A direct effect of aldosterone on endothelin-1 gene expression in vivo.
Aldosterone regulates sodium reabsorption in epithelial tissues such as the kidney and colon, via a pathway involving the activation of intracellular mineralocorticoid receptors ( MR), induction of specific target genes, and a subsequent increase in sodium channel activity. Characterized aldosterone target genes in epithelia include the serum and glucocorticoid-regulated kinase 1 and the corticosteroid hormone-induced factor. Endothelin-1 ( ET-1) is a potent vasoconstrictor that alters both sodium transport and hydrogen ion secretion in the kidney. Recent studies in a mouse medullary collecting duct cell line and rat A-10 smooth muscle cells have demonstrated an acute response of ET-1 gene expression to aldosterone. In the present study, we have investigated the ET-1 gene in vivo as a potential direct aldosterone-regulated target gene in the kidney and colon. Adrenalectomized rats given a single dose of aldosterone were found to have a 2-fold increase in ET-1 mRNA levels in the kidney and colon after 1 h. No significant changes in mRNA levels were detected for the related isoforms ET-2 or ET-3. Cotreatment with aldosterone and potassium canrenoate, a MR antagonist, blocked induction of ET-1 mRNA, suggesting that induction was mediated via the MR. In a time course study, ET-1 mRNA levels were induced rapidly by aldosterone, with levels of ET-1 mRNA maximally increased 2- and 2.5-fold after 1 h in the kidney and colon, respectively. These results suggest that ET-1 is a direct aldosterone gene target in the kidney and colon and may play an important role in aldosterone-regulated ion homeostasis.[1]References
- A direct effect of aldosterone on endothelin-1 gene expression in vivo. Wong, S., Brennan, F.E., Young, M.J., Fuller, P.J., Cole, T.J. Endocrinology (2007) [Pubmed]
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