20 research outputs found

    NOXA1-dependent NADPH oxidase 1 signaling mediates angiotensin II activation of the epithelial sodium channel

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    The activity of the epithelial Na+ channel (ENaC) in principal cells of the distal nephron fine-tunes renal Na+ excretion. The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system modulates ENaC activity to control blood pressure, in part, by influencing Na+ excretion. NADPH oxidase activator 1-dependent NADPH oxidase 1 (NOXA1/NOX1) signaling may play a key role in angiotensin II (ANG II)-dependent activation of ENaC. The present study aimed to explore the role of NOXA1/NOX1 signaling in ANG II-dependent activation of ENaC in renal principal cells. Patch-clamp electrophysiology and principal cell-specific Noxa1 knockout (PC-Noxa1 KO) mice were used to determine the role of NOXA1/NOX1 signaling in ANG II-dependent activation of ENaC. The activity of ENaC in the luminal plasma membrane of principal cells was quantified in freshly isolated split-opened tubules using voltage-clamp electrophysiology. ANG II significantly increased ENaC activity. This effect was robust and observed in response to both acute (40 min) and more chronic (48-72 h) ANG II treatment of isolated tubules and mice, respectively. Inhibition of ANG II type 1 receptors with losartan abolished ANG II-dependent stimulation of ENaC. Similarly, treatment with ML171, a specific inhibitor of NOX1, abolished stimulation of ENaC by ANG II. Treatment with ANG II failed to increase ENaC activity in principal cells in tubules isolated from the PC-Noxa1 KO mouse. Tubules from wild-type littermate controls, though, retained their ability to respond to ANG II with an increase in ENaC activity. These results indicate that NOXA1/NOX1 signaling mediates ANG II stimulation of ENaC in renal principal cells. As such, NOXA1/NOX1 signaling in the distal nephron plays a central role in Na+ homeostasis and control of blood pressure, particularly as it relates to regulation by the renin-ANG II axis.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Activity of the epithelial Na+ channel (ENaC) in the distal nephron fine-tunes renal Na+ excretion. Angiotensin II (ANG II) has been reported to enhance ENaC activity. Emerging evidence suggests that NADPH oxidase (NOX) signaling plays an important role in the stimulation of ENaC by ANG II in principal cells. The present findings indicate that NOX activator 1/NOX1 signaling mediates ANG II stimulation of ENaC in renal principal cells.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/175279/2/NOXA1-dependent NADPH oxidase 1 signaling mediates angiotensin II activation of the epithelial sodium channel.pdfPublished versionDescription of NOXA1-dependent NADPH oxidase 1 signaling mediates angiotensin II activation of the epithelial sodium channel.pdf : Published versio

    Cardiomyocyte NOX4 regulates resident macrophage-mediated inflammation and diastolic dysfunction in stress cardiomyopathy

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    In acute sympathetic stress, catecholamine overload can lead to stress cardiomyopathy. We tested the hypothesis that cardiomyocyte NOX4 (NADPH oxidase 4)-dependent mitochondrial oxidative stress mediates inflammation and diastolic dysfunction in stress cardiomyopathy. Isoproterenol (ISO; 5 mg/kg) injection induced sympathetic stress in wild-type and cardiomyocyte (CM)-specific Nox4 knockout (Nox4CM−/−) mice. Wild-type mice treated with ISO showed higher CM NOX4 expression, H2O2 levels, inflammasome activation, and IL18, IL6, CCL2, and TNFα levels than Nox4CM−/− mice. Spectral flow cytometry and t-SNE analysis of cardiac cell suspensions showed significant increases in pro-inflammatory and pro-fibrotic embryonic-derived resident (CCR2−MHCIIhiCX3CR1hi) macrophages in wild-type mice 3 days after ISO treatment, whereas Nox4CM−/− mice had a higher proportion of embryonic-derived resident tissue-repair (CCR2−MHCIIloCX3CR1lo) macrophages. A significant increase in cardiac fibroblast activation and interstitial collagen deposition and a restrictive pattern of diastolic dysfunction with increased filling pressure was observed in wild-type hearts compared with Nox4CM−/− 7 days post-ISO. A selective NOX4 inhibitor, GKT137831, reduced myocardial mitochondrial ROS, macrophage infiltration, and fibrosis in ISO-injected wild-type mice, and preserved diastolic function. Our data suggest sympathetic overstimulation induces resident macrophage (CCR2−MHCII+) activation and myocardial inflammation, resulting in fibrosis and impaired diastolic function mediated by CM NOX4-dependent ROS.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/191307/2/Cardiomyocyte NOX4 regulates resident macrophage.pdfPublished versionDescription of Cardiomyocyte NOX4 regulates resident macrophage.pdf : Published versio

    Mitochondrial oxidative stress contributes to diastolic dysfunction through impaired mitochondrial dynamics

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    Diastolic dysfunction (DD) underlies heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), a clinical syndrome associated with aging that is becoming more prevalent. Despite extensive clinical studies, no effective treatment exists for HFpEF. Recent findings suggest that oxidative stress contributes to the pathophysiology of DD, but molecular mechanisms underpinning redox-sensitive cardiac remodeling in DD remain obscure. Using transgenic mice with mitochondria-targeted NOX4 overexpression (Nox4TG618) as a model, we demonstrate that NOX4-dependent mitochondrial oxidative stress induces DD in mice as measured by increased E/E′, isovolumic relaxation time, Tau Glantz and reduced dP/dtmin while EF is preserved. In Nox4TG618 mice, fragmentation of cardiomyocyte mitochondria, increased DRP1 phosphorylation, decreased expression of MFN2, and a higher percentage of apoptotic cells in the myocardium are associated with lower ATP-driven and maximal mitochondrial oxygen consumption rates, a decrease in respiratory reserve, and a decrease in citrate synthase and Complex I activities. Transgenic mice have an increased concentration of TGFβ and osteopontin in LV lysates, as well as MCP-1 in plasma, which correlates with a higher percentage of LV myocardial periostin- and ACTA2-positive cells compared with wild-type mice. Accordingly, the levels of ECM as measured by Picrosirius Red staining as well as interstitial deposition of collagen I are elevated in the myocardium of Nox4TG618 mice. The LV tissue of Nox4TG618 mice also exhibited increased ICaL current, calpain 2 expression, and altered/disrupted Z-disc structure. As it pertains to human pathology, similar changes were found in samples of LV from patients with DD. Finally, treatment with GKT137831, a specific NOX1 and NOX4 inhibitor, or overexpression of mCAT attenuated myocardial fibrosis and prevented DD in the Nox4TG618 mice. Together, our results indicate that mitochondrial oxidative stress contributes to DD by causing mitochondrial dysfunction, impaired mitochondrial dynamics, increased synthesis of pro-inflammatory and pro-fibrotic cytokines, activation of fibroblasts, and the accumulation of extracellular matrix, which leads to interstitial fibrosis and passive stiffness of the myocardium. Further, mitochondrial oxidative stress increases cardiomyocyte Ca2+ influx, which worsens CM relaxation and raises the LV filling pressure in conjunction with structural proteolytic damage.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/175138/2/Mitochondrial oxidative stress contributes to diastolic dysfunction through impaired mitochondrial dynamics.pdfPublished versionDescription of Mitochondrial oxidative stress contributes to diastolic dysfunction through impaired mitochondrial dynamics.pdf : Published versio
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