inadequate blood supply to the expanding adipose tissue (AT) is involved in the unhealthy AT remodeling and cardiometabolic consequences of obesity. because of the pathophysiological role of upregulated mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) signaling in the complications of obesity, this study tested the vasoactive properties of finerenone, a nonsteroidal MR antagonist, in arteries of human AT. arteries isolated from the visceral AT of obese subjects were studied in a wire myograph. finerenone resulted in a concentration-dependent relaxation of arteries precontracted with either the thromboxane-A2 analog U46619, ET-1, or high-K+ solution; the steroidal MR antagonist potassium canrenoate, by contrast, did not relax arteries contracted with either U46619 or high-K+ solution. finerenone-induced relaxation after precontraction with U46619 was greater in the arteries of obese versus nonobese subjects. mechanistically, the vasorelaxing response to finerenone was not influenced by preincubation with the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor L-NAME or by endothelium removal. Interestingly, finerenone, like the dihydropyridine Ca2+-channel blocker nifedipine, relaxed arteries contracted with the L-type Ca2+-channel agonist bay K8644. In conclusion, finerenone relaxes arteries of human visceral AT, likely through antagonism of L-type Ca2+ channels. this finding identifies a novel mechanism by which finerenone may improve AT perfusion, hence protecting against the cardiometabolic complications of obesity.

Schinzari, F., De Stefano, A., Sica, G., Mettimano, M., Cardillo, C., Tesauro, M. (2024). Role of L-type Ca2+-channels in the vasorelaxing response to finerenone in arteries of human visceral adipose tissue. PHYSIOLOGICAL REPORTS, 12(18), 1-10 [10.14814/phy2.70062].

Role of L-type Ca2+-channels in the vasorelaxing response to finerenone in arteries of human visceral adipose tissue

De Stefano, Alessandro;Sica, Giuseppe;Tesauro, Manfredi
2024-09-01

Abstract

inadequate blood supply to the expanding adipose tissue (AT) is involved in the unhealthy AT remodeling and cardiometabolic consequences of obesity. because of the pathophysiological role of upregulated mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) signaling in the complications of obesity, this study tested the vasoactive properties of finerenone, a nonsteroidal MR antagonist, in arteries of human AT. arteries isolated from the visceral AT of obese subjects were studied in a wire myograph. finerenone resulted in a concentration-dependent relaxation of arteries precontracted with either the thromboxane-A2 analog U46619, ET-1, or high-K+ solution; the steroidal MR antagonist potassium canrenoate, by contrast, did not relax arteries contracted with either U46619 or high-K+ solution. finerenone-induced relaxation after precontraction with U46619 was greater in the arteries of obese versus nonobese subjects. mechanistically, the vasorelaxing response to finerenone was not influenced by preincubation with the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor L-NAME or by endothelium removal. Interestingly, finerenone, like the dihydropyridine Ca2+-channel blocker nifedipine, relaxed arteries contracted with the L-type Ca2+-channel agonist bay K8644. In conclusion, finerenone relaxes arteries of human visceral AT, likely through antagonism of L-type Ca2+ channels. this finding identifies a novel mechanism by which finerenone may improve AT perfusion, hence protecting against the cardiometabolic complications of obesity.
set-2024
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore MED/09
Settore MEDS-05/A - Medicina interna
Settore MEDS-06/A - Chirurgia generale
English
adipose tissue
calcium channels
finerenone
mineralocorticoid receptor
obesity
Schinzari, F., De Stefano, A., Sica, G., Mettimano, M., Cardillo, C., Tesauro, M. (2024). Role of L-type Ca2+-channels in the vasorelaxing response to finerenone in arteries of human visceral adipose tissue. PHYSIOLOGICAL REPORTS, 12(18), 1-10 [10.14814/phy2.70062].
Schinzari, F; De Stefano, A; Sica, G; Mettimano, M; Cardillo, C; Tesauro, M
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/392570
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