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Vasorelaxant and anti-aggregatory actions of the nitroxyl donor, isopropylamine NONOate, are maintained in hypercholesterolemia

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 14:18 authored by Michelle Bullen, Alyson Miller, Janahan Dharmarajah, Grant Drummond, Chris Sobey, Barbara Kemp-Harper
Nitroxyl (HNO) displays pharmacological and therapeutic actions distinct from those of its redox sibling nitric oxide (NO •). It remains unclear, however, whether the vasoprotective actions of HNO are preserved in disease. The ability of the HNO donor isopropylamine NONOate (IPA/NO) to induce vasorelaxation, its susceptibility to tolerance development, and antiaggregatory actions were compared with those of a clinically used NO • donor, glyceryl trinitrate (GTN), in hypercholesterolemic mice. The vasorelaxant and antiaggregatory properties of IPA/NO and GTN were examined in isolated carotid arteries and washed platelets, respectively, from male C57BL/6J mice [wild-type (WT)] maintained on either a normal diet (WT-ND) or high fat diet (WT-HFD; 7 wk) as well as apolipoprotein E-deficient mice maintained on a HFD (ApoE -/--HFD; 7 wk). In WT-ND mice, IPA/NO (0.1-30 μmol/l) induced concentration-dependent vasorelaxation and inhibition of collagen (30 μg/ml)-stimulated platelet aggregation, which was predominantly soluble guanylyl cyclase/cGMP dependent. Compared with WT-HFD mice, ApoE -/--HFD mice displayed an increase in total plasma cholesterol levels (P < 0.001), vascular (P < 0.05) and platelet (P < 0.05) superoxide (O 2 -) production, and reduced endogenous NO • bioavailability (P < 0.001). Vasorelaxant responses to both IPA/NO and GTN were preserved in hypercholesterolemia, whereas vascular tolerance developed to GTN (P < 0.001) but not to IPA/NO. The ability of IPA/NO (3 μmol/l) to inhibit platelet aggregation was preserved in hypercholesterolemia, whereas the actions of GTN (100 μmol/l) were abolished. In conclusion, the vasoprotective effects of IPA/NO were maintained in hypercholesterolemia and, thus, HNO donors may represent future novel treatments for vascular diseases.

History

Journal

American Journal of Physiology: Heart and Circulatory Physiology

Volume

301

Start page

1314

End page

1405

Total pages

92

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

Copyright © 2011 the American Physiological Society

Former Identifier

2006042210

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-01-19

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