Abstract

Objectives: Upregulation of endothelin-1 (ET-1) and its receptors have been linked to increases in hypoxic sensitivity of the carotid chemoreceptors and the development of hypertension. As such, chemoreflex sensitization has been shown in pre-clinical models to be attenuated by ET-1 receptor blockade. Herein, we sought to assess a role for ET-1 in the maintenance of resting blood pressure (BP) in healthy young men and determine whether chemoreflex control of BP could be altered by ET-1 blockade. We hypothesized endothelin receptor antagonism with oral bosentan would lower resting BP in healthy young men as well as the acute BP response to hypoxia. Methods: Twenty-four healthy young men (31±5 yrs, 26±3 kg/m2) completed two study visits (control, bosentan) separated by a minimum of 1 week. The nonspecific endothelin receptor antagonist bosentan (62.5 mg) was taken by mouth twice daily for 3 days prior to the second study visit. On each visit, beat-by-beat BP was assessed under 3 inspiratory air conditions: 1) steady-state normoxia (FiO2 0.21), 2) chemoreflex excitation produced by acute, graded hypoxia (FiO2 0.05 – 0.21), 3) chemoreflex inhibition elicited by transient hyperoxia (FiO2 1.00). Results: Oral bosentan treatment resulted in an increase in plasma ET-1 (0.9±0.9 to 1.3±0.6 pg/mL, p=0.004), supporting receptor blockade. Resting diastolic and mean BP were reduced following 3 days of bosentan treatment compared to control (diastolic: 73±5 to 69±7 mmHg, p=0.007; mean: 93±7 to 88±7 mmHg, p=0.005) with no change in systolic BP (p=0.507). Notably, the BP response to both acute hypoxia (-0.48±0.38 to -0.25±0.31 mmHg/%, p=0.004) and hyperoxia (main effect of bosentan, p=0.025) were attenuated following bosentan. Conclusions: Acute oral bosentan treatment resulted in a reduction in resting BP in healthy young men. The effect of endothelin receptor inhibition with bosentan further attenuated the rise in BP during chemoreflex excitation via acute, graded hypoxia as well as the fall in BP during chemoreflex inhibition (transient hyperoxia). Together these data support a role for ET-1 in control of resting BP in healthy young men, possibly through a chemoreceptor-mediated mechanism. NIH HL130339 (JL), Mayo Clinic Center for Biomedical Discovery (JL, SB). This is the full abstract presented at the American Physiology Summit 2024 meeting and is only available in HTML format. There are no additional versions or additional content available for this abstract. Physiology was not involved in the peer review process.

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