HIV-associated cardiovascular diseases have been widely described, but clinical studies aimed at establishing cause-effect relationships between HIV-associated cardiovascular disease and either the HIV infection or antiretroviral therapy have been problematic. Endothelial dysfunction is a sensitive marker and early event in atherosclerosis, and many have suggested that protease inhibitors promote endothelial dysfunction indirectly by inducing elevations in circulating lipids. To determine whether nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors and/or protease inhibitors induce endothelial dysfunction, and to test whether this effect is dependent upon drug-mediated alteration in plasma lipid concentrations, we treated male Sprague-Dawley rats with pharmacological doses of azidothymidine (AZT), indinavir, or AZT plus indinavir through their drinking water for 1 month and assessed endothelial function in aortic rings using an isometric force measurement. Circulating levels of plasma lipids and endothelin-1, a marker for endothelial injury and/or dysfunction, were also determined. We found that AZT and AZT plus indinavir treatments dramatically reduced endothelium-dependent vessel relaxation. However, AZT treatment did not significantly alter plasma levels of cholesterol or triglyceride. In addition, plasma endothelin-1 levels were elevated in rats treated with AZT plus indinavir. Indinavir treatment alone increased plasma cholesterol levels but had no effect on endothelial function. These findings suggest that in addition to modulating plasma lipid levels, antiretrovirals, particularly AZT and perhaps other nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, may have direct effects on the vascular endothelium. Together with other increased risk factors for atherosclerosis in HIV patients, AZT-induced endothelial dysfunction may contribute to the cardiovascular diseases associated with HIV antiretroviral therapy.
Basal contractility and responses to beta-adrenoceptor activation are compromised in hearts from rats with chronic portal vein stenosis. Here we report the effect of partial ligation of the portal vein on myocardial G protein expression, beta-adrenoceptor-G protein coupling, and excitation-contraction coupling (ECC). Contractility (dT/dt) was reduced 30-50% in right and left ventricles, but the rate of relaxation (-dT/dt) was unaffected. Isoproterenol-induced positive inotropism was diminished, but there was no difference in ED(50). The concentration-dependent increase in -dT/dt was unaffected. G(s)alpha and G(i)alpha expression, cholera toxin- and pertussis toxin-induced ADP-ribosylation, and formation of the agonist-receptor-G(s) complex were unaffected by portal vein stenosis. Of the components of ECC examined, the caffeine-sensitive sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+) pool was reduced 35%, although the Ca(2+) uptake and release processes were unchanged; the apparent density of L-type Ca(2+) channels decreased 60% with no change in affinity; the dihydropyridine Ca(2+) channel agonist BAY K 8644 produced relative changes in dT/dt that were similar in both groups, suggesting normal function in the remaining Ca(2+) channels; and Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchange was reduced 50% in the portal vein stenosis group. These data suggest that the effect of portal vein stenosis on the myocardium is the result of alterations to ECC.
Human immunodeficiency virus-1 antiretroviral treatment is associated with an increased incidence of atherosclerosis. We hypothesized that antiretrovirals directly impair endothelial function after short-term exposure and that with chronic exposure, this dysfunction promotes a proliferative response, inducing neointimal hyperplasia, thus contributing to vascular lesion formation. To test this hypothesis, we treated mice with the nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor azidothymidine (AZT), the protease inhibitor indinavir, or AZT + indinavir. Treatment with AZT or AZT + indinavir for 5 days impaired endothelium-dependent vessel relaxation. Though indinavir treatment alone did not alter vessel relaxation, it potentiated the impairment of endothelium-dependent relaxation induced by AZT. Coadministration of the antioxidant Mn (III) tetrakis (1-methyl-4-pyridyl) porphyrin attenuated antiretroviral-induced endothelial dysfunction, suggesting that oxidant production may have a causal role in the observed endothelial dysfunction. To test whether the antiretrovirals promote a proliferative response following endothelial dysfunction, we treated mice with antiretrovirals for 14 days and then induced a carotid endothelial injury. Two weeks later, we observed a dramatic increase in neointimal formation in all antiretroviral-treated animals, and the newly formed neointima was comprised mainly of proliferated smooth muscle cells. Although a functional endothelium surrounding the lesioned area and re-endothelialization across the area of injury is important in reducing proliferation in this model, we tested whether the neointimal hyperplasia was associated with endothelial dysfunction. Plasma levels of asymmetric dimethylarginine, a biomarker of endothelial dysfunction, increased after treatment with indinavir or AZT + indinavir. On the other hand, treatment with AZT or AZT + indinavir increased endothelial vascular cell adhesion molecule staining. We conclude that short-term treatment with antiretrovirals elicited a direct impairment in endothelial function, in part via an oxidant-dependent pathway. These antiretrovirals also exacerbated injury-induced vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation and neointimal hyperplasia, likely because of their inhibition of endothelial function.
Inadequate blood flow and increased vasoconstriction of the placenta contribute to pregnancy associated disorders such as preeclampsia (PE). Because placental vessels lack autonomic innervation, humoral effects of the placenta must play critical roles in regulation of fetal-placental vascular contractility. In this study, we examined the nature of humoral factors produced by PE trophoblasts on placental vessel contractility using an organ bath perfusion model. Vasomotor responses were studied in vitro using placental chorionic plate arteries. Vessel rings from third branch chorionic plate arteries were dissected from human placentas following normal or PE delivery. The arterial rings were equilibrated in Krebs Henseleit buffer and exposed to placental conditioned medium, which was prepared by culture of villous tissue from PE placentas. Receptor antagonists for angiotensin II (ANG II), thromboxane (TX), and endothelin (ET) were used to determine which humoral factor produced by placental tissue (trophoblasts) was more effective in promoting vasoconstriction. The role of angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) and non-ACE ANG II generating enzymes in regulation of placental vasomotor tone were also investigated. A total of 80 arterial rings from 48 placentas were studied. Our results showed: 1) enhanced vasomotor tone in arteries from PE placentas compared to those from normal placentas; 2) PE-CM induced vaso-constrictive activity could be partially attenuated by receptor antagonists for TX, ANG II and ET, respectively; and 3) chymostatin (a chymase inhibitor) produced a stronger inhibitory effect than captopril (ACE inhibitor) on PE conditioned medium induced vasoconstriction. Our data demonstrate increased vasocontractility in PE placentas and suggest that the non-ACE pathway is probably a major source of ANG II produced in the human placenta.
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