Abstract

Increased inflammation arising from an abnormal immune response can damage healthy tissue and lead to disease progression. An important example of this is the accumulation of inflammatory mediators in the kidney, which can subsequently lead to hypertension and renal injury. The origin of this inflammation may involve neuro‐immune interactions. For example, the novel vagus nerve‐to‐spleen mechanism known as the “cholinergic anti‐inflammatory pathway” controls inflammation upon stimulation. However, if this pathway is dysfunctional, inflammation becomes less regulated and chronic inflammatory diseases such as hypertension may develop. Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is an autoimmune disease with aberrant immune function, increased renal inflammation, and prevalent hypertension. We hypothesized that the cholinergic anti‐inflammatory pathway is impaired in SLE and that stimulation of this pathway would protect from the progression of hypertension in SLE mice. Female SLE (NZBWF1) and control (NZW) mice were administered nicotine or vehicle for 7 days (2 mg/kg/day, subcutaneously) in order to stimulate the cholinergic anti‐inflammatory pathway at the level of the splenic nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (α7‐nAChR). Blood pressure was assessed posttreatment. Nicotine‐treated SLE mice did not develop hypertension and this lower blood pressure (compared to saline‐treated SLE mice) coincided with lower splenic and renal cortical expression of pro‐inflammatory cytokines. These data provide evidence that the cholinergic anti‐inflammatory pathway is impaired in SLE. In addition, these data suggest that stimulation of the cholinergic anti‐inflammatory pathway can protect the kidney by dampening inflammation and therefore prevent the progression of hypertension in the setting of SLE.

Highlights

  • More than 25% of the world’s adult population was hypertensive in 2000 and the prevalence of hypertension is projected to increase by 29% by the year 2025 (Kearney et al 2005)

  • These data confirm that pharmacological stimulation of the cholinergic anti-inflammatory pathway with nicotine is capable of suppressing splenic inflammation

  • The purpose of this study was to determine whether activation of the cholinergic anti-inflammatory pathway at the level of the a7-nAChR would attenuate the production and release of splenic pro-inflammatory cytokines, which would subsequently reduce systemic, renal, inflammation

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Summary

Introduction

More than 25% of the world’s adult population was hypertensive in 2000 and the prevalence of hypertension is projected to increase by 29% by the year 2025 (Kearney et al 2005). In the kidney, has recently been associated with the progression of hypertension (Miguel et al 2010; Heijnen et al 2013; McMaster et al 2015; Xiao et al 2015). Immunosuppressive therapy and/or blockade of inflammatory mediators have been shown to reduce inflammation in the kidneys and protect from hypertension in both humans and animals (Rodriguez-Iturbe et al 2001; Herrera et al 2006; Venegas-Pont et al 2010); it is of interest to determine the a 2017 The Authors. Physiological Reports published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of The Physiological Society and the American Physiological Society.

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