Effects of Bradykinin on Aortic Endothelial Function in ApoE-Knockout Mice With Chronic Chlamydia Pneumoniae Infection

    • Liuba Petru
    • Departments of Pediatric Cardiology, Lund University Hospital and University of Lund
    • Karnani Paivi
    • Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Helsinki
    • Pesonen Erkki
    • Departments of Pediatric Cardiology, Lund University Hospital and University of Lund
    • Paakkari Ilari
    • Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Helsinki

    • Persson Kenneth
    • Departments of Medical Microbiology, Lund University Hospital and University of Lund
    • Forslid Anders
    • Laboratory Animal Science, Lund University Hospital and University of Lund

Abstract

Background Impaired muscarinic receptor-mediated vasodilation is an important feature of early atherosclerosis. Earlier studies on apolipoprotein E-knockout mice (apoE-KO) mice suggested adverse effects of Chlamydia pneumoniae infection on the endothelial vasomotor responses of aortas to the muscarinic agonist methacholine. Using additional aorta samples the present study investigated the responses to bradykinin. Methods and Results ApoE-KO mice were repeatedly inoculated with either Chlamydia pneumoniae (C. pneumoniae) or saline. At 2, 6, and 10 weeks after the first inoculation, precontracted aorta rings from both groups were exposed to bradykinin in the absence and presence of L-NAME and diclofenac. In noninfected animals, the vasomotor responses to bradykinin were similar at all timepoints (p>0.5). Compared with noninfected animals, the responses in infected animals tended to increase through the study period (p<0.05 at 10 weeks). Although diclofenac and L-NAME had no effect in noninfected mice, they inhibited the responses to bradykinin in infected mice at 6 and, more markedly, 10 weeks (p<0.05 for both). Conclusion Bradykinin stimulation of aorta endothelium from C. pneumoniae-infected apoE-KO animals appears to activate compensatory kinin receptor-related mechanisms that could involve nitric oxide and vasore-laxing prostanoids. Although the precise molecular mechanisms require further investigation, one could speculate that strategies increasing bradykinin availability might reverse the arterial dysfunction during chronic infectious disease.

Journal

Circulation journal : official journal of the Japanese Circulation Society   [List of Volumes]

Circulation journal : official journal of the Japanese Circulation Society 71(9), 1480-1484, 2007-08-20  [Table of Contents]

Japanese Circulation Society

References:  34

You must have a user ID to see the references.If you already have a user ID, please click "Login" to access the info.New users can click "Sign Up" to register for an user ID.

Cited by:  1

You must have a user ID to see the cited references.If you already have a user ID, please click "Login" to access the info.New users can click "Sign Up" to register for an user ID.

Preview

Preview

Codes

  • NII Article ID (NAID) :
    110006399699
  • NII NACSIS-CAT ID (NCID) :
    AA11591968
  • Text Lang :
    ENG
  • Article Type :
    Journal Article
  • ISSN :
    13469843
  • Databases :
    CJP  CJPref  NII-ELS  J-STAGE 

Export