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      Altered Nitric Oxide System in Cardiovascular and Renal Diseases

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          Abstract

          Nitric oxide (NO) is synthesized by a family of NO synthases (NOS), including neuronal, inducible, and endothelial NOS (n/i/eNOS). NO-mediated effects can be beneficial or harmful depending on the specific risk factors affecting the disease. In hypertension, the vascular relaxation response to acetylcholine is blunted, and that to direct NO donors is maintained. A reduction in the activity of eNOS is mainly responsible for the elevation of blood pressure, and an abnormal expression of iNOS is likely to be related to the progression of vascular dysfunction. While eNOS/nNOS-derived NO is protective against the development of atherosclerosis, iNOS-derived NO may be proatherogenic. eNOS-derived NO may prevent the progression of myocardial infarction. Myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury is significantly enhanced in eNOS-deficient animals. An important component of heart failure is the loss of coronary vascular eNOS activity. A pressure-overload may cause severer left ventricular hypertrophy and dysfunction in eNOS null mice than in wild-type mice. iNOS-derived NO has detrimental effects on the myocardium. NO plays an important role in regulating the angiogenesis and slowing the interstitial fibrosis of the obstructed kidney. In unilateral ureteral obstruction, the expression of eNOS was decreased in the affected kidney. In triply n/i/eNOS null mice, nephrogenic diabetes insipidus developed along with reduced aquaporin-2 abundance. In chronic kidney disease model of subtotal-nephrectomized rats, treatment with NOS inhibitors decreased systemic NO production and induced left ventricular systolic dysfunction (renocardiac syndrome).

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          Most cited references93

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          Oxidation of tetrahydrobiopterin leads to uncoupling of endothelial cell nitric oxide synthase in hypertension.

          Tetrahydrobiopterin is a critical cofactor for the NO synthases, and in its absence these enzymes become "uncoupled," producing reactive oxygen species (ROSs) rather than NO. In aortas of mice with deoxycorticosterone acetate-salt (DOCA-salt) hypertension, ROS production from NO synthase is markedly increased, and tetrahydrobiopterin oxidation is evident. Using mice deficient in the NADPH oxidase subunit p47(phox) and mice lacking either the endothelial or neuronal NO synthase, we obtained evidence that hypertension produces a cascade involving production of ROSs from the NADPH oxidase leading to oxidation of tetrahydrobiopterin and uncoupling of endothelial NO synthase (eNOS). This decreases NO production and increases ROS production from eNOS. Treatment of mice with oral tetrahydrobiopterin reduces vascular ROS production, increases NO production as determined by electron spin resonance measurements of nitrosyl hemoglobin, and blunts the increase in blood pressure due to DOCA-salt hypertension. Endothelium-dependent vasodilation is only minimally altered in vessels of mice with DOCA-salt hypertension but seems to be mediated by hydrogen peroxide released from uncoupled eNOS, since it is inhibited by catalase. Tetrahydrobiopterin oxidation may represent an important abnormality in hypertension. Treatment strategies that increase tetrahydrobiopterin or prevent its oxidation may prove useful in preventing vascular complications of this common disease.
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            Nitric oxide and cardiac function: ten years after, and continuing.

            Nitric oxide (NO) is produced from virtually all cell types composing the myocardium and regulates cardiac function through both vascular-dependent and -independent effects. The former include regulation of coronary vessel tone, thrombogenicity, and proliferative and inflammatory properties as well as cellular cross-talk supporting angiogenesis. The latter comprise the direct effects of NO on several aspects of cardiomyocyte contractility, from the fine regulation of excitation-contraction coupling to modulation of (presynaptic and postsynaptic) autonomic signaling and mitochondrial respiration. This multifaceted involvement of NO in cardiac physiology is supported by a tight molecular regulation of the three NO synthases, from cellular spatial confinement to posttranslational allosteric modulation by specific interacting proteins, acting in concert to restrict the influence of NO to a particular intracellular target in a stimulus-specific manner. Loss of this specificity, such as produced on excessive NO delivery from inflammatory cells (or cytokine-stimulated cardiomyocytes themselves), may result in profound cellular disturbances leading to heart failure. Future therapeutic manipulations of cardiac NO synthesis will necessarily draw on additional characterization of the cellular and molecular determinants for the net effect of this versatile radical on the cardiomyocyte biology.
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              Chronic kidney disease and cardiovascular disease in a general Japanese population: the Hisayama Study.

              Chronic kidney disease has been shown to be an independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease in high-risk populations. However, this relationship is inconclusive in community-based populations. To clarify this issue, we followed 2634 community-dwelling individuals without cardiovascular disease, aged 40 years or older, for 12 years and examined the relationship between chronic kidney disease and the incidence of cardiovascular disease. During the follow-up period, 99 subjects (56 men and 43 women) experienced coronary heart disease, 137 subjects (60 men and 77 women) ischemic stroke, and 60 subjects (26 men and 34 women) hemorrhagic stroke. In men, the age-adjusted incidence of coronary heart disease was significantly higher in subjects with chronic kidney disease than in those without it (6.2 vs. 2.9 per 1000 person-years) (P < 0.05), but such a relationship was not observed with ischemic stroke. In contrast, in women, the age-adjusted incidence of ischemic stroke was significantly higher in subjects with chronic kidney disease than in those without it (3.4 vs. 2.5) (P < 0.05), while that of coronary heart disease was not. Chronic kidney disease was not found to be associated with the incidence of hemorrhagic stroke. In multivariate analysis, even after adjustments for traditional and nontraditional cardiovascular disease risk factors, chronic kidney disease was found to be an independent risk factor for the occurrence of coronary heart disease in men [hazard ratio (HR), 2.26; 95% CI, 1.06-4.79], and for the occurrence of ischemic stroke in women (HR, 1.91; 95% CI, 1.15-3.15). Our findings suggest that chronic kidney disease is an independent risk factor for the occurrence of cardiovascular disease in the general Japanese population.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Chonnam Med J
                Chonnam Med J
                CMJ
                Chonnam Medical Journal
                Chonnam National University Medical School
                2233-7385
                2233-7393
                May 2016
                20 May 2016
                : 52
                : 2
                : 81-90
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Physiology, Chonnam National University Medical School, Gwangju, Korea.
                [2 ]Department of Internal Medicine, Chonnam National University Medical School, Gwangju, Korea.
                Author notes
                Corresponding Author: JongUn Lee. Department of Physiology, Chonnam National University Medical School, 160 Baekseo-ro, Dong-gu, Gwangju 61469, Korea. Tel: +82-62-220-4262, Fax: +82-62-232-1242, julee@ 123456jnu.ac.kr
                Article
                10.4068/cmj.2016.52.2.81
                4880583
                27231671
                73f9980e-daa3-4008-9836-84e1665b0f26
                © Chonnam Medical Journal, 2016

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 12 February 2016
                : 14 March 2016
                : 22 March 2016
                Funding
                Funded by: Chonnam National University Hospital Biomedical Research Institute;
                Award ID: CRI13903-21
                Categories
                Review Article

                Medicine
                nitric oxide,hypertension,atherosclerosis,ischemia/reperfusion injury,heart failure,nephrogenic diabetes insipidus,ureteral obstruction,cardio-renal syndrome

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