Abstract

Salt sensitivity of blood pressure is an independent risk factor for cardiovascular mortality not only in hypertensive but also in normotensive adults. The diagnosis of salt sensitivity of blood pressure is not feasible in the clinic due to lack of a simple diagnostic test, making it difficult to investigate therapeutic strategies. Most research efforts to understand the mechanisms of salt sensitivity of blood pressure have focused on renal regulation of sodium. However, salt retention or plasma volume expansion is not different between salt-sensitive and salt-resistant individuals. In addition, over 70% of extracellular fluid is interstitial and, therefore, not directly controlled by renal salt and water excretion. We discuss in this review how the seminal work by Harry Goldblatt paved the way for our attempts at understanding the mechanisms that underlie immune activation by salt in hypertension. We describe our findings that sodium, entering antigen-presenting cells via an epithelial sodium channel, triggers a PKC (protein kinase C)- and SGK1 (serum/glucocorticoid kinase 1)-stimulated activation of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate oxidase, which, in turn, enhances lipid oxidation with generation of highly reactive isolevuglandins. Isolevuglandins adduct to proteins, with the potential to generate degraded peptide neoantigens. Activated antigen-presenting cells increase production of the TH17 polarizing cytokines, IL (interleukin)-6, IL-1β, and IL-23, which leads to differentiation and proliferation of IL-17A producing T cells. Our laboratory and others have shown that this cytokine contributes to hypertension. We also discuss where this sodium activation of antigen-presenting cells may occur in vivo and describe the multiple experiments, with pharmacological antagonists and knockout mice that we used to unravel this sequence of events in rodents. Finally, we describe experiments in mononuclear cells obtained from normotensive or hypertensive volunteers, which confirm that analogous processes of salt-induced immunity take place in humans.

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