Deficient Dopamine D-2 Receptor Function Causes Renal Inflammation Independently of High Blood Pressure

作者:Zhang Yanrong*; Cuevas Santiago; Asico Laureano D; Escano Crisanto; Yang Yu; Pascua Annabelle M; Wang Xiaoyan; Jones John E; Grandy David; Eisner Gilbert; Jose Pedro A; Armando Ines
来源:PLos One, 2012, 7(6): e38745.
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0038745

摘要

Renal dopamine receptors participate in the regulation of blood pressure. Genetic factors, including polymorphisms of the dopamine D-2 receptor gene (DRD2) are associated with essential hypertension, but the mechanisms of their contribution are incompletely understood. Mice lacking Drd2 (D-2(-/-)) have elevated blood pressure, increased renal expression of inflammatory factors, and renal injury. We tested the hypothesis that decreased dopamine D-2 receptor (D2R) function increases vulnerability to renal inflammation independently of blood pressure, is an immediate cause of renal injury, and contributes to the subsequent development of hypertension. In D-2(-/-) mice, treatment with apocynin normalized blood pressure and decreased oxidative stress, but did not affect the expression of inflammatory factors. In mouse RPTCs Drd2 silencing increased the expression of TNF alpha and MCP-1, while treatment with a D2R agonist abolished the angiotensin II-induced increase in TNF-alpha and MCP-1. In uni-nephrectomized wild-type mice, selective Drd2 silencing by subcapsular infusion of Drd2 siRNA into the remaining kidney produced the same increase in renal cytokines/chemokines that occurs after Drd2 deletion, increased the expression of markers of renal injury, and increased blood pressure. Moreover, in mice with two intact kidneys, short-term Drd2 silencing in one kidney, leaving the other kidney undisturbed, induced inflammatory factors and markers of renal injury in the treated kidney without increasing blood pressure. Our results demonstrate that the impact of decreased D2R function on renal inflammation is a primary effect, not necessarily associated with enhanced oxidant activity, or blood pressure; renal damage is the cause, not the result, of hypertension. Deficient renal D2R function may be of clinical relevance since common polymorphisms of the human DRD2 gene result in decreased D2R expression and function.

  • 出版日期2012-6-14