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BACKGROUND: alpha(1)-adrenergic receptors (alpha(1)ARs) regulate blood pressure, regional vascular resistance, and venous capacitance; the exact subtype (alpha(1a), alpha(1b), alpha(1 d)) mediating these effects is unknown and varies with species studied. In order to understand mechanisms underlying cardiovascular responses to acute stress and chronic catecholamine exposure (as seen with aging), we tested two hypotheses: (1) human alpha(1)AR subtype expression differs with vascular bed, and (2) age influences human vascular alpha(1)AR subtype expression. METHODS AND RESULTS: Five hundred vessels from 384 patients were examined for alpha(1)AR subtype distribution at mRNA and protein levels (RNase protection assays, ligand binding, contraction assays). Overall vessel alpha(1)AR density is 16+/-2.3fmol/mg total protein. alpha(1a)AR predominates in arteries at mRNA (P or = 65 years) in mammary artery (no change in saphenous vein), accompanied by increased alpha(1b)>alpha(1a) expression (P< = 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Human vascular alpha(1)AR subtype distribution differs from animal models, varies with vessel bed, correlates with contraction in mammary artery, and is modulated by aging. These findings provide potential novel targets for therapeutic intervention in many clinical settings.
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Xiaowen L. Rudner
Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center New Orleans
Dan E. Berkowitz
Vascular / Pulmonary Vascular
John V. Booth
Siriraj Hospital
Circulation
Johns Hopkins University
Duke University
Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center
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Rudner et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69fd7fe7ff27123c9a5e24b6 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.100.23.2336
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