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Late gestational hypoxia and a postnatal high salt diet programs endothelial dysfunction and arterial stiffness in adult mouse offspring

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 23:43 authored by Sarah Walton, Reetu Singh, Tiffany Tan, Tamara ParaviciniTamara Paravicini, Karen Moritz
Gestational hypoxia and high dietary salt intake have both been associated with impaired vascular function in adulthood. Using a mouse model of prenatal hypoxia, we examined whether a chronic high salt diet had an additive effect in promoting vascular dysfunction in offspring. Pregnant CD1 dams were placed in a hypoxic chamber (12% O2) or housed under normal conditions (21% O2) from embryonic day 14.5 until birth. Gestational hypoxia resulted in a reduced body weight for both male and female offspring at birth. This restriction in body weight persisted until weaning, after which the animals underwent catch-up growth. At 10 weeks of age, a subset of offspring was placed on a high salt diet (5% NaCl). Pressurized myography of mesenteric resistance arteries at 12 months of age showed that both male and female offspring exposed to maternal hypoxia had significantly impaired endothelial function, as demonstrated by impaired vasodilatation to ACh but not sodium nitroprusside. Endothelial dysfunction caused by prenatal hypoxia was not exacerbated by postnatal consumption of a high salt diet. Prenatal hypoxia increased microvascular stiffness in male offspring. The combination of prenatal hypoxia and a postnatal high salt diet caused a leftward shift in the stress­strain relationship in both sexes. Histopathological analysis of aortic sections revealed a loss of elastin integrity and increased collagen, consistent with increased vascular stiffness. These results demonstrate that prenatal hypoxia programs endothelial dysfunction in both sexes. A chronic high salt diet in postnatal life had an additive deleterious effect on vascular mechanics and structural characteristics in both sexes.

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  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1113/JP271067
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 00223751

Journal

Journal of Physiology

Volume

594

Issue

5

Start page

1451

End page

1463

Total pages

13

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2015 The Authors. The Journal of Physiology © 2015 The Physiological Society

Former Identifier

2006056303

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-11-25

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