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

Vitamin D Attenuates Endothelial Dysfunction in Uremic Rats and Maintains Human Endothelial Stability

  • Marc Vila Cuenca,
  • Evelina Ferrantelli,
  • Elisa Meinster,
  • Stephan M. Pouw,
  • Igor Kovačević,
  • Renee X. de Menezes,
  • Hans W. Niessen,
  • Robert H.J. Beelen,
  • Peter L. Hordijk,
  • Marc G. Vervloet

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.118.008776
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 17

Abstract

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Background Dysfunctional endothelium may contribute to the development of cardiovascular complications in chronic kidney disease (CKD). Supplementation with active vitamin D has been proposed to have vasoprotective potential in CKD, not only by direct effects on the endothelium but also by an increment of α‐Klotho. Here, we explored the capacity of the active vitamin D analogue paricalcitol to protect against uremia‐induced endothelial damage and the extent to which this was dependent on increased α‐Klotho concentrations. Methods and Results In a combined rat model of CKD with vitamin D deficiency, renal failure induced vascular permeability and endothelial‐gap formation in thoracic aorta irrespective of baseline vitamin D, and this was attenuated by paricalcitol. Downregulation of renal and serum α‐Klotho was found in the CKD model, which was not restored by paricalcitol. By measuring the real‐time changes of the human endothelial barrier function, we found that paricalcitol effectively improved the recovery of endothelial integrity following the addition of the pro‐permeability factor thrombin and the induction of a wound. Furthermore, immunofluorescence staining revealed that paricalcitol promoted vascular endothelial‐cadherin–based cell‐cell junctions and diminished F‐actin stress fiber organization, preventing the formation of endothelial intracellular gaps. Conclusions Our results demonstrate that paricalcitol attenuates the CKD‐induced endothelial damage in the thoracic aorta and directly mediates endothelial stability in vitro by enforcing cell‐cell interactions.

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