Increased sympathoexcitation and renal sodium retention during high salt intake are hallmarks of the salt sensitivity of blood pressure. The mechanism(s) by which excessive sympathetic nervous system release of norepinephrine influences renal sodium reabsorption is unclear. However, studies demonstrate that norepinephrine can stimulate the activity of the NCC (sodium chloride cotransporter) and promote the development of SSH (salt-sensitive hypertension). The adrenergic signaling pathways governing NCC activity remain a significant source of controversy with opposing studies suggesting a central role of upstream α
1
- and β-adrenoceptors in the canonical regulatory pathway involving WNKs (with-no-lysine kinases), SPAK (STE20/SPS1-related proline alanine-rich kinase), and OxSR1 (oxidative stress response 1). In our previous study, α
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-adrenoceptor antagonism in norepinephrine-infused male Sprague-Dawley rats prevented the development of norepinephrine–evoked SSH in part by suppressing NCC activity and expression. In these studies, we used selective adrenoceptor antagonism in male Dahl salt–sensitive rats to test the hypothesis that norepinephrine-mediated activation of the NCC in Dahl SSH occurs via an α
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-adrenoceptor dependent pathway. A high-salt diet evoked significant increases in NCC activity, expression, and phosphorylation in Dahl salt–sensitive rats that developed SSH. Increases were associated with a dysfunctional WNK1/4 dynamic and a failure to suppress SPAK/OxSR1 activity. α
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-adrenoceptor antagonism initiated before high–salt intake or following the establishment of SSH attenuated blood pressure in part by suppressing NCC activity, expression, and phosphorylation. Collectively, our findings support the existence of a norepinephrine-activated α
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-adrenoceptor gated pathway that relies on WNK/SPAK/OxSR1 signaling to regulate NCC activity in SSH.
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