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Hyperinsulinemia blunts sympathetic vasoconstriction: a possible role of β-adrenergic activation
Author(s) -
Jaqueline K Limberg,
Rogério Nogueira Soares,
Gavin Power,
Jennifer L. Harper,
James Smith,
Brian Shariffi,
Dain W. Jacob,
Camila ManriqueAcevedo,
Jaume Padilla
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
american journal of physiology. regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology/american journal of physiology. regulatory, integrative, and comparative physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.266
H-Index - 175
eISSN - 1522-1490
pISSN - 0363-6119
DOI - 10.1152/ajpregu.00018.2021
Subject(s) - vasoconstriction , vasodilation , hyperinsulinemia , medicine , sympathetic nervous system , endocrinology , adrenergic , insulin , norepinephrine , epinephrine , catecholamine , blood pressure , insulin resistance , receptor , dopamine
Herein we report in a sample of healthy young men ( n = 14) and women ( n = 12) that hyperinsulinemia induces time-dependent decreases in total peripheral resistance and its contribution to the maintenance of blood pressure. In the same participants, we observe profound vasodilatory effects of insulin in the lower limb despite concomitant activation of the sympathetic nervous system. We hypothesized that this prominent peripheral vasodilation is possibly due to the ability of the leg vasculature to escape sympathetic vasoconstriction during systemic insulin stimulation. Consistent with this notion, we demonstrate in a subset of healthy men ( n = 9) and women ( n = 7) that systemic infusion of insulin blunts sympathetically mediated leg vasoconstriction evoked by a cold pressor test, a well-established sympathoexcitatory stimulus. Further substantiating this observation, we show in mouse aortic rings that insulin exposure suppresses epinephrine and norepinephrine-induced vasoconstriction. Notably, we found that such insulin-suppressing effects on catecholamine-induced constriction are diminished following β-adrenergic receptor blockade. In accordance, we also reveal that insulin augments β-adrenergic-mediated vasorelaxation in isolated arteries. Collectively, these findings support the idea that sympathetic vasoconstriction can be attenuated during systemic hyperinsulinemia in the leg vasculature of both men and women and that this phenomenon may be in part mediated by potentiation of β-adrenergic vasodilation neutralizing α-adrenergic vasoconstriction.

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