Central Alpha-Adrenoceptors During the Development of Hypertension in Rats on High and Low Salt Intake

Abstract
Our purpose was to investigate the binding characteristics of central alpha-adrenoceptors during the early stages of the development of hypertension in rats on high and low salt (NaCl) intake. We measured alpha 1-[( 3H]prazosin) and alpha 2-[( 3H]rauwolscine) binding in membranes of the hypothalamus and medulla oblongata of six groups of young Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats, spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and subtotally nephrectomized WKY (SN) rats with mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) ranging from normotensive to hypertensive levels after 1 week of salt restriction or loading. In the hypothalamus the SN-high salt rats and both SHR groups had elevated alpha 1-number but there was no change in alpha 2-number. Moreover, MAP was positively correlated with mean hypothalamic alpha 1-number in the six groups. In the medulla oblongata alpha 1-number was unaffected. However, high salt diet influenced medullary alpha 2-binding in the opposite manner in WKY rats versus SN rats and SHR. In these latter groups the affinity was increased and the number decreased in response to high salt intake. Furthermore, a positive correlation between MAP and mean alpha 1:alpha 2 ratio existed in both the hypothalamus and the medulla of the six groups. The data suggest that hypothalamic alpha 1-binding capacity was increased in SHR due principally to a genetic condition which is mimicked by salt loading in the SN rats. Medullary alpha 2-adrenoceptors of WKY, which remained normotensive despite salt loading, responded differently to high salt intake than those of the SN and SHR, whose blood pressure rose significantly.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)