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Vasodilation to vascular endothelial growth factor in the uterine artery of the pregnant rat is blunted by low dietary protein intake

Vasodilation to vascular endothelial growth factor in the uterine artery of the pregnant rat is blunted by low dietary protein intake
Vasodilation to vascular endothelial growth factor in the uterine artery of the pregnant rat is blunted by low dietary protein intake
Pregnancy is associated with a substantial increase in uterine artery blood flow, which may in part result from dilation in response to vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Uterine blood flow is reported to be reduced in globally diet-restricted pregnant rats. Both global and protein dietary restriction in pregnancy produce programmed effects in offspring. In this study we hypothesized that protein restriction in pregnancy impairs maternal uterine artery responses to VEGF.
Vascular responses to VEGF were determined in isolated uterine arteries of pregnant (18 or 19 d of gestation) Wistar rats fed a diet containing either 18% or 9% casein throughout pregnancy. For comparison, responses to phenylephrine, potassium chloride, and acetylcholine were determined. In addition, the response of the mesenteric artery to VEGF was studied in the same animals. A significant reduction of the maximal relaxation to VEGF (p = 0.041) and in the overall response (p = 0.004) to VEGF was found in uterine arteries of the 9% compared with the 18% group, but responses to all other agonists were similar. The VEGF response was reduced by cyclooxygenase inhibition (indomethacin) in both groups. In the 18%, but not the 9%, group it was further reduced by nitric oxide synthase inhibition (N?-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester).
VEGF was shown to dilate the mesenteric artery but this effect was not significantly altered by the low-protein diet. These results show an attenuated uterine artery vasodilator response to VEGF produced by a low-protein diet in pregnancy, partly because of a reduction of the nitric oxide component of VEGF-mediated relaxation.
0031-3998
485-491
Itoh, Shigeru
ee32ea77-f41b-486b-a687-dae80f4a244e
Brawley, Lee
acce4d5e-03c8-48da-b391-45fbc1b384b1
Wheeler, Timothy
6aefc7d2-5cf8-4a45-8295-144cf78a7edb
Anthony, Frederick W.
28a46159-500c-48fe-8c55-ef57e034cbeb
Poston, Lucilla
916aced2-462e-445f-9efa-83ed4b7b3a9f
Hanson, Mark A.
1952fad1-abc7-4284-a0bc-a7eb31f70a3f
Itoh, Shigeru
ee32ea77-f41b-486b-a687-dae80f4a244e
Brawley, Lee
acce4d5e-03c8-48da-b391-45fbc1b384b1
Wheeler, Timothy
6aefc7d2-5cf8-4a45-8295-144cf78a7edb
Anthony, Frederick W.
28a46159-500c-48fe-8c55-ef57e034cbeb
Poston, Lucilla
916aced2-462e-445f-9efa-83ed4b7b3a9f
Hanson, Mark A.
1952fad1-abc7-4284-a0bc-a7eb31f70a3f

Itoh, Shigeru, Brawley, Lee, Wheeler, Timothy, Anthony, Frederick W., Poston, Lucilla and Hanson, Mark A. (2002) Vasodilation to vascular endothelial growth factor in the uterine artery of the pregnant rat is blunted by low dietary protein intake. Pediatric Research, 51 (4), 485-491.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Pregnancy is associated with a substantial increase in uterine artery blood flow, which may in part result from dilation in response to vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Uterine blood flow is reported to be reduced in globally diet-restricted pregnant rats. Both global and protein dietary restriction in pregnancy produce programmed effects in offspring. In this study we hypothesized that protein restriction in pregnancy impairs maternal uterine artery responses to VEGF.
Vascular responses to VEGF were determined in isolated uterine arteries of pregnant (18 or 19 d of gestation) Wistar rats fed a diet containing either 18% or 9% casein throughout pregnancy. For comparison, responses to phenylephrine, potassium chloride, and acetylcholine were determined. In addition, the response of the mesenteric artery to VEGF was studied in the same animals. A significant reduction of the maximal relaxation to VEGF (p = 0.041) and in the overall response (p = 0.004) to VEGF was found in uterine arteries of the 9% compared with the 18% group, but responses to all other agonists were similar. The VEGF response was reduced by cyclooxygenase inhibition (indomethacin) in both groups. In the 18%, but not the 9%, group it was further reduced by nitric oxide synthase inhibition (N?-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester).
VEGF was shown to dilate the mesenteric artery but this effect was not significantly altered by the low-protein diet. These results show an attenuated uterine artery vasodilator response to VEGF produced by a low-protein diet in pregnancy, partly because of a reduction of the nitric oxide component of VEGF-mediated relaxation.

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Published date: 2002

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 25650
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/25650
ISSN: 0031-3998
PURE UUID: e2be7cd2-c69f-485d-90af-760ad3e61816
ORCID for Mark A. Hanson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6907-613X

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Date deposited: 20 Apr 2006
Last modified: 28 Apr 2022 01:47

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Contributors

Author: Shigeru Itoh
Author: Lee Brawley
Author: Timothy Wheeler
Author: Frederick W. Anthony
Author: Lucilla Poston
Author: Mark A. Hanson ORCID iD

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