Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease (Aug 2018)

Nitric Oxide Synthase Inhibition Induces Renal Medullary Hypoxia in Conscious Rats

  • Tonja W. Emans,
  • Ben J. Janssen,
  • Jaap A. Joles,
  • C.T. Paul Krediet

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.118.009501
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 15

Abstract

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Background Renal hypoxia, implicated as crucial factor in onset and progression of chronic kidney disease, may be attributed to reduced nitric oxide because nitric oxide dilates vasculature and inhibits mitochondrial oxygen consumption. We hypothesized that chronic nitric oxide synthase inhibition would induce renal hypoxia. Methods and Results Oxygen‐sensitive electrodes, attached to telemeters, were implanted in either renal cortex (n=6) or medulla (n=7) in rats. After recovery and stabilization, baseline oxygenation (pO2) was recorded for 1 week. To inhibit nitric oxide synthase, N‐ω‐nitro‐l‐arginine (L‐NNA; 40 mg/kg/day) was administered via drinking water for 2 weeks. A separate group (n=8), instrumented with blood pressure telemeters, followed the same protocol. L‐NNA rapidly induced hypertension (165±6 versus 108±3 mm Hg; P<0.001) and proteinuria (79±12 versus 17±2 mg/day; P<0.001). Cortical pO2, after initially dipping, returned to baseline and then increased. Medullary pO2 decreased progressively (up to −19±6% versus baseline; P<0.05). After 14 days of L‐NNA, amplitude of diurnal medullary pO2 was decreased (3.7 [2.2–5.3] versus 7.9 [7.5–8.4]; P<0.01), whereas amplitudes of blood pressure and cortical pO2 were unaltered. Terminal glomerular filtration rate (1374±74 versus 2098±122 μL/min), renal blood flow (5014±336 versus 9966±905 μL/min), and sodium reabsorption efficiency (13.0±0.8 versus 22.8±1.7 μmol/μmol) decreased (all P<0.001). Conclusions For the first time, we show temporal development of renal cortical and medullary oxygenation during chronic nitric oxide synthase inhibition in unrestrained conscious rats. Whereas cortical pO2 shows transient changes, medullary pO2 decreased progressively. Chronic L‐NNA leads to decreased renal perfusion and sodium reabsorption efficiency, resulting in progressive medullary hypoxia, suggesting that juxtamedullary nephrons are potentially vulnerable to prolonged nitric oxide depletion.

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