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Norvaline Reduces Blood Pressure and Induces Diuresis in Rats with Inherited Stress-Induced Arterial Hypertension. / Gilinsky, Michael A.; Polityko, Yulia K.; Markel, Arkady L. et al.

In: BioMed Research International, Vol. 2020, 4935386, 14.02.2020.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Gilinsky, MA, Polityko, YK, Markel, AL, Latysheva, TV, Samson, AO, Polis, B & Naumenko, SE 2020, 'Norvaline Reduces Blood Pressure and Induces Diuresis in Rats with Inherited Stress-Induced Arterial Hypertension', BioMed Research International, vol. 2020, 4935386. https://doi.org/10.1155/2020/4935386

APA

Gilinsky, M. A., Polityko, Y. K., Markel, A. L., Latysheva, T. V., Samson, A. O., Polis, B., & Naumenko, S. E. (2020). Norvaline Reduces Blood Pressure and Induces Diuresis in Rats with Inherited Stress-Induced Arterial Hypertension. BioMed Research International, 2020, [4935386]. https://doi.org/10.1155/2020/4935386

Vancouver

Gilinsky MA, Polityko YK, Markel AL, Latysheva TV, Samson AO, Polis B et al. Norvaline Reduces Blood Pressure and Induces Diuresis in Rats with Inherited Stress-Induced Arterial Hypertension. BioMed Research International. 2020 Feb 14;2020:4935386. doi: 10.1155/2020/4935386

Author

Gilinsky, Michael A. ; Polityko, Yulia K. ; Markel, Arkady L. et al. / Norvaline Reduces Blood Pressure and Induces Diuresis in Rats with Inherited Stress-Induced Arterial Hypertension. In: BioMed Research International. 2020 ; Vol. 2020.

BibTeX

@article{df8d6089b9e24553ab4bf11fd769d595,
title = "Norvaline Reduces Blood Pressure and Induces Diuresis in Rats with Inherited Stress-Induced Arterial Hypertension",
abstract = "Growing evidence suggests that increased arginase activity affects vital bioprocesses in various systems and universally mediates the pathogenesis of numerous metabolic diseases. The adverse effects of arginase are associated with a severe decline in L-arginine bioavailability, which leads to nitric oxide synthase substrate insufficiency, uncoupling, and, eventually, superoxide anion generation and substantial reduction of nitric oxide (NO) synthesis. In cooperation, it contributes to chronic oxidative stress and endothelial dysfunction, which might lead to hypertension and atherosclerosis. Recent preclinical investigations point arginase as a promising therapeutic target in ameliorating metabolic and vascular dysfunctions. In the present study, adult rats with inherited stress-induced arterial hypertension (ISIAH) were used as a model of hypertension. Wistar rats served as normotensive controls. Experimental animals were intraperitoneally administered for seven days with nonproteinogenic amino acid L-norvaline (30 mg/kg/day), which is a potent arginase inhibitor, or with the vehicle. Blood pressure (BP), body weight, and diuresis were monitored. The changes in blood and urine levels of creatinine, urea, and NO metabolites were analyzed. We observed a significant decline in BP and induced diuresis in ISIAH rats following the treatment. The same procedure did not affect the BP of control animals. Remarkably, the treatment had no influence upon glomerular filtration rate in two experimental groups, just like the daily excretion of creatinine and urea. Conversely, NO metabolite levels were amplified in normotonic but not in hypertensive rats following the treatment. The data indicate that L-norvaline is a potential antihypertensive agent and deserves to be clinically investigated. Moreover, we suggest that changes in blood and urine are causally related to the effect of L-norvaline upon BP regulation.",
keywords = "NECROSIS-FACTOR-ALPHA, GLOMERULAR-FILTRATION-RATE, ENDOTHELIAL ARGINASE-II, NITRIC-OXIDE SYNTHESIS, L-ARGININE, UREA SYNTHESIS, INHIBITION, SYNTHASE, DISEASE, TARGET",
author = "Gilinsky, {Michael A.} and Polityko, {Yulia K.} and Markel, {Arkady L.} and Latysheva, {Tatyana V.} and Samson, {Abraham O.} and Baruh Polis and Naumenko, {Sergey E.}",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2020 Michael A. Gilinsky et al.",
year = "2020",
month = feb,
day = "14",
doi = "10.1155/2020/4935386",
language = "English",
volume = "2020",
journal = "BioMed Research International",
issn = "2314-6133",
publisher = "Hindawi Publishing Corporation",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Norvaline Reduces Blood Pressure and Induces Diuresis in Rats with Inherited Stress-Induced Arterial Hypertension

AU - Gilinsky, Michael A.

AU - Polityko, Yulia K.

AU - Markel, Arkady L.

AU - Latysheva, Tatyana V.

AU - Samson, Abraham O.

AU - Polis, Baruh

AU - Naumenko, Sergey E.

N1 - Copyright © 2020 Michael A. Gilinsky et al.

PY - 2020/2/14

Y1 - 2020/2/14

N2 - Growing evidence suggests that increased arginase activity affects vital bioprocesses in various systems and universally mediates the pathogenesis of numerous metabolic diseases. The adverse effects of arginase are associated with a severe decline in L-arginine bioavailability, which leads to nitric oxide synthase substrate insufficiency, uncoupling, and, eventually, superoxide anion generation and substantial reduction of nitric oxide (NO) synthesis. In cooperation, it contributes to chronic oxidative stress and endothelial dysfunction, which might lead to hypertension and atherosclerosis. Recent preclinical investigations point arginase as a promising therapeutic target in ameliorating metabolic and vascular dysfunctions. In the present study, adult rats with inherited stress-induced arterial hypertension (ISIAH) were used as a model of hypertension. Wistar rats served as normotensive controls. Experimental animals were intraperitoneally administered for seven days with nonproteinogenic amino acid L-norvaline (30 mg/kg/day), which is a potent arginase inhibitor, or with the vehicle. Blood pressure (BP), body weight, and diuresis were monitored. The changes in blood and urine levels of creatinine, urea, and NO metabolites were analyzed. We observed a significant decline in BP and induced diuresis in ISIAH rats following the treatment. The same procedure did not affect the BP of control animals. Remarkably, the treatment had no influence upon glomerular filtration rate in two experimental groups, just like the daily excretion of creatinine and urea. Conversely, NO metabolite levels were amplified in normotonic but not in hypertensive rats following the treatment. The data indicate that L-norvaline is a potential antihypertensive agent and deserves to be clinically investigated. Moreover, we suggest that changes in blood and urine are causally related to the effect of L-norvaline upon BP regulation.

AB - Growing evidence suggests that increased arginase activity affects vital bioprocesses in various systems and universally mediates the pathogenesis of numerous metabolic diseases. The adverse effects of arginase are associated with a severe decline in L-arginine bioavailability, which leads to nitric oxide synthase substrate insufficiency, uncoupling, and, eventually, superoxide anion generation and substantial reduction of nitric oxide (NO) synthesis. In cooperation, it contributes to chronic oxidative stress and endothelial dysfunction, which might lead to hypertension and atherosclerosis. Recent preclinical investigations point arginase as a promising therapeutic target in ameliorating metabolic and vascular dysfunctions. In the present study, adult rats with inherited stress-induced arterial hypertension (ISIAH) were used as a model of hypertension. Wistar rats served as normotensive controls. Experimental animals were intraperitoneally administered for seven days with nonproteinogenic amino acid L-norvaline (30 mg/kg/day), which is a potent arginase inhibitor, or with the vehicle. Blood pressure (BP), body weight, and diuresis were monitored. The changes in blood and urine levels of creatinine, urea, and NO metabolites were analyzed. We observed a significant decline in BP and induced diuresis in ISIAH rats following the treatment. The same procedure did not affect the BP of control animals. Remarkably, the treatment had no influence upon glomerular filtration rate in two experimental groups, just like the daily excretion of creatinine and urea. Conversely, NO metabolite levels were amplified in normotonic but not in hypertensive rats following the treatment. The data indicate that L-norvaline is a potential antihypertensive agent and deserves to be clinically investigated. Moreover, we suggest that changes in blood and urine are causally related to the effect of L-norvaline upon BP regulation.

KW - NECROSIS-FACTOR-ALPHA

KW - GLOMERULAR-FILTRATION-RATE

KW - ENDOTHELIAL ARGINASE-II

KW - NITRIC-OXIDE SYNTHESIS

KW - L-ARGININE

KW - UREA SYNTHESIS

KW - INHIBITION

KW - SYNTHASE

KW - DISEASE

KW - TARGET

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85080073087&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1155/2020/4935386

DO - 10.1155/2020/4935386

M3 - Article

C2 - 32149110

AN - SCOPUS:85080073087

VL - 2020

JO - BioMed Research International

JF - BioMed Research International

SN - 2314-6133

M1 - 4935386

ER -

ID: 23668682