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Placental growth factor mediates aldosterone-dependent vascular injury in mice
Iris Z. Jaffe, … , Afshin Ehsan, Michael E. Mendelsohn
Iris Z. Jaffe, … , Afshin Ehsan, Michael E. Mendelsohn
Published October 1, 2010
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2010;120(11):3891-3900. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI40205.
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Research Article Cardiology

Placental growth factor mediates aldosterone-dependent vascular injury in mice

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Abstract

In clinical trials, aldosterone antagonists reduce cardiovascular ischemia and mortality by unknown mechanisms. Aldosterone is a steroid hormone that signals through renal mineralocorticoid receptors (MRs) to regulate blood pressure. MRs are expressed and regulate gene transcription in human vascular cells, suggesting that aldosterone might have direct vascular effects. Using gene expression profiling, we identify the pro-proliferative VEGF family member placental growth factor (PGF) as an aldosterone-regulated vascular MR target gene in mice and humans. Aldosterone-activated vascular MR stimulated Pgf gene transcription and increased PGF protein expression and secretion in the mouse vasculature. In mouse vessels with endothelial damage and human vessels from patients with atherosclerosis, aldosterone enhanced expression of PGF and its receptor, FMS-like tyrosine kinase 1 (Flt1). In atherosclerotic human vessels, MR antagonists inhibited PGF expression. In vivo, aldosterone infusion augmented vascular remodeling in mouse carotids following wire injury, an effect that was lost in Pgf–/– mice. In summary, we have identified PGF as what we believe to be a novel downstream target of vascular MR that mediates aldosterone augmentation of vascular injury. These findings suggest a non-renal mechanism for the vascular protective effects of aldosterone antagonists in humans and support targeting the vascular aldosterone/MR/PGF/Flt1 pathway as a therapeutic strategy for ischemic cardiovascular disease.

Authors

Iris Z. Jaffe, Brenna G. Newfell, Mark Aronovitz, Najwa N. Mohammad, Adam P. McGraw, Roger E. Perreault, Peter Carmeliet, Afshin Ehsan, Michael E. Mendelsohn

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Figure 6

Lack of aldosterone-enhanced ECM deposition after vascular injury in PGF-deficient mice.

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Lack of aldosterone-enhanced ECM deposition after vascular injury in PGF...
ECM deposition was quantified in trichrome-stained sections of uninjured and injured WT and PGF KO mouse carotid arteries treated with vehicle or aldosterone. Fold change in medial trichrome pixel area for all animals compared with WT vehicle-treated, uninjured vessels is indicated at top. Representative carotid artery sections are shown at bottom (scale bar: 1 mM). *P < 0.001 versus uninjured.

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