2008 Annual Meeting
(572r) Elucidating the Transcriptional Regulatory Network Underlying the Nts Response to Acute Hypertension
Authors
To gain insight into how NTS cells are remodeled during the adaptation to the hypertensive state, we subject healthy animals to acute hypertension and then measure the response of their NTS cells at the level of gene and protein activity. Because NTS cells removed from animals subjected to this elevated blood pressure treatment have been found to exhibit a broad, dynamic gene expression response, gene expression is suspected to play a major role in this cellular adaptation (Khan et al, 2008). In this work, we identify the regulatory events orchestrating the gene expression response measured by Khan et al. Because the dominant mechanism by which changes in gene expression occur is through binding of transcription factors to their target gene promoters, we have focused on the network of transcription factors producing the gene expression response in the adaptation of NTS cells to the hypertensive state.
Because genes with AP-1 and CREB binding sites have been found to be significantly differentially expressed in the NTS from animals subjected to elevated blood pressure (Khan et al, 2008), we suspect that AP-1 and CREB are key transcription factors in the adaptation of NTS cells to the hypertensive state. To test this hypothesis, we perform chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments to measure AP-1 and CREB binding to the promoter regions of genes predicted to be regulatory targets of these transcription factors. Our experimental results show AP-1 and CREB bind differentially to genes known to be important for neuronal function in the NTS from animals with elevated blood pressure. These results support the role of AP-1 and CREB in central blood pressure regulation, and may lead to the identification of new pharmaceutical targets for hypertension.
References
Khan R.L. et al. (2008), Dynamic Transcriptomic Response to Acute Hypertension in the Nucleus Tractus Solitarius. Am. J. Physiol. Regul. Integr. Comp. Physiol.
National Heart Lung and Blood Institute Website, High Blood Pressure (2008). http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/dci/Diseases/Hbp/HBP_WhatIs.html