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-estradiol on
parasympathetic tone in male rats
Department of Anatomy and Physiology, Atlantic Veterinary College, University of Prince Edward Island, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada C1A 4P3
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ABSTRACT |
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The following experiments were conducted to
determine if peripherally administered estrogen has an effect on
central autonomic tone and whether this change in tone results in an
alteration in cardiovascular reflex control. Male Sprague-Dawley rats
were anesthetized with thiobutabarbitol sodium (50 mg/kg) and
instrumented to record blood pressure, heart rate, and vagal
parasympathetic or renal sympathetic efferent nerve activity.
Additional rats were instrumented to test the sensitivity of the
cardiac baroreflex using intravenous injections of phenylephrine
hydrochloride (0.025, 0.05, 0.1 mg/kg) or sodium nitroprusside (0.0025, 0.005, 0.01 mg/kg) and plotting the cardiovascular responses.
Intravenous injection of estrogen
(10
4,
10
2, and
10
1 mg/kg) produced a
significant increase in vagal efferent activity and in baroreflex
sensitivity. The bilateral microinjection of an estrogen receptor
antagonist, ICI-182,780 (1 pM, 50 nl/side) into the nucleus ambiguus
blocked both the estrogen-induced increase in vagal efferent activity
and baroreflex sensitivity. These results demonstrate that in male rats
estrogen acts centrally to enhance baroreflex sensitivity by increasing
parasympathetic efferent tone.
renal nerve; vagus nerve; ICI-182,780; nucleus ambiguus; baroreflex sensitivity
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INTRODUCTION |
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EPIDEMIOLOGICAL and experimental studies have indicated the existence of gender differences in autonomic tone (5, 18, 31). These studies also suggest that the incidence of cardiovascular disease is far less pronounced in premenopausal women compared with men, but this difference decreases with age and disappears after menopause, when cardiovascular disease becomes the leading cause of death among women (5, 31). Analysis of baroreceptor reflex sensitivity (BRS) and heart rate variability provides a measure of sympathovagal balance and serves as a risk stratifier for future cardiac arrhythmias and/or sudden cardiac death (43). Specifically, BRS is elevated in premenopausal women relative to both men and postmenopausal women (1). Interestingly, both the BRS and heart rate variability of postmenopausal women have been shown to significantly improve after estrogen replacement therapy (18). In light of this apparent cardioprotective effect, much attention has been focused on the peripheral autonomic effects of estrogen (6, 13, 28, 39), particularly as they pertain to estrogen replacement therapy after the onset of menopause (for review, see Ref. 13).
The beneficial effects of estrogen in the periphery appear to be multifactorial. For example, estrogen affects cholesterol metabolism and disposition, increases plasma levels of high-density lipoproteins (35), inhibits peroxidation of low-density lipoproteins (36), inhibits the proliferation of smooth muscle cells in the arterial wall (46), stimulates vasodilation, and suppresses the norepinephrine-induced vasoconstrictor response of coronary arteries (8, 48).
Other investigations into the effects of estrogen on peripheral
autonomic tone have demonstrated that, in females, estrogen increases
the density and enhances the function of presynaptic
2-adrenoceptors, resulting in a
lower basal plasma norepinephrine level (11, 23) and a significant
attenuation of norepinephrine-induced pressor responses (12, 20, 27)
compared with men. As well, estrogen has been demonstrated to increase
the rate of choline reuptake into cholinergic terminals, potentiate the
activity of choline acetyltransferase (13), and increase the magnitude
of the phenylephrine-induced reflex bradycardia, resulting in an enhanced BRS (37). Furthermore, epidemiological studies have indicated
that premenopausal women have a lower incidence of ventricular tachycardia, ventricular fibrillation, and fatal arrhythmias after coronary artery occlusion (10, 25, 42) primarily due to an enhanced
parasympathetic tone. This vagally enhanced state is beneficial when
one considers such cardiovascular pathologies as myocardial infarction
and heart failure, which have been shown to result in sympathetic
hyperactivity and parasympathetic withdrawal (4, 13, 17, 45). Men tend
to have a higher sympathetic tone and a depressed BRS compared with
women under normal conditions as well as after a cardiovascular
accident, contributing to an increased risk for lethal cardiac
arrhythmias and sudden death (13, 40, 49). It has been postulated,
however, that these gender differences in autonomic tone depend largely
on a long-term exposure to estrogen (31). To date, very little research
has been undertaken to determine the mechanisms involved in the
short-term cardioprotective effects of estrogen administration.
Recently, our lab has shown that the direct stimulation of cervical vagal afferents in male rats for a period of 2 h resulted in an increase in plasma norepinephrine levels and a decrease in BRS (38) similar to that observed after cardiovascular pathology. Furthermore, intravenous injection of estrogen has been shown to increase BRS in a dose-dependent manner in normal male rats as well as block the depression in the BRS in vagal-stimulated male rats. In both cases, the effect of estrogen on the BRS was shown to result from an increase in the magnitude of the reflex bradycardia response to a bolus injection of a pressor agent (37). Finally, the intravenous administration of ICI-182,780, a potent and selective estrogen receptor antagonist (19, 47), 10 min before injection of estrogen, blocked both effects (37), indicating that the enhanced reflex bradycardia was dependent on estrogen receptor activation.
In the present investigation, we will examine whether intravenously administered estrogen alters baroreflex sensitivity via a centrally mediated effect on autonomic tone. Parasympathetic and sympathetic nerve activity will be measured before and after the local microinjection of ICI-182,780 into the nucleus ambiguus, a known autonomic regulatory nucleus (24). In this way, a centrally mediated, estrogen-induced effect on autonomic tone in male rats can be demonstrated.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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All experiments were carried out in accordance with the guidelines of the Canadian Council on Animal Care and were approved by the University of Prince Edward Island Animal Care Committee.
General surgical procedures. Experiments were performed on a total of 48 male Sprague-Dawley rats (Charles River; Montreal, PQ, Canada) weighing 250-275 g. Rats were anesthetized with a single dose of thiobutabarbitol sodium (Inactin; RBI, Natick, MA; 50 mg/kg ip), which maintained a surgical plane of anesthesia for the duration of the experiment. A polyethylene catheter (PE-50; Clay Adams, Parsippany, NJ) was inserted into the right femoral artery to monitor blood pressure and heart rate and into the right femoral vein (PE-10) for the intravenous administration of drugs. Arterial blood pressure was measured with a pressure transducer (Gould P23 ID; Cleveland, OH) connected to a Gould model 2200S polygraph. Heart rate was determined from the pulse pressure using a Gould tachograph (Biotach). An endotracheal tube was inserted, and animals were ventilated with room air on a Harvard rodent ventilator (65 strokes/min; 2.5 ml tidal volume) to facilitate respiration.
Vagal parasympathetic and renal sympathetic nerve isolation and recording. For recording of parasympathetic efferent nerve activity, the right cervical vagus nerve was isolated through a midline cervical incision. Bipolar platinum recording electrodes were secured in place using dental impression material (Basilex; Ash Temple, Bedford, NS). The vagal nerve bundle was then crushed distally to permit recording of efferent activity only. To record sympathetic efferent nerve activity, the right kidney was exposed through a retroperitoneal incision with the aid of an operating stereomicroscope. A renal nerve branch was isolated from the surrounding tissue, and a bipolar platinum recording electrode was secured in place to record efferent nerve activity. For both renal and vagus nerves, the multiunit activity was first amplified and recorded with a 100-Hz to 3-kHz bandpass and 60-Hz notch filter by a Grass model P15 preamplifier (Grass; Warwick, RI). The signal was then further amplified (Gould Universal Amplifier; Cleveland, OH) before being sent to an oscilloscope (BK Precision Instruments; Chicago, IL). In addition, the differentiated signal was sent to a microcomputer for display (2-s bin width) and analysis using the Integrated Program for Electrophysiological Experiments software program (IPEE; Conrad Yim Software; Etobicoke, ON, Canada). Background noise levels were determined by the intravenous infusion of hexamethonium chloride (Sigma; St. Louis, MO; 2 mg/kg) at the conclusion of the experimental period. The residual signal was subtracted as noise in calculations of absolute values for sympathetic and parasympathetic nerve activity.
Central and peripheral drug injections. After nerve isolation, the animals were placed in a David Kopf (Tujunga, CA) stereotaxic frame and small burr holes were drilled bilaterally through the temporal-occipital bone to permit stereotaxic insertion of a 30-gauge, stainless steel, 1 µl Hamilton microsyringe into the nucleus ambiguus according to coordinates obtained from a stereotaxic atlas of the rat brain (11.5 mm caudal to bregma, 2.0 mm mediolaterally and 6.0 mm deep; Ref. 32). Animals were then allowed to stabilize for at least 30 min before drug injection or nerve activity measurements.
The first group of 20 animals received bilateral microinjections of
saline (0.9%, 50 nl/side) into the nucleus ambiguus. Ten minutes after
these central microinjections a single dose of 17
-estradiol 3-sulfate (water-soluble form; Sigma, St. Louis, MO) was injected intravenously (10
5,
10
4,
10
2,
10
1, and 1.0 mg/kg;
injection volume = 0.2 ml; n = 4/dose), and parasympathetic efferent nerve activity was recorded. In a
separate group of four animals, renal sympathetic nerve activity was
measured after the central microinjection of saline and the intravenous
administration of estrogen at a dose that produced a maximal change in
parasympathetic nerve activity
(10
2 mg/kg). An additional
separate group of four animals receiving a central injection of saline
(50 nl/side) were administered saline (vehicle; 0.9% in 0.2 ml)
intravenously, after which parasympathetic nerve activity was recorded.
In two other groups of animals (n = 4/group), the selective estrogen receptor antagonist ICI-182,780 (1 pM;
50 nl/side) was microinjected bilaterally into the nucleus ambiguus
before the intravenous injection of estrogen
(10
2 mg/kg) or saline
(0.9%; 0.2 ml), and parasympathetic nerve activity was recorded. In
all groups where peripheral nerve recordings were made, renal
sympathetic or vagal parasympathetic activity was recorded 30 min
before and at 30, 60, 90, 120, 180, 240, and 300 min after the
intravenous injection of estrogen or saline.
Baroreflex testing. In 12 animals the
effects of estrogen (10
2
mg/kg) on cardiac BRS were measured every 30 min using intravenous injections of phenylephrine (0.025, 0.05, 0.1 mg/kg;
n = 8) or sodium nitroprusside
(0.0025, 0.005, 0.01 mg/kg; n = 4).
The first of these peripheral injections was made 10 min after the
bilateral central microinjection of ICI-182,780 (1 pM; 50 nl/side) or
saline (0.9%; 50 nl/side) into the nucleus ambiguus. The peak
amplitudes of the resulting phenylephrine- or nitroprusside-induced
blood pressure and heart rate changes were plotted against each other. Regression lines were obtained by the least-squares method, and the
slope of each line was calculated to provide an index of BRS. The slope
of the BRS was measured 30 min before and 30, 60, 90, 120, 180, 240, and 300 min after the peripheral administration of estrogen or saline.
Data analysis. All data are presented
as means ± SE and were analyzed by a one-way ANOVA for repeated
measures followed by a Student-Newman-Keuls post hoc analysis.
Statistical differences between the slopes of the regression lines
(BRS) were determined using an analysis of covariance. Differences in
baseline or peak changes in renal or vagal nerve activity were
determined using both a Student's
t-test and ANOVA for repeated
measures. In all cases, differences were considered significant if
P
0.05.
Histology. At the end of each experiment, under deep anesthesia, animals were perfused transcardially with 0.9% saline followed by 10% Formalin. The brains were then removed and stored in 10% Formalin. The tip of the injection track was then verified histologically in thionin-stained coronal sections (±100 µm) and compared against the location of the compact cell group of the nucleus ambiguus according to the stereotaxic atlas (32).
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RESULTS |
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Baseline values for mean arterial pressure (110 ± 11 mmHg;
n = 48), heart rate (357 ± 19 beats/min; n = 48), parasympathetic nerve activity (22 ± 6 spikes/bin;
n = 32), sympathetic nerve activity
(24 ± 7 spikes/bin; n = 4), and
baroreceptor sensitivity (0.52 ± 0.05 beats · min
1 · mmHg
1;
n = 12) remained unchanged during the
30-min period before experimental manipulation. The bilateral central
injection of either saline (n = 36) or ICI-182,780 (n = 12)
produced a very brief, transient decrease in both mean arterial
pressure (12 ± 6 mmHg) and heart rate (16 ± 9 beats/min). Both
parameters returned to preinjection baseline values within 60-90
s. Subsequent intravenous injection of either saline
(n = 8) or any dose of 17
-estradiol
(n = 16) other than the
10
2 mg/ml dose
(n = 24; see Table
1) did not alter baseline blood pressure or
heart rate throughout the experimental time period.
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Estrogen produces a dose-related increase in vagal
parasympathetic efferent nerve activity. In the group
of animals instrumented to record parasympathetic tone, mean vagal
efferent nerve activity was significantly enhanced compared with
preinjection values (22 ± 6 spikes/bin;
n = 32) at all time points from 30 to
120 min after the intravenous injection of estrogen
(10
4,
10
2, and
10
1 mg/kg;
n = 4/dose;
P < 0.05 for each group at 30, 60, 90, and 120 min; Fig. 1,
A and
B) and central microinjection of
saline. The maximum changes in vagal activity at each of these time
points occurred after injection of
10
2 mg/kg estrogen (average
peak activity of 109 ± 22, 159 ± 21, 174 ± 24, and 86 ± 10 spikes/bin at 30, 60, 90, and 120 min postestrogen injection;
n = 4/group;
P < 0.05 for each time point). For
each concentration of estrogen that produced an enhanced vagal tone, the increase recovered to prestimulation levels when measured 180 min
postestrogen (Fig. 1B) and remained
unchanged for the duration of the experiment. Parasympathetic efferent
nerve activity remained unchanged after the intravenous injection of
saline or the lowest (10
5
mg/kg) and highest (1 mg/kg) dose of estrogen used in combination with
central saline microinjections (n = 4/group; P > 0.05 at all
experimental time points compared with baseline values).
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Estrogen has no significant effect on renal
sympathetic efferent nerve activity. In animals
instrumented to record sympathetic tone before and after the central
administration of saline and the intravenous injection of estrogen
(10
2 mg/kg), renal nerve
activity remained unchanged from preinjection values (24 ± 7 spikes/bin) at all time points measured throughout the duration of the
experiment (n = 4;
P > 0.05 for all time points; data
not shown). Although done in separate animals, the lack of change in
sympathetic tone correlated to the time during which parasympathetic
tone was optimally enhanced (Fig. 1, A
and B) in animals instrumented to
record vagal efferent activity.
Nucleus ambiguus mediates the estrogen-induced
enhancement of the slope of the baroreflex sensitivity and
parasympathetic tone. Previously in our laboratory, we
have shown that a bolus intravenous injection of estrogen significantly
enhances the BRS of male rats (37). This effect was primarily the
result of an increase in the magnitude of the reflex bradycardia in
response to the intravenous injection of the pressor agent
phenylephrine. In the present investigation, estrogen
(10
2 mg/kg) injection
followed by the central microinjection of saline (n = 4/group) also resulted in a
significant increase in the magnitude of the phenylephrine-induced
reflex bradycardia (28 ± 8 beats/min preestrogen to 56 ± 6, 66 ± 7, 38 ± 6, 51 ± 5, 56 ± 6, 57 ± 7, and 54 ± 6 beats/min at 30, 60, 90, 120, 180, 240, and 300 min, respectively;
P < 0.05; Fig.
2A). As
well, there was no measurable change in the phenylephrine-induced
pressor response at any time point after estrogen injection
(n = 4;
P > 0.05 at all time points; Fig.
2A). When these
phenylephrine-induced changes in mean arterial pressure and heart rate
after estrogen injection
(10
2 mg/kg;
n = 4) were plotted, the slopes of the
regression lines (BRS) were significantly increased (0.52 ± 0.05 beats · min
1 · mmHg
1
30 min preestrogen to 1.2 ± 0.03, 1.3 ± 0.04, 0.8 ± 0.05, 0.9 ± 0.05, 1.05 ± 0.06, 1.06 ± 0.06, and 0.95 ± 0.04 beats · min
1 · mmHg
1
at 30, 60, 90, 120, 180, 240, and 300 min, respectively, postinjection; n = 4/group;
P < 0.05 at each time point; Fig.
2B).
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Conversely, intravenous injection of estrogen
(10
2 mg/kg;
n = 4) did not significantly change
the magnitude of the sodium nitroprusside-induced depressor response
(preestrogen value of 33 ± 7 mmHg) or the reflex tachycardia
(preestrogen value of 22 ± 5 beats/min) at any of the time points
measured (n = 4/group;
P > 0.05 for 30, 60, 90, 120, 180, 240, and 300 min postestrogen; figure not shown).
Consequently, when these two variables were plotted and the slope of
the regression lines determined, no significant differences between the
preestrogen BRS (0.55 ± 0.05 beats · min
1 · mmHg
1)
and postestrogen BRS values were observed at any time point (n = 4/group; 0.52 ± 0.05 at 30, 0.55 ± 0.06 at 60, 0.57 ± 0.06 at 90, 0.54 ± 0.05 at 120, 0.57 ± 0.05 at 180, 0.58 ± 0.05 at 240, and 0.56 ± 0.05 beats · min
1 · mmHg
1
at 300 min postestrogen; P > 0.05;
figure not shown).
Bilateral microinjection of the estrogen receptor antagonist
ICI-182,780 (1 pM; 50 nl/side) into the nucleus ambiguus in combination with an intravenous injection of saline (0.9%, 0.2 ml) produced no
significant changes in vagal efferent nerve activity, the
phenylephrine-induced pressor and reflex bradycardia responses and BRS
when compared with preinjection values
(n = 4/group;
P > 0.05 for each time point for
each parameter; data not shown). In addition, the combination of
ICI-182,780 and intravenous estrogen
(10
2 mg/kg;
n = 4) produced no significant changes
in the phenylephrine-induced pressor response when experimental time
points were compared with preinjection values. However, the
microinjection of ICI-182,780 into the nucleus ambiguus 10 min before
estrogen (10
2 mg/kg)
administration blocked the previously observed significant changes in
vagal efferent nerve activity (n = 4;
Fig. 3, Aa
and Ab) and BRS
(n = 4; Fig. 3,
Ba and
Bb) when measured at each time point
after estrogen injection. The ICI-182,780-induced blockade of the
change in the slope of the BRS was the result of an attenuated ability
of estrogen to increase the magnitude of the phenylephrine-induced reflex bradycardia. The reflex bradycardia remained unchanged from
preestrogen injection values (n = 4;
P > 0.05 at all time points; Fig.
3Ba).
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Histological verification of cannula
placement. Figure 4 shows a
composite diagram indicating the bilateral location of microinjection cannulas in the region of the nucleus ambiguus obtained from all animals receiving ICI-182,780 in this investigation. Data
from animals in which both microinjections of ICI-182,780 were located outside the nucleus ambiguus were not included in this study (except to
confirm the effective zone for the antagonist within this nucleus). The
results from such animals, as well as animals in which only a
unilateral injection was made or a bilateral injection outside the
nucleus ambiguus did not produce an attenuation of the estrogen-induced enhancement of parasympathetic activity, increased
phenylephrine-induced reflex bradycardia, or BRS are not
shown. Also, the sites of all animals receiving exact
bilateral saline microinjections made into the nucleus ambiguus have
been omitted from Fig. 4 for clarity.
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DISCUSSION |
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Our results demonstrated that acute intravenous injection of estrogen in male rats enhanced parasympathetic efferent nerve activity. Coinciding with this increase in parasympathetic tone, an increase in the phenylephrine-induced reflex bradycardia, and consequently BRS, was also observed. When the estrogen antagonist ICI-182,780 was preinjected into the nucleus ambiguus, both the estrogen-induced increase in parasympathetic tone and BRS were blocked.
Doses of estrogen between, but not including,
10
5 and 1 mg/kg were
effective in eliciting significant increases in parasympathetic efferent nerve activity, with a dose of
10
2 mg/kg producing the
maximal increase. Doses of estrogen
>10
2 mg/kg produced
smaller increases in parasympathetic tone, resulting in a bell-shaped
dose-response curve. This finding is consistent with a previous
investigation in which a similar, bell-shaped, dose-response
relationship was observed between estrogen at these same doses and the
BRS of male rats (37). In that investigation, the maximal effective
dose of estrogen on the BRS was found to be
10
2 mg/kg, with those doses
between 10
4 and 1 mg/kg
having a significant effect on the BRS (37). In contrast to previous
reports on the cardiovascular effects of estrogen (8, 12, 13, 18, 35,
37, 39), our present results showed that baseline heart rate was
significantly depressed after estrogen injection but only at a dose
(10
2 mg/kg) producing a
maximal effect on parasympathetic efferent activity (see Fig. 1).
However, this estrogen-induced decrease in heart rate did not appear to
affect the magnitude of the phenylephrine-induced reflex bradycardia,
because baseline heart rate was only depressed at 60 and 90 min (see
Table 1), whereas the reflex bradycardia (and hence BRS) was
significantly enhanced at all time points measured.
Interestingly, our results demonstrated that administration of estrogen
(10
2 mg/kg) after the prior
microinjection of saline into the nucleus ambiguus did not effect the
nitroprusside-induced depressor response or the magnitude of the reflex
tachycardia. The nitroprusside-induced alteration in heart rate is
mediated via an increase in cardiac sympathetic efferent nerve activity
concurrent with a withdrawal of parasympathetic tone. The lack of an
estrogen-induced change in the nitroprusside-evoked reflex correlates
well with the observation that no significant changes in tonic
sympathetic activity were observed after estrogen injection. Consistent
with previous results (37), we demonstrated that intravenous estrogen
(10
2 mg/kg) with the prior
central microinjection of saline also increased the magnitude of the
reflex bradycardia in response to a phenylephrine-induced rise in blood
pressure. The enhanced reflex bradycardia was again independent of a
change in the magnitude of the phenylephrine-induced pressor response.
Therefore, it appeared that estrogen enhanced the BRS of male rats
primarily by increasing parasympathetic outflow.
Of particular interest was the observation of the difference in the
time course of the estrogen-induced changes in parasympathetic tone
compared with that of the BRS. Vagal efferent tone was enhanced for a
period of only 120 min after estrogen administration, with an optimal
increase in activity occurring between 60 and 90 min. However, the
estrogen-induced enhancement of the BRS appeared to be biphasic,
remaining significantly different from preinjection values for the
duration of the experimental time course (300 min) with peak BRS values
at 60 min and between 180 and 240 min. Furthermore, our results
indicate that the increase in BRS may in fact be dependent on an
initial centrally mediated, estrogen-induced increase in parasympathetic tone. This is evidenced by the fact that both the
elevated vagal tone and the enhanced BRS are blocked over the 300 min
of testing by the prior injection of ICI-182,780 into the nucleus
ambiguus. Figure 5 summarizes the
relationship between the time course of the estrogen-induced
(10
2 mg/kg) increase in
vagal activity and BRS. Figure 5 clearly shows that the enhanced vagal
efferent activity recovers to baseline values at around the same time
that a secondary increase in BRS becomes apparent.
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The nucleus ambiguus contains the majority of descending vagal
preganglionic cardioinhibitory neurons (24). Estrogen receptors have
been localized to the ventral medulla in the region of the nucleus
ambiguus (2, 41) as well as in estrogen-containing projection neurons
from the forebrain (9). Therefore, it would appear that the
longer-lasting effect of estrogen on BRS is dependent on estrogen
acting directly, or indirectly via an estrogenic projection pathway, on
estrogen receptors in the nucleus ambiguus and increasing parasympathetic outflow. Evidence already exists to suggest that estrogen is capable of rapid, nongenomic changes in membrane
excitability via the direct modulation of ion channel function (21) or
via the induction of long-term potentiation (14) within the central nervous system. Also, 17
-estradiol has been described as a central nervous system "activator" that can enhance excitatory
neurotransmission (15). Most recently, estrogen has been shown to bind
to specific sites on neuronal membranes in the rat brain (34). Estrogen may thus have a direct, immediate effect on neuronal excitability, which might account for the short-term estrogen-induced changes in
parasympathetic tone. Because it is not known what concentration of
estrogen would be found locally within the nucleus ambiguus after a
peripheral injection, electrophysiological investigations are underway
in our laboratory to determine the direct, local effect of estrogen on
the excitability of neurons within this parasympathetic preganglionic
nucleus and to determine if this effect results in an increase in vagal
efferent activity to the heart.
Another possible mechanism for the estrogen-mediated increase in parasympathetic tone could be via the release of neurotrophins and activation of their central receptors. It has been shown that neurons colocalize estrogen and neurotrophin receptors (44), and acute estrogen administration has been shown to significantly enhance the postsynaptic concentration of neurotrophin receptors (for review, see Ref. 3). After synaptic activity and the subsequent increase in postsynaptic intracellular calcium concentration, the calcium-dependent neurotrophin released may act as a retrograde messenger to enhance further presynaptic neurotransmitter release (3). Furthermore, neurotrophins have been implicated in the postsynaptic potentiation of excitatory neurotransmission (3). Therefore, a short-term, estrogen-dependent increase in neuronal excitability may be maintained for a longer period of time after a neurotrophin-mediated increase in postsynaptic activity. However, in our study, no secondary increase in parasympathetic tone was observed after a return to baseline values. It therefore appears that the secondary increase in BRS is not directly related to a secondary, centrally mediated increase in parasympathetic tone.
It is possible, however, that neurotrophins may still mediate the secondary elevation of BRS at a peripheral level, because neurotrophin receptors have been localized on cardiac myocytes (16). The initial increase in parasympathetic efferent tone and subsequent postganglionic postsynaptic activity on cardiac myocytes may be adequate to activate and maintain neurotrophin release at this peripheral site. After the decline of estrogen-induced vagal efferent activity, neurotrophins released from postsynaptic fibers may either enhance or maintain the presynaptic release of acetylcholine (3, 16) and thus sustain the enhanced phenylephrine-induced reflex bradycardia. This neurotrophin-induced effect would, however, be dependent on an initial estrogen-induced increase in efferent parasympathetic tone and therefore would also be blocked after the prior central microinjection of the estrogen antagonist ICI-182,780.
We cannot exclude the possibility that estrogen might be acting peripherally via genomic pathways to maintain an enhanced BRS after the decline in parasympathetic activity. Several lines of evidence suggest that steroid hormones, such as estrogen, control intracellular functions via mechanisms that activate the transcription processes via a nuclear estrogen receptor. Estrogen administration has been shown to increase the levels of choline acetyltransferase resulting in elevated circulating plasma acetylcholine levels (22, 26) as well as facilitating the high-affinity uptake of choline (30). Both of these estrogen-induced effects would result in an enhanced synaptic efficacy of acetylcholine at the sinoatrial node. This could also be responsible for a secondary long-term enhancement of the phenylephrine-induced reflex bradycardia and BRS after the recovery of the initial centrally mediated change in parasympathetic tone.
Perspectives
Several cardiovascular pathologies have been associated with serious autonomic abnormalities, characterized by enhanced sympathetic nervous system activity and parasympathetic nervous system withdrawal (29, 33). Additionally, the extent of suppression of parasympathetic tone has been correlated with the severity of heart failure and provides prognostic value to sudden cardiac death and other future clinical problems (7, 29, 40). This report demonstrates that acute estrogen administration enhances parasympathetic tone and, as previously shown, blocks the depression in baroreceptor sensitivity observed after vagal afferent stimulation (37). Taken together, these results suggest that acute estrogen administration after a cardiovascular incident may have potential therapeutic value by decreasing the imbalance in autonomic output. Evidently this would occur by a centrally mediated estrogen-induced increase in parasympathetic tone.| |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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The authors thank Monique Saleh for assistance in reviewing the manuscript.
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FOOTNOTES |
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This work was supported by Grant 615122 from the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Prince Edward Island.
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Address reprint requests to T. M. Saleh.
Received 3 August 1998; accepted in final form 23 October 1998.
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