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      Estrogen protects transgenic hypertensive rats by shifting the vasoconstrictor-vasodilator balance of RAS.

      The American journal of physiology
      Angiotensin I, Angiotensin II, blood, pharmacology, Animals, Animals, Genetically Modified, Aorta, Thoracic, enzymology, Blood Pressure, drug effects, Estradiol, therapeutic use, Estrogen Replacement Therapy, Female, Hypertension, drug therapy, genetics, physiopathology, Kidney, Mice, Models, Cardiovascular, Muscle, Smooth, Vascular, Ovariectomy, Peptide Fragments, Peptidyl-Dipeptidase A, metabolism, Rats, Renin, biosynthesis, Renin-Angiotensin System, physiology, Vasoconstriction, Vasodilation

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          Abstract

          In pursuit of the hypothesis that estrogen shifts the vasoconstrictor-vasodilator balance of the renin-angiotensin system, we investigated the cardiovascular responses to administration of angiotensin-(1-7) [ANG-(1-7)] and angiotensin II (ANG II) in female transgenic (mRen2)27-positive [Tg(+)] and -negative [Tg(-)] rats in the presence and absence of 3 wk of estrogen replacement therapy. Fifty-three female Tg(-) and Tg(+) rats were oophorectomized and received either 17 beta-estradiol (1.5 mg/rat s.c. for 3 wk) or vehicle. At the end of 3 wk of estrogen treatment, mean blood pressure was lowered in freely moving chronically cannulated Tg(+) (159 +/- 4 vs. 145 +/- 5 mmHg, P < 0.05) and Tg(-) (119 +/- 4 vs. 108 +/- 2 mmHg, P < 0.05) rats. Moreover, the magnitude of the depressor component of the biphasic response to ANG-(1-7) was significantly enhanced in estrogen-treated Tg(+) rats, whereas the pressor component to ANG-(1-7) was attenuated in both Tg(+) and Tg(-) rats. Estrogen replacement significantly attenuated the pressor response to ANG II in both Tg(+) and Tg(-) rats. In addition, estrogen replacement therapy significantly reduced plasma ANG-converting enzyme activity in association with a reduction in circulating levels of ANG II. Tissue levels (kidney and aorta) of ANG-converting enzyme were also reduced with chronic estrogen replacement therapy. On the other hand, estrogen augmented the levels of plasma ANG-(1-7) in Tg(+) animals. Plasma renin activity was unchanged with estrogen treatment. These findings provide the first evidence demonstrating that estrogen is protective against hypertension, possibly by amplifying the vasodilator contributions of ANG-(1-7), while reducing the formation and vasoconstrictor actions of ANG II.

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