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Maternal high salt diet altered Adenosine‐mediated vasodilatation via PKA/BK channel pathway in offspring rats
Author(s) -
Wu Jue,
Li Na,
Liu Yanping,
Li Weisheng,
He Axin,
Zhu Di,
Feng Xueqin,
Liu Bailin,
Shi Ruixiu,
Zhang Yujuan,
Lv Juanxiu,
Xu Zhice
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
molecular nutrition and food research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.495
H-Index - 131
eISSN - 1613-4133
pISSN - 1613-4125
DOI - 10.1002/mnfr.201600963
Subject(s) - vasodilation , medicine , endocrinology , adenosine , offspring , adenylyl cyclase , forskolin , protein kinase a , chemistry , biology , receptor , kinase , biochemistry , pregnancy , genetics
Scope High salt (HS) diets are related to cardiovascular diseases, and prenatal HS was suggested to increase risks of coronary artery diseases in the offspring. This study tested the hypothesis that prenatal HS may influence Adenosine‐induced vasodilatation via protein kinase A (PKA) pathway in coronary arteries. Methods and results Sprague–Dawley rats were fed with 8% salt diet for gestation, the control was fed with 0.3% salt diet. Coronary arteries from male adult offspring were tested for K + channels and Adenosine signal pathways. Adenosine‐mediated vasodilatation was reduced in coronary arteries in HS. There was no difference in gene expression of A 2A receptors between the two groups. After pretreatment with PKA inhibitor, vasodilatation to Adenosine was decreased to a smaller extent in HS than that in control. Forskolin (activator of adenylate cyclase)‐mediated vasodilatation was decreased in HS. Iberiotoxin (large‐conductance Ca 2+ ‐activated K + channel [BK channel] inhibitor) attenuated Forskolin‐induced vasodilatation in control, not in HS group. Currents of BK channels decreased in coronary artery smooth muscle cells, and PKA‐modulated BK channel functions were declined. Protein levels of BK β1 and PKA C‐subunits in coronary arteries of HS offspring were reduced. Conclusions Prenatal HS diets altered Adenosine‐mediated coronary artery vasodilatation in the offspring, which was linked to downregulation of cAMP/PKA/BK channel pathway.