor reflex sensitivity in SHR during the development of hypertension. (Hypertension 1989;13:327-333)
Introduction: An inadequate wound healing following myocardial infarction (MI) is one of the main etiologies of heart failure (HF) development. Interventions aiming at improving this process may contribute to preserving cardiac function after MI. Our group, as well as others, have demonstrated the crucial role of Wnt/frizzled signaling in post-MI remodeling. In this overview, we provide the results of different studies aimed at confirming an initial study from our group, in which we observed beneficial effects of administration of a peptide fragment of Wnt5a, UM206, on infarct healing in a mouse MI model.Methods: Mice were subjected to permanent left coronary artery ligation, and treated with saline (control) or UM206, administered via osmotic minipumps. Cardiac function was assessed by echocardiography and hemodynamic measurements, while infarct size and myofibroblast content were characterized by (immuno)histochemistry.Results: In total, we performed seven follow-up studies, but we were unable to reproduce the beneficial effects of UM206 on infarct healing in most of them. Variations in dose and timing of UM206 administration, its manufacturer and the genetic background of the mice could not restore the phenotype. An in-depth analysis of the datasets revealed that the absence of effect of UM206 coincided with a lack of adverse cardiac remodeling and HF development in all experimental groups, irrespective of the treatment.Discussion: Irreproducibility of experimental observations is a major issue in biomedical sciences. It can arise from a relatively low number of experimental observations in the original study, a faulty hypothesis or a variation in the experimental model that cannot be controlled. In this case, the lack of adverse cardiac remodeling and lung weight increases in the follow-up studies point out to altered experimental conditions as the most likely explanation.
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