Decreased NO signaling leads to enhanced vasoconstrictor responsiveness in skeletal muscle arterioles of the ZDF rat prior to overt diabetes and hypertension
- 1 April 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology
- Vol. 294 (4) , H1840-H1850
- https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.00692.2007
Abstract
Approximately 40% of patients with type 2 diabetes present with concurrent hypertension at the time of diabetes diagnosis. Increases in peripheral vascular resistance and correspondingly enhanced vasoconstrictor capacity could have profound implications for the development of hypertension and the progression of insulin resistance to overt diabetes. The purpose of this study was to determine whether skeletal muscle arteriolar vasoconstrictor dysfunction precedes or occurs concurrently with the onset of diabetes and hypertension. Male Zucker diabetic fatty (ZDF) rats were studied at 7, 13, and 20 wk of age to represent prediabetic and short-term and long-term diabetic states, respectively. Conscious mean arterial pressure (MAP), fasted plasma insulin and glucose, vasoconstrictor responses, and passive mechanical properties of isolated skeletal muscle arterioles were measured in prediabetic, diabetic, and age-matched control rats. Elevated MAP was manifest in short-term diabetes (control 117 ± 1, diabetic 135 ± 3 mmHg) and persisted with long-term diabetes (control 113 ± 2, diabetic 135 ± 3 mmHg). This higher MAP was preceded by augmented arteriolar vasoconstrictor responses to norepinephrine and endothelin-1 and followed by diminished β-adrenergic vasodilation and enhanced myogenic constriction in long-term diabetes. Furthermore, we demonstrate that diminished nitric oxide (NO) signaling underlies the increases in vasoconstrictor responsiveness in arterioles from prediabetic and diabetic rats. Arteriolar stiffness was not different between control and prediabetic or diabetic rats at any time point studied. Collectively, these results indicate that increases in vasoconstrictor responsiveness resulting from diminished NO signaling in skeletal muscle arterioles precede the development of diabetes and hypertension in ZDF rats.Keywords
This publication has 61 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ageing and exercise training alter adrenergic vasomotor responses of rat skeletal muscle arteriolesThe Journal of Physiology, 2007
- Vascular adrenergic tone and structural narrowing constrain reactive hyperemia in skeletal muscle of obese Zucker ratsAmerican Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology, 2006
- Muscle glycogen inharmoniously regulates glycogen synthase activity, glucose uptake, and proximal insulin signalingAmerican Journal of Physiology-Endocrinology and Metabolism, 2006
- Reduced nitric oxide bioavailability contributes to skeletal muscle microvessel rarefaction in the metabolic syndromeAmerican Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology, 2005
- Differential gene expression between Zucker Fatty rats and Zucker Diabetic Fatty rats: a potential role for the immediate-early gene Egr-1 in regulation of beta cell proliferationJournal of Molecular Endocrinology, 2005
- ??-Adrenoceptor-mediated, nitric-oxide-dependent vasodilatation is abnormal in early hypertensionJournal Of Hypertension, 2004
- Integrative control of the skeletal muscle microcirculation in the maintenance of arterial pressure during exerciseJournal of Applied Physiology, 2004
- Enhanced arteriolar α-adrenergic constriction impairs dilator responses and skeletal muscle perfusion in obese Zucker ratsJournal of Applied Physiology, 2004
- Microvasculature in diabetesCardiovascular Research, 1996
- Age-Related Changes in Vascular Reactivity in Genetically Diabetic RatsPharmacology, 1995