Nutrients (Feb 2021)

Vitamin D Deficiency Cause Gender Specific Alterations of Renal Arterial Function in a Rodent Model

  • Miklós Sipos,
  • Borbála Péterffy,
  • Réka Eszter Sziva,
  • Péter Magyar,
  • Leila Hadjadj,
  • Bálint Bányai,
  • Anita Süli,
  • Eszter Soltész-Katona,
  • Dóra Gerszi,
  • Judit Kiss,
  • Mária Szekeres,
  • György L. Nádasy,
  • Eszter Mária Horváth,
  • Szabolcs Várbíró

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13020704
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 2
p. 704

Abstract

Read online

Vitamin D deficiency shows positive correlation to cardiovascular risk, which might be influenced by gender specific features. Our goal was to examine the effect of Vitamin D supplementation and Vitamin D deficiency in male and female rats on an important hypertension target organ, the renal artery. Female and male Wistar rats were fed with Vitamin D reduced chow for eight weeks to induce hypovitaminosis. Another group of animals received normal chow with further supplementation to reach optimal serum vitamin levels. Isolated renal arteries of Vitamin D deficient female rats showed increased phenylephrine-induced contraction. In all experimental groups, both indomethacin and selective cyclooxygenase-2 inhibition (NS398) decreased the phenylephrine-induced contraction. Angiotensin II-induced contraction was pronounced in Vitamin D supplemented males. In both Vitamin D deficient groups, acetylcholine-induced relaxation was impaired. In the female Vitamin D supplemented group NS398, in males the indomethacin caused reduced acetylcholine-induced relaxation. Increased elastic fiber density was observed in Vitamin D deficient females. The intensity of eNOS immunostaining was decreased in Vitamin D deficient females. The density of AT1R staining was the highest in the male Vitamin D deficient group. Although Vitamin D deficiency induced renal vascular dysfunction in both sexes, female rats developed more extensive impairment that was accompanied by enzymatic and structural changes.

Keywords