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Prevention of Obesity‐Associated Coronary and Cardiac Diastolic Dysfunction by Deletion of Smooth Muscle Cell Mineralocorticoid Receptor in Females
Author(s) -
Brown Scott M,
Aragonez Christian G,
Khan Maloree L,
Chandrasekar Bysani,
DeMarco Vincent G,
Jaffe Iris Z,
Bender Shawn B
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
the faseb journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.709
H-Index - 277
eISSN - 1530-6860
pISSN - 0892-6638
DOI - 10.1096/fasebj.2019.33.1_supplement.lb508
Subject(s) - medicine , endocrinology , vasodilation , mineralocorticoid receptor , diastole , endothelial dysfunction , cardiology , endothelium , vascular smooth muscle , receptor , blood pressure , smooth muscle
Coronary microvascular dysfunction is independently predictive of cardiac diastolic dysfunction and both conditions are common in obesity and associated metabolic syndrome. Recent work by us and others indicates that mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) antagonism treats obesity‐associated coronary and cardiac diastolic dysfunction. Vascular cell‐specific MR involvement in these obesity‐related defects remains unclear. Thus, we evaluated the hypothesis that deletion of smooth muscle cell (SMC) MR would prevent obesity‐associated coronary and cardiac diastolic dysfunction in females. Female wild‐type (WT) and SMC MR knockout (KO) mice were fed a standard chow or western diet (WD) to induce obesity for 16 weeks. WD feeding induced obesity, hyperinsulinemia, hypercholesterolemia, and visceral adipose inflammation in both WT and SMC MR KO mice. Assessment of coronary vascular function via wire myography revealed WD‐induced impairment of endothelium‐dependent vasodilation and enhanced vasoconstriction to the thromboxane A 2 analog U46619 in WT but not SMC MR KO mice. Vasodilation to the nitric‐oxide donor sodium nitroprusside was unchanged by WD feeding. Global quantitative proteomics of aortas from each group revealed a number of differentially expressed proteins following WD feeding including upregulation of the oxidative stress‐related small GTPase Rac‐1 in WT but not SMC MR KO aortas. Accordingly, pretreatment of coronary arteries with the superoxide dismutase mimetic Tempol restored endothelium‐dependent vasodilation in WD‐fed WT mice with no effect in SMC MR KO vessels. Furthermore, WD feeding induced cardiac diastolic dysfunction assessed by echocardiography (i.e., increased E/E′, reduced E′/A′, increased diastolic stiffness). Coincident with prevention of WD‐induced coronary dysfunction, SMC MR deletion prevented WD‐induced cardiac diastolic dysfunction. Importantly, this cardioprotective effect of SMC MR deletion occurred independent of changes in left ventricular hypertrophy, blood pressure, aortic stiffening, and proteinuria. Taken together, our data demonstrate a central role of SMC MR signaling underlying WD‐induced coronary and cardiac diastolic dysfunction in females. Importantly, this study adds to an emerging body of evidence suggesting a vascular origin of cardiac dysfunction in obesity. Support or Funding Information Supported by NIH (HL136386 to SBB, HL119290 to IZJ) and the Department of Veterans Affairs BLR&D (CDA‐2 IK2 BX002030). BC is supported by Department of Veterans Affairs (IK6 BX004016 and I01 BX002255). This abstract is from the Experimental Biology 2019 Meeting. There is no full text article associated with this abstract published in The FASEB Journal .