Abstract

Oxidative stress has been implicated in the pathophysiology of cerebral stroke. As NADPH oxidases (NOXs) play major roles in the regulation of oxidative stress, we hypothesized that reduction of NOX activity by depletion of p22phox, an essential subunit of NOX complexes, would prevent cerebral stroke. To investigate this, we used the stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHRSP) and the p22phox-deleted congenic SHRSP. Although p22phox depletion reduced blood pressure under salt loading, it did not ameliorate oxidative stress or reduce the incidence of salt-induced stroke in SHRSPs. Additional pharmacological reduction of oxidative stress using antioxidant reagents with different mechanisms of action was necessary to prevent stroke, indicating that NOX was not the major target in salt-induced stroke in SHRSPs. On the other hand, oxidative stress measured based on urinary isoprostane levels showed significant correlations with blood pressure, stroke latency and urinary protein excretion under salt loading, suggesting an important role of oxidative stress per se in hypertension and hypertensive organ damage. Overall, our results imply that oxidative stress from multiple sources influences stroke susceptibility and other hypertensive disorders in salt-loaded SHRSPs.

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