A COMPARISON OF CARDIAC REACTIVITY AND β‐ADRENOCEPTOR NUMBER AND AFFINITY BETWEEN AORTA‐COARCTED HYPERTENSIVE AND NORMOTENSIVE RATS
Open Access
- 1 November 1981
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in British Journal of Pharmacology
- Vol. 74 (3) , 517-523
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1476-5381.1981.tb10459.x
Abstract
The effects of noradrenaline (NA) and isoprenaline on isolated atria from aorta‐coarcted hypertensive rats (AHR) at early (6 day) and chronic (28 day) stages of hypertension were studied and compared with time‐matched, sham‐operated, normotensive rats (SNR). The number and affinity of β‐adrenoceptors ((−)‐[3H]‐dihydroalprenolol binding sites) were also studied in cardiac membranes prepared from these animals. Six and 28 days after complete ligation of the abdominal aorta between the two renal arteries, rats became hypertensive with significantly greater arterial blood pressures than time‐matched SNR. At both stages of hypertension, the atrial inotropic or chronotropic effects of NA and isoprenaline from hypertensive rats were similar to time‐matched SNR. Moreover, no differences in atrial reactivity were observed between the early and chronic stages of hypertension. Irrespective of the stage of hypertension, cardiac membranes from the AHR contained the same number of β‐adrenoceptors as time‐matched SNR. In addition, the receptor affinity for the radioligand within each group was equivalent. However, the chronic stage hypertensive rats and their time‐matched controls contained fewer β‐adrenoceptors and these receptors had greater affinity for the radioligand when compared with cardiac membranes from rats at the early stage of hypertension and their controls. The observed equivalent chronotropic and inotropic responses to NA and isoprenaline between the hypertensive and normotensive rats in both stages of hypertension may be explained in terms of similar receptor number and receptor binding affinity. The reduced number of β‐adrenoceptors with greater binding affinity in day 28 normotensive or hypertensive rats may be a compensatory mechanism for these animals to maintain normal cardiac function with increasing age.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- CARDIAC β‐ADRENOCEPTORS DURING NORMAL GROWTH OF MALE AND FEMALE RATSBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1980
- Subsensitivity of Cardiac β-Adrenoceptors in Renal Hypertensive RatsJournal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology, 1979
- β-Adrenergic Receptors in Aged Rat Brain: Reduced Number and Capacity of Pineal Gland to Develop SupersensitivityScience, 1978
- Reduced number of β-adrenergic receptors in the myocardium of spontaneously hypertensive ratsBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1978
- Adrenergic reactivity of the myocardium in hypertensionLife Sciences, 1978
- Differences of cardiac reactivity between spontaneously hypertensive and normotensive ratsEuropean Journal of Pharmacology, 1972
- EVIDENCE FOR THE EXISTENCE OF ALPHA ADRENERGIC RECEPTOR IN ISOLATED RAT ATRIAThe Japanese Journal of Pharmacology, 1972
- Reactivity to Noradrenaline of Aortic Strips and Portal Veins from Spontaneously Hypertensive and Normotensive RatsActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1971
- A method for production of experimental hypertension in ratsCanadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology, 1968
- THE ATTRACTIONS OF PROTEINS FOR SMALL MOLECULES AND IONSAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1949