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Vol. 285, Issue 1, 83-94, April 1998
Prassis Research Institute Sigma-Tau,
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Abstract |
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The inhibition of the long-term pressor effect of ouabain may be useful
for the therapy of essential hypertension. Here, for the first time, a
selective inhibitor of the ouabain pressor effect is described.
In vitro, 17
-(3-furyl)-5
-androstane-3
, 14
,
17
-triol (PST 2238) displaced ouabain from its binding sites on
purified sodium, potassium ATPase enzyme (Na-K ATPase)
(IC50 1.7 × 10
6 M) without interacting
with other receptors involved in blood pressure regulation or hormonal
control. In cultured renal cells, incubation with ouabain
(10
10 to 10
8 M) for 5 days stimulated the
Na-K pump at Vmax, whereas PST 2238 showed the
same effect at micromolar concentration. The ouabain-dependent increase
in the Na-K pump rate was abolished by PST 2238 at concentrations from
10
14 to 10
9 M. In rats made hypertensive by
chronic infusion of 50 µg/kg/day of ouabain, PST 2238 given p.o at
very low doses (0.1-1 µg/kg/day for 4 weeks) abolished the increase
in blood pressure and renal Na-K ATPase activity caused by ouabain. PST
2238 did not affect either blood pressure or renal Na-K ATPase activity
in normotensive rats. In conclusion, PST 2238 is a very potent compound
that normalizes both blood pressure and alterations in the Na-K pump
caused by ouabain. Thus it represents the prototype of a new class of
antihypertensive drugs that could be effective in forms of hypertension
sustained by the concomitant increase of endogenous ouabain levels and
alterations in the Na-K pump.
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Introduction |
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A
primary defect in the ability of the kidney to excrete sodium
associated with a secondary increase in the plasma level of the
so-called OLF has been proposed as a possible cause of primary hypertension (Blaustein, 1977
). This hypothesis predicts that the
pressor mechanisms derive from the increased neurovascular reactivity
caused by OLF inhibition of the Na-K pump at the sympathetic nervous
terminals or the vasculature. Consequently, inhibition of the OLF
effect on the Na-K pump should prevent that portion of the rise in
blood pressure triggered by such mechanisms.
This hypothesis is supported by much experimental and clinical evidence
(Haddy and Overbeck, 1976
; Ferrandi et al., 1992
; Doris,
1994
; Leenen et al., 1994
; Kojima et al., 1982
;
Pamnani et al., 1989
; Moreth et al., 1987
; Hamlyn
et al., 1982
; Rossi et al., 1995
). Some
disagreement still exists over the methodology for measuring OLF in
body fluids and tissues, and its chemical structure is still a subject
of debate (Lewis et al., 1994
; Kelly and Smith, 1992
;
Gomez-Sanchez et al., 1994
). We have recently provided
consistent data on the appropriate methodology for measuring OLF both
in rats and in humans (Ferrandi et al., 1997
). Other research groups have demonstrated that the structure of OLF must be
very close, if not identical, to that of ouabain (Mathews et al., 1991
; Zhao et al., 1995
). In addition, Manunta
et al. (1994)
have demonstrated that chronic infusion of low
doses of ouabain in normal Sprague-Dawley rats increases plasma levels
of ouabain by 4- to 5-fold and induces a sustained but reversible form
of hypertension. The pressor effect of ouabain has not been
consistently demonstrated in other species (Pidgeon et al.,
1996
), which is not surprising, because according to Blaustein's
hypothesis (Blaustein, 1977
), both a peculiar renal defect in
Na+ handling and a high level of OLF, or ouabain, must be
present to induce the pressor effect.
A direct consequence of these findings is that OLF could represent a
new pharmacological target in the treatment of those forms of
volume-dependent hypertension where it plays a pathogenic role. In the
past it has been hypothesized that the antihypertensive activity of
K-Canrenoate (Pamnani et al., 1990
; de Mendoca et al., 1988
) might be due not only to its antimineralcorticoid
activity but also to a partially antagonistic action on ouabain (or
OLF) at the Na-K pump site (Finotti and Palatini, 1981
; Garay et
al., 1985
). However, K-Canrenoate cannot be considered an ideal
anti-ouabain-type antihypertensive drug because of its lack of
selectivity and because of undesired side effects due to interactions
with progesterone and androgen receptors (Corvol et al.,
1975
; Pita et al., 1975
).
The aim of our research was therefore to synthesize a new antihypertensive compound capable of selectively antagonizing the pressor effect of ouabain without causing the cardiac or hormonal side effects typical of digitalis and antimineralcorticoid drugs. In the present report we describe, for the first time, the pharmacological characteristics of a new, orally active, antihypertensive compound, PST 2238, which selectively displaces ouabain from the purified Na-K ATPase receptor in vitro at micromolar concentrations without interacting with other receptors involved in blood pressure or hormonal regulation. Moreover, PST 2238 antagonizes the effect of ouabain on the Na-K pump in cultured cells, at nanomolar concentrations, and prevents the effects of ouabain on blood pressure and Na-K pump activity in vivo at doses of micrograms per kilogram.
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Materials and Methods |
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Synthesis
Details of the synthesis of PST 2238 have been reported
elsewhere (Quadri et al., 1997
).
Materials
For in vitro receptor studies, PST 2238 was
solubilized up to 3 × 10
4 M in the appropriate
buffers (see below) containing 10% DMSO. For in vivo
treatments, PST 2238 was administered p.o., by gavage, in suspension
with 0.5% w/v Methocel (methylcellulose) at a volume of 2 ml/kg b.wt.
Ouabain was obtained from Sigma Corp. (St. Louis, MO) and solubilized
up to 10
2 M in appropriate buffers or 0.9% NaCl solution
for in vitro studies and osmotic minipump loading (see
"Hypertensive models"). 3H-PST 2238 (specific activity
21.5 Ci/mmol) was synthesized by the Institute of Nuclear Chemistry of
the CNR (Rome, Italy).
In Vitro Studies on Purified Receptors
Na-K ATPase purification.
Renal Na-K ATPase was purified
from outer medulla of dog kidney according to Jørgensen's method
(Jørgensen, 1974
). The tissue was homogenized in (mM) 250 sucrose, 30 histidine, pH 7.2 (1 g of tissue/10 ml) using a PCU-Kinematica
Polytron. The homogenate was centrifuged at 6000 × g
for 15 min at 4°C, and the pellet was discarded. The supernatant was
centrifuged at 48,000 × g for 30 min at 4°C, and the
pellet (microsomal fraction) was incubated for 30 min at 20°C with
SDS, 0.58 mg/ml, and then layered on a discontinuous density gradient
of sucrose (10, 15 and 29.4%) and centrifuged at 230,000 × g for 115 min at 4°C. The pellet obtained was resuspended
in 25 mM imidazole, 1 mM EDTA solution, pH 7.5. In all experiments the
protein content was measured by the Lowry method, using bovine serum
albumin as reference standard (Lowry et al., 1951
). The
presence of the
1 Na-K ATPase isoform was verified by Western blot
analysis, using a monoclonal antibody against the
1 isoform (Upstate
Biotechnology, Lake Placid, NY).
Na-K ATPase receptor study.
Binding displacement of
3H-ouabain from purified dog kidney Na-K ATPase was carried
out by the rapid filtration technique (Noel and Godfraind, 1984
).
Incremental concentrations of either ouabain or PST 2238 were incubated
for 45 min at 37°C with 1.2 µg of purified Na-K ATPase in 120 µl
of solution A, (mM: 100 NaCl, 3 MgCl2, 3 ATP, 50 Tris-HCl,
pH 7.4) containing 25 nM 3H-ouabain (20-50 Ci/mmol
specific activity, Amersham, Milan, Italy). Nonspecific binding,
calculated in the presence of 10
3 M unlabeled ouabain,
accounted for less than 5% of total radioactivity and was subtracted
from total 3H-ouabain binding. Free 3H-ouabain
from membrane-bound 3H-ouabain was separated by rapid
filtration on Whatman glass GF/ C fiber filter sheets using a Brandel
48R Cell Harvester apparatus (Biomedical Research and Development
Laboratories, Gaithersburg, MD). Filters were washed twice with 10 ml
of cold incubation solution and counted for radioactivity in a liquid
scintillation
counter (Beckman LS 5000 CE).
8 M 3H-ouabain (45 Ci/mmol) with 10
6 M 3H-PST 2238 (21.5 Ci/mmol). The association curves were obtained by incubating the two
ligands in solution A with the Na-K ATPase (1.2 µg for ouabain, 2.4 µg for PST 2238) for sequential times up to 20 min for PST 2238 and
180 min for ouabain and stopping the reaction by the rapid filtration
technique. The dissociation curves of the ligand-enzyme complexes were
obtained by preincubating the tritiated ligands with the Na-K ATPase
(1.2 µg for ouabain, 2.4 µg for PST 2238) for 60 and 5 min,
respectively, for ouabain and PST 2238. After preincubation, which
allowed a total receptor-ligand association, the reaction was stopped
by 33-fold dilution in the preincubation medium (0 time), and aliquots
were taken thereafter at sequential times. Bound were separated from
free 3H ligands by the rapid filtration technique. Specific
ouabain or PST 2238 binding was obtained by subtracting, from the total binding, the unspecific binding obtained in the presence of saturating concentrations of the two ligands (10
3 M for ouabain;
10
5 M PST 2238 and ouabain 10
3 M for PST
2238).
Na-K ATPase inhibition.
Na-K ATPase activity was assayed
after the release of 32P from 32P-ATP (Doucet
et al., 1979
). Increasing concentrations of ouabain or PST
2238 were preincubated with 0.3 µg of purified dog kidney enzyme for
10 min at 37°C in a 120-µl final volume of preincubation medium
(solution B; mM: 140 NaCl, 3 MgCl2, 3 ATP, 50 HEPES-Tris, 3 ATP, pH 7.5). After the preincubation period, 10 µl of incubation solution, containing 10 mM KCl and 20 nCi of 32P-ATP
(0.5-3 Ci/ mmol, Amersham, Milan, Italy) was added, and the reaction
was continued for 15 min at 37°C. The reaction was stopped by
acidification with ice-cold perchloric acid solution at 30% v/v.
32P was separated by centrifugation with activated
charcoal, and the radioactivity was measured by liquid scintillation
counting. The inhibitory activity was expressed as percent of a control sample that contained neither ouabain nor product.
General and hormonal receptor binding.
We evaluated the
in vitro interaction of PST 2238 with the following receptor
sites:
and
adrenergic, D1, D2,
D3, 5-HT1, 5-HT2, H1,
H2, M1, M2, A1,
A2, associated with the Ca++ and K+
channels, AT1, AT2, ETA,
ETB, GABA, thromboxane and vasopressin. Crude membrane
preparations were obtained from rat, guinea pig and rabbit tissues
according to previously described procedures (Greenglass and Bremner,
1979
; U'Prichard et al., 1977
; Bylund and Snyder, 1976
;
Kilpatrick et al., 1986
; Fields et al., 1977
; Blurton and Wood, 1986
; Leysen et al., 1982
; Hill et
al., 1978
; Beaumont et al., 1978
; Hill and Bowery,
1981
; Speth et al., 1979
; Honoré et al.,
1986
; Wang et al., 1987
; Javitch et al., 1983
; Schoemaker and Langer, 1985
; Reynolds et al., 1983
; Mihara
et al., 1989
; Patel et al., 1982
; Bruns et
al., 1986
; Chiu et al., 1990
; Whitebread et
al., 1991
; Williams et al., 1991
; Mihara et al., 1994
; Shleikh et al., 1989
; Gopalakrishnan
et al., 1986
; Gaines et al., 1988
; Vazquez
et al., 1989
; Catterall et al., 1979
). Displacement of the specific bindings by 10
5 to
10
4 M PST 2238 was measured after separation of the free
ligand from the receptor-ligand complex by the rapid filtration
technique.
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Cell Culture Studies
Cell culture.
NRK-52E cells (epithelial-like cells) (De
Larco and Todano, 1978
) were purchased from the European Collection of
Animal Cell Cultures (ECACC, CRL 1571). Cells were maintained in
monolayer on plastic substrate in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium
(Gibco BRL, Milan, Italy) supplemented with 5% fetal calf serum
(Myoclone, Life Technologies), 1% nonessential aminoacids (Sigma),
penicillin/streptomycin 100 IU/ml (Gibco BRL, Milan, Italy) and were
kept in a 37°C humidified incubator with 5% CO2. Medium
was changed on alternate days. The cells were seeded at 5 × 105 cells/cm2 on Transwell filter inserts
(Costar Clear, 0.4-µm pore size) in the absence or presence of
ouabain or PST 2238 at different concentrations. In some studies,
ouabain and PST 2238 were simultaneously present in the medium from
seeding. Cells were used for measurement of Na-K pump and intracellular
ion content and for cell protein determination 5 days after seeding
(typically, seeding on Monday and measurements on Friday). The medium
was changed on the third day.
Cell protein content. We assessed cell growth rate at the end of the incubation period, measuring the content of protein extracted by lysing the cells with NaOH 0.1 N and SDS 0.1%.
Cell Na-K pump at Vmax.
Cells grown
on all filters were washed in K+-free saline and incubated
without external K+ for 50 min to load the cells with
Na+ and reach the maximal activation of the Na-K pump. The
ouabain-sensitive component of the K+ transport (Na-K
pump activity) was determined as the amount of 86Rb+ uptake, measured in the absence or
presence of 10 mM ouabain, which was added to the basolateral side 5 min before the assay to block the Na-K pump quickly and completely. PST
2238, ouabain alone or the combination of the two compounds (according
to the protocol) was always present in all filters at the
concentrations under study, during both the loading and the uptake
procedure. 86Rb+ uptake was measured during the
initial 10 min from restoration of normal external K+
concentration (5.4 mM KCl + 86RbCl 8 µCi/ml) as
described (Bowen, 1992
). At the end of the uptake period, the
Transwells were washed three times in a large volume (250 ml) of
saline. Radioactivity was extracted by lysing the cells with 0.1 N NaOH
and SDS 0.1% and counted in a
-counter (Beckman 5500). An aliquot
of the lysate was used to measure the protein content of each
Transwell. Ouabain-sensitive Rb+ uptake was expressed as
the equivalent K+ transport in nanomoles per hour per
milligram of protein. We also expressed it as rate constant for
Na+ (hr
1), correcting the expected value of
Na+ extrusion for the intracellular Na+ content
(see below).
Intracellular Na+ content at Vmax. A different set of filters were used to measured the intracellular Na+ content after Na+ loading. The filters were washed four times in a Na+-free medium (mM): choline-Cl 95, MgCl2 1, sucrose 85, glucose 10, MOPS-Tris buffer 10, pH 7.4, at room temperature. Sodium was extracted in double-distilled water and measured by atomic absorption spectrophotometry (Perkin Elmer 1100B). The intracellular Na+ content was expressed as nanomoles of Na+ per milligram of protein.
In Vivo Studies
Effect of PST 2238 on the pressor response to vasoactive
compounds.
Male Wistar rats, (Charles River Italia SpA, Calco,
Italy), aged 4 to 5 weeks and weighing 80 to 100 g were treated
p.o., daily for 6 weeks, with either vehicle (Methocel 0.5% w/v)
(controls) or PST 2238 10 mg/kg/day. At the end of this treatment the
rats were catheterized, under light halothane anesthesia, with a
polyethylene tubing (PE50, Dow Chemical, Lepetit, Italy) via
the carotid for blood pressure recording and via the jugular
vein for infusions. Rats were allowed to recover from surgery for 4 hr,
and then SBP, MBP, DBP and HR were recorded by connecting the carotid
catheter to a pressure transducer (XCDR-P23XL, Gould, Cernusco-Milano, Italy) attached to a multichannel recorder (Gould Instrument Systems, Mod. 3400). After 1 hr of stabilization (basal recording) and 5 hr from
the last PST 2238 or vehicle treatment, each rat was sequentially
injected i.v. with noradrenaline (1 µg/kg), ACh (7.5 µg/kg),
angiotensin II (0.1 µg/kg) and rat renin extract (3 µl/rat) purified from plasma of nephrectomized rats, according to a previously described procedure (Haas et al., 1966
). Basal blood
pressure and the acute pressor responses to the vasoactive substances
were monitored continuously.
Hypertensive rat model.
A ouabain-dependent hypertension was
induced in normotensive Sprague-Dawley (Hsd:S.D.) rats (Harlan
Sprague-Dawley Inc., Indianapolis, IN) according to a previously
described procedure (Manunta et al., 1994
). Briefly, male
rats 6 to 7 weeks old and weighing 150 to 180 g were implanted
s.c., under light ether anesthesia, with osmotic minipumps (Alzet,
Charles River, Calco, Italy) containing a ouabain-saline solution that
slow-released 50 µg/kg/day of ouabain at a mean pumping rate of 10 µl/day (OS rats). CS rats received sterile saline through osmotic
minipumps. The pumps were changed every 15 (Mod 2002) or every 28 days
(Mod 2004). SBP and HR were measured weekly at the tail by
plethysmography ("W+W' BP Recorder, U. Basile, Varese, Italy). From
3 to 4 weeks after implantation of the minipumps, SBP rose
significantly in 70% to 80% of the ouabain-treated rats, by 20 to 25 mmHg, from initial average values of 145 mmHg. In saline-treated
control rats, SBP was unchanged. HR was not affected in either group.
At this point, OS rats were divided into groups, which received either
PST 2238 or vehicle (Methocel 0.5% w/v). SBP and HR were recorded
weekly, 6 hr after treatment.
| 1) In the first experiment, 0.1 mg/kg/day was administered to a group of OS rats (n = 7) for 4 weeks. Values were recorded during the treatment period and for a further 2 weeks after suspension of treatment (washout). | |
| 2) In the second experiment, doses of 0.1, 1, 10 and 100 µg/kg/day were administered to groups of OS rats (n = 8) and 100 µg/kg/day to a group of CS rats (n = 7). At the end of the treatment period, both CS and OS treated rats were sacrificed, and the activity of the Na-K ATPase in renal outer medulla microsomes and the ouabain concentrations in tissue and plasma were measured. | |
| 3) In the third experiment, designed to establish the ineffective dose of PST 2238 on SBP and renal Na-K ATPase activity, PST 2238 was administered to groups of OS rats (n = 8) at 0.01, 1 and 100 µg/kg/day. CS rats (n = 7) received only the vehicle. Renal Na-K ATPase activity was also measured. |
Biochemical assays: Preparation of renal outer medulla
microsomes.
Rats were anesthetised with ether and then sacrificed
by decapitation. Kidneys were removed, weighed and sliced, and the
outer medulla was dissected under a stereo microscope at 4°C, pooled, weighed and then frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at
70°C up to
the moment of microsome preparation. Kidney outer medulla slices were
suspended (1 g/10 ml) in an ice-cold solution containing (mM): 250 sucrose, 30 histidine and 5 disodium EDTA, pH 7.2, and homogenized in a
PCU-Kinematica Polytron. Each sample was homogenized twice for 15 sec
at setting 5. The homogenate was centrifuged at 6000 × g for 15 min at 4°C (J2-21 M/E, Beckman Instruments). The
supernatant fluid was decanted and saved, and the pellet was resuspended in the same solution, homogenized and centrifuged at
6000 × g for 15 min at 4°C. The second supernatant
was decanted, pooled with the first and centrifuged at 48,000 × g for 30 min at 4°C. Pellets were resuspended 1:1 (w/v) in
the sucrose-histidine solution. The protein content of the microsomes
was assayed. Na-K ATPase enzymatic activity was determined in microsome
preparations previously permeabilized with deoxycholic acid (0.65 mg
DOC/mg protein) for 30 min at room temperature to obtain the maximal activation of the Na-K ATPase (Ferrandi et al., 1996
). Na-K
ATPase activity was assayed as already described.
Ouabain content in plasma and tissue.
Ouabain was extracted
from plasma and freshly thawed renal tissue and measured by RIA assay
according to a previously described procedure (Ferrandi et
al., 1997
). Ouabain concentrations in plasma and tissues extracts
were calculated as percentage displacement of the control sample,
carried out in the absence of ouabain, and expressed in nM (plasma) or
nanograms per gram of tissue according to a ouabain standard curve.
Statistics
Data are reported as mean ± S.E.M. Regression analysis was
used to calculate IC50 values in the in vitro
tests (Motulsky and Ransnas, 1987
). Factorial one-way analysis of
variance (ANOVA) followed by Fisher's LSD was performed to test the
differences among different compound concentrations in cell culture
studies. Factorial two-way ANOVA for repeated measures was performed to test the interaction of time and in vivo treatments.
Factorial one-way ANOVA was then performed to test the different groups vs. the control group at different times and different times
vs. base-line time in each group. Dunnett's t
test was used to determine the significance of the F ratio;
P < 0.05 was considered significant for all comparisons.
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Results |
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PST 2238 In Vitro Receptor Interaction
Interaction with the Na-K ATPase.
Ouabain inhibited purified
dog kidney Na-K ATPase and displaced 3H-ouabain from the
receptor with a similar IC50 of 2.5 × 10
8 M (fig. 1). Under the
same experimental conditions used to assay ouabain, PST 2238 inhibited
the enzyme with an IC50 of 2.5 × 10
5 M
and displaced 3H-ouabain with an IC50 of
1.7 × 10
6 M (fig. 1). Therefore, a 15-fold
difference between the inhibitory and the displacing IC50
values was observed for PST 2238. To determine whether this difference
could be ascribed to the presence of K+ during the Na-K
ATPase inhibition test, we also conducted experiments at low
K+ concentration (0.5 mM). At this low K+
concentration ouabain, IC50 was unchanged (2.5 × 10
8 M) compared with that obtained in the presence of 10 mM K+. On the contrary, the IC50 of PST 2238 at
low K+ was 1.5 × 10
6 M, a value 16.6 times lower than that obtained in the presence of 10 mM K+
and similar to that of the displacement experiment. Thus the difference
between the inhibitory and displacing activities of PST 2238 should be
ascribed to a decrease in affinity for the Na-K ATPase when
K+ was added.
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8 M
for ouabain and 0.79 × 10
6 M for PST 2238, which
were in keeping with the results obtained with the displacement
experiments.
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Interaction with general and hormonal receptors.
To assess
their specificity of interaction, we assayed PST 2238, ouabain and
Canrenone in vitro on a panel of general and hormonal
receptors. PST 2238, at fixed concentrations of either 10
5 M or 10
4 M, did not show any
significant interactions with the tested receptors (table 1). Only with
the thromboxane A2 receptor did PST 2238 10
4
M show any interaction (61%). Ouabain was ineffective at
10
5 M in all the receptor binding assays (table 1). As
expected, Canrenone showed a specific interaction with the
mineralocorticoid receptors and also some interactions with the
M1 and M2 receptors (table 1). It should be
noted that Canrenone did not show any affinity for the Na-K ATPase
receptor up to the maximum possible concentration of 5 × 10
4 M.
PST 2238 Effect on the Na-K Pump of NRK Cells
The activity of the Na-K pump in NRK cells in culture was assessed
as a function of the ouabain-sensitive 86Rb uptake measured
in Na+-loaded cells at Vmax. In
these experiments, intracellular Na+ concentration was
raised from 140 nmole/mg protein (basal conditions) to 450 nmole/mg
protein (maximal intracellular Na concentration). This resulted in a
maximal activation (Vmax) of the Na-K pump (+500% compared with basal conditions) and gives an indirect
evaluation of the total number of activable pump sites (Bowen, 1992
).
Acute effect (5-hr incubation).
As shown in figure
3, ouabain inhibited the Na-K pump with
IC50 of 2.08 × 10
4 M, whereas PST 2238 was ineffective up to 10
4 M (maximal concentration
tested). These results are similar to those obtained measuring the
in vitro inhibitory activity of both ouabain and PST 2238 on
purified rat renal Na-K ATPase: ouabain showed an IC50 of
7 × 10
5 M, as already reported (Anner et
al., 1995
), whereas PST 2238 did not inhibit the enzyme up to
10
4 M. In the cell culture experiments, PST 2238 affected
neither the Na-K cotransport nor the passive permeability, measured as bumetanide-sensitive, ouabain-resistant uptake and as bumetanide and
ouabain-resistant 86Rb uptake, respectively (data not
shown).
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Prolonged (5 days) incubation.
NRK cells were incubated with
both compounds separately or in combination. Under these conditions,
neither ouabain (from 10
14 to 10
5 M) nor
PST 2238 (from 10
16 to 10
5 M) affected the
cell growth rate, as indicated by the fact that the amount of proteins
found on Transwell filters was not different from controls (data not
shown). Figure 4A shows that ouabain
increased the rate constant of the Na-K pump at
Vmax by 37% at 10
10 M, by 33% at
10
9 M (P < .05) and by 24% at 10
8 M. PST 2238 did not affect the Na-K pump rate in the range of 10
16 to 10
9 M and slightly stimulated it at
10
6 M (+23%) and 10
5 M (+28%, P < .05; fig. 4B). Both Na-K cotransport and the passive permeability were
unaffected by PST 2238 at all the test concentrations, even after 5 days of incubation (data not shown).
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9 M) or with a combination of 10
9 M
ouabain and incremental concentrations of PST 2238. As shown in figure
4C, the stimulatory effect of ouabain at 10
9 M (+27%,
P < .05) was completely abolished by the addition of PST 2238 at
10
10 M, but not at the higher concentration of
10
6 M. We later verified that the ouabain-dependent
stimulation of the Na-K pump rate was inhibited by PST 2238 in the
concentration range 10
14 to 10
9 M, whereas
10
16 M was ineffective, as shown in figure
5.
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PST 2238 In Vivo Experiments
Modulation of the pressor responses to vasoactive compounds. As shown in figure 6 the i.v. injections of fixed doses of noradrenaline, ACh, angiotensin II and renin to control rats elicited a general 30% to 35% change in MBP over the basal values. These pressor responses were completely superimposable on those recorded in rats previously treated p.o. with 10 mg/kg/day of PST 2238 for 6 weeks, a dose 100 to 10,000 times higher than those active on ouabain-dependent hypertension (see the next paragraph). These data exclude the possibility that the compound interacts with pressor mechanisms dependent on the vasoactive substances used in this study.
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Antihypertensive activity in OS rats. The blood pressure-lowering effect of orally administered PST 2238 and its reversibility were measured in hypertensive OS rats treated for 4 weeks. Figure 7 shows the hypertensive effect of 8 weeks of chronic infusion of 50 µg/kg/day of ouabain in normotensive Sprague-Dawley rats. SBP started to rise after 2 to 3 weeks of ouabain infusion and reached statistically significant higher levels in OS rats (P < .05), compared with CS rats, after 4 weeks (fig. 7). The SBP of OS rats decreased to the level of CS controls after 2 weeks of treatment with PST 2238 at 0.1 mg/kg/day (fig. 7). After suspension of treatment (washout period) the SBP of PST 2238-treated OS rats returned to the high levels of OS controls within 2 weeks (fig. 7). This demonstrates that the increase in SBP caused by ouabain infusion (+22 mmHg) was abolished by PST 2238.
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18.1 ± 3.2, P < .01; 1 µg/kg =
12.5 ± 3.6, P < .05; 10 µg/kg =
13.1 ± 4.8, P < .05 and 100 µg/kg =
18.1 ± 4.7 mmHg, P < .01). At the
end of the 4-week treatment, PST 2238 had induced a similar hypotensive
effect at all doses, and SBP levels of treated OS rats were similar to
those of CS controls (fig. 8A). Four-week treatment of CS rats with PST
2238 at 100 µg/kg did not cause any significant variation of SBP as
compared with CS controls (fig. 8A).
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Effect on renal Na-K ATPase and on tissue and plasma ouabain concentration. Because of the specific interaction of ouabain and PST 2238 with the Na-K ATPase receptor and their activities on the Na-K pump rate of NRK cells, we verified whether in vivo long-term treatment with these two compounds could influence the activity of the Na-K ATPase at the kidney level. The activity of the renal outer medulla Na-K ATPase was quantified in OS rats at the end of the p.o. treatment with PST 2238 at 0.1, 1, 10 and 100 µg/kg and in CS rats treated with 100 µg/kg. As shown in figure 8B, renal Na-K ATPase activity was significantly increased in OS control rats, as compared with CS controls, and was normalized to the levels of CS controls by the PST 2238 treatment at all doses tested. In contrast, PST 2238 at 100 µg/kg/day did not affect renal Na-K ATPase activity in CS rats (fig. 8B). In the third experiment, the renal Na-K ATPase activity, measured in OS rats treated with PST 2238 at the dose of 0.01 µg/kg/day (which did not affect SBP, fig. 9), was similar (1.69 ± 0.071 µmol Pi/min/mg) to that of OS controls (1.67 ± 0.065 µmol Pi/min/mg), and both values were significantly increased as compared with CS controls (1.125 ± 0.12 µmol Pi/min/mg, P < .01).
Plasma concentrations of ouabain were increased 2.3-fold in OS compared with CS rats (p < .01) (fig. 10A). Similarly, ouabain was 5.6-fold more concentrated in kidneys of OS rats than in those of CS rats (P < .01) (fig. 10B). PST 2238 did not significantly affect either plasma or kidney ouabain concentrations.
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Discussion |
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In this report we describe the in vitro and in
vivo pharmacological characteristics of a new antihypertensive
molecule that selectively interacts with the Na-K ATPase and
antagonizes the pressor effect of ouabain. A series of new derivatives
of digitoxigenin have been synthesized and screened for their
selectivity for the Na-K ATPase receptor and then for their
antihypertensive activity in a ouabain-hypertensive rat model (Manunta
et al., 1994
). Selectivity for the Na-K ATPase receptor was
tested firstly by measuring the affinities of the compounds for the dog
kidney enzyme. This tissue was chosen because it is known to express
the
1 isoform (Sweadner et al., 1994
), which binds
ouabain with high affinity (Kd = 2.5 × 10
8 M). This preparation permits screening molecules with
a wide range of affinities for the Na-K ATPase
1 receptor, including those less potent than ouabain, that could be lost using tissue preparations from the so-called ouabain-resistant species, such as rat
(Sweadner, 1989
). Second, all the molecules that demonstrated an
IC50 for the Na-K ATPase receptor lower than
10
5 M were assayed for their ability to interact with a
wide panel of general and hormonal receptors known to be involved in
blood pressure regulation. All the molecules that showed some affinity for receptors other than Na-K ATPase were excluded from the in vivo tests. The ability of the selected compounds to antagonize in vivo the pressor effect of ouabain was tested in the OS.
Even though the rat is considered a ouabain-resistant species, it
responds to very low doses of ouabain with a sustained and reversible
increase in blood pressure (Manunta et al., 1994
) and, as
shown in this study, with an up-regulation of the renal Na-K ATPase
activity. Furthermore, the ability of the selected compounds to
antagonize at the cell level the long-term effects of low
concentrations of ouabain on the Na-K pump rate was assayed on rat
renal cells in culture, where only the
1 Na-K ATPase isoform is
present (Whorwood et al., 1994
).
Following this protocol, the most interesting compound selected up to now is PST 2238, which displays the following pharmacological characteristics:
| 1) Selectivity for the Na-K ATPase receptor with affinity in
the micromolar range, demonstrated by the absence of a relevant interaction with other receptors known to be involved in blood pressure
regulation. Despite its steroidal structure, PST 2238 does not affect
the receptors for steroidal hormones such as estrogens, progestinics,
androgens and mineralocorticoids. Therefore, PST 2238 might be devoid
of those side effects typical of the antimineralocorticoids such as
Canrenone and Spironolactone (Corvol et al., 1975 |
|
| 2) Ability to reverse the ouabain-dependent increase in the Na-K pump rate in cultured renal cells at less than nanomolar concentrations, without itself affecting the Na-K pump. | |
| 3) Ability to reverse completely the two main effects produced by chronic infusion of ouabain in vivo: hypertension and up-regulation of the renal Na-K ATPase activity, at p.o. doses (0.1-1 µg/kg) compatible with the nanomolar concentrations active in intact cells. Both the results obtained in intact cultured cells and those obtained in vivo in ouabain-hypertensive rats indicate that the chronic exposure of a cellular system to low concentrations of ouabain induces an up-regulation of the Na-K ATPase activity that is selectively antagonized by low concentrations of PST 2238. |
The mechanism through which ouabain produces a pressor effect in
the rat has not been fully elucidated, but according to Blaustein's hypothesis (Blaustein, 1977
), a chronic inhibition of the Na-K ATPase
in target organs such as the vasculature and the nervous system may
induce an increase in the intracellular Na+ and, in turn,
Ca++ concentrations. These changes are responsible for
enhanced vasoconstriction and nervous reactivity, which causes an
increase in the peripheral vascular resistance and thus hypertension.
Moreover, it has also been shown that the prolonged and continuous
infusion of ouabain in normal rats increases the concentration of this
steroid in plasma, kidney, hypothalamus and pituitary (Manunta et
al., 1994
). The accumulation of ouabain by these organs may be
relevant because these tissues are involved in the long-term regulation
of blood pressure. In particular, the hypothalamus, which contains
high-affinity ouabain binding sites (Sweadner, 1989
), can play a role
in the central regulation of blood pressure after ouabain infusion
(Huang et al., 1994
).
The results presented here show that chronic infusion of ouabain in rat
stimulates renal Na-K ATPase activity at Vmax.
This means that, in vivo, low doses of ouabain can, in the
long-run, affect the rat Na-K ATPase
1 isoform, which is highly
resistant to ouabain binding when studied as an isolated enzyme. It is
unknown whether this effect, observed in renal microsomes, mirrors an in vivo increase in the Na+ transport rate in
intact tubular cells, but if such an increase is present, it may cause
Na+ retention and thus hypertension. The observation that
administration of digitalis-like compounds in vivo increases
tissue Na-K ATPase activity is not new. In fact, an up-regulation of
Na-K ATPase activity in guinea pig heart (Bluschke et al.,
1976
), rat liver (Lindsay and Parker, 1976
) and rat heart, skeletal
muscle and renal medulla (Wai Ching Li et al., 1993
) has
already been described after chronic digitalization. In recent years, a
number of important studies have focused on the long-term mechanisms by
which the Na-K pump responds to ionic stimuli or chronic inhibition to
maintain transmembrane ion gradients, transepithelial transports and
cell excitability (Tang and McDonough, 1992
; Rayson, 1989
; Pollack et al., 1981
). These long-term mechanisms involve the
processes of synthesis, membrane insertion, internalization and
degradation of the Na-K pumps that determine the level of expression of
this enzyme at the cell surface. Many experimental data support the notion that the pool of the two Na-K pump subunits,
and
,
changes in a coordinated way after an inhibitory stimulus (Tang and
McDonough, 1992
; Rayson, 1989
; Pollack et al., 1981
). In
some cell types, such as renal tubular cells, chronic inhibition of the
Na-K pump induced by low extracellular K+ or ouabain
treatment increases the expression of the
subunit mRNA present
proportionally to the final Na-K ATPase activity measurable on the cell
membrane (Tang and McDonough, 1992
; Rayson, 1989
; Lescale-Matys
et al., 1993
; Pollack et al., 1981
). In this way
the cell can reestablish the equilibrium in Na+ and
K+ ion gradients altered by pump inhibition (Rayson and
Gupta, 1985
). It has been suggested that coordinated increase of
intracellular Na+ and Ca++ is the triggering
mechanism for the Na-K pump synthesis (Rayson, 1993
).
The data available so far do not permit precise elucidation of the
molecular mechanism through which PST 2238 antagonizes the effect of
ouabain on Na-K pump expression and activity, partly because the
ouabain mechanism itself has not yet been clearly explained. However,
some findings related to the effects of chronic ouabain exposure on the
Na-K pump may be relevant to this discussion. Long-term but not
short-term incubation of cells with submaximal inhibitory
concentrations of ouabain increases the affinity for digitalis
(Griffiths et al., 1991
). This long-term exposure is accompanied by three parallel feedback mechanisms: 1) replacement of
the blocked pumps with new functioning sites and parallel
internalization of the drug, 2) increased transport activity of
unoccupied pump sites, transiently stimulated by an increase of
intracellular Na+ and 3) final enhancement of the total
number of pump sites (Pollack et al., 1981
). This latter
process is driven both by a transient increase in the rate of synthesis
and by a subsequent decrease in the pump degradation rate, causing a
prolongation of the time that Na-K pumps are resident on the cell
membrane surface (Rayson, 1989
). It is possible that PST 2238, which is
more lipophylic than ouabain, reversibly binds to the Na-K pump and
interferes with the effects of ouabain on Na-K pump turnover.
The possibility that PST 2238 is internalized into the cell and interacts with some unknown intracellular receptors or second messengers that affect Na-K pump synthesis cannot be excluded. In fact, PST 2238 is internalized by the cell to a concentration 2- to 3-fold higher than the extracellular concentration (L. Torielli, unpublished results).
Finally, it is possible that PST 2238, besides exerting its evident
effect on the renal Na-K ATPase
1 isoform, may also act in
vivo by interfering with the ouabain-sensitive Na-K ATPase isoforms (
2 and
3) in target organs such as the vasculature or
the nervous system. This and other hypotheses deserve further study to
clarify the molecular mechanism(s) of PST 2238. However, the ability of
this new compound to reverse the ouabain-dependent increase in renal
Na-K ATPase suggests that it may act by normalizing the alterations in
tubular ion transport caused by ouabain or OLF.
Could an antagonist of the long-term pressor effect of ouabain be
useful for the therapy of human primary hypertension? It is known that
increased levels of "endogenous ouabain" or OLF are present in a
subgroup of essential hypertensive patients (Hamlyn et al.,
1982
; Rossi et al., 1995
), in some cardiovascular disorders (Bagrov et al., 1994
; Delva et al., 1991
) and in
animal models of genetic hypertension (Ferrandi et al.,
1992
; Doris, 1994
; Leenen et al., 1994
). In rats of the
Milan strain, where plasma and tissue OLF levels are increased
(Ferrandi et al., 1992
), the development of hypertension is
paralleled by an up-regulation of the expression of Na-K ATPase at the
renal level (Ferrandi et al., 1996
). Also in this strain,
preliminary data show that PST 2238 reduces the development of
hypertension and normalizes the increased renal Na-K ATPase activity
(Ferrari et al., 1995
). It is likely that new
antihypertensive compounds, such as PST 2238, that are able to modulate
the effect of ouabain or OLF on the expression of Na-K ATPase can be
useful for the therapy of those patients in whom these pathogenic
mechanisms are the cause of hypertension.
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Acknowledgments |
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We thank Mrs. Elena Minotti for her excellent technical assistance and Dr. Garner Haupert and Dr. Barry R. Barber for a critical revision and editing of the manuscript.
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Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication December 18, 1997.
Received for publication May 15, 1997.
Send reprint requests to: Patrizia Ferrari, Prassis Istituto Ricerche Sigma-Tau, via Forlanini 3, 20019 Settimo Milanese (Milano), Italy.
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Abbreviations |
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CS, control-saline rats; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; DMSO, dimethylsulfoxide; MBP, mean blood pressure; NRK cells, normal rat kidney cells; OLF, ouabain-like factor; OS, ouabain-sensitive rats; SBP, systolic blood pressure; SDS, sodium dodecylsulfate.
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References |
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