Abstract

In spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR), enhanced responsiveness of phospholipase C has been reported in various cells and tissues. In SHR and in some patients with essential hypertension particularly, the increased phospholipase C responsiveness of platelets has been described as involved in the hyperreactivity to thrombin. To determine the relation between such an enzymic abnormality and hypertension, the platelet phospholipase C activity was investigated in various models of experimental hypertension (i.e., in the Dahl salt-resistant and salt-sensitive strains inbred by John Rapp at Toledo, Ohio, SR/Jr and SS/Jr, respectively) fed either on a low or a high NaCl-containing diet, and in deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA)-salt hypertensive rats. In phosphorus-32-prelabeled platelets, phospholipase C was determined by measurement of the thrombin-induced [32P]phosphatidic acid formation; the labeling of the P47 protein with 32P was also measured. In parallel experiments, the platelet reactivity was assessed by measurement of the thrombin-induced serotonin release. Under thrombin (0.05-0.5 units/ml) stimulation, phospholipase C activity, [32P]P47 labeling, and serotonin release were significantly increased in SS/Jr rats fed a high NaCl diet compared with SS/Jr rats fed a low NaCl diet. NaCl-rich diet did not modify phospholipase C in SR/Jr rats. Platelet reactivity and phospholipase C responsiveness were also normal in DOCA-salt hypertensive rats compared with controls.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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