D. Rosskopf, Klaus-Jan Schröder, W. Siffert
Feb 1, 1995
Citations
1
Influential Citations
25
Citations
Quality indicators
Journal
Cardiovascular research
Abstract
OBJECTIVE The aim was to investigate the effect of ethylisopropylamiloride (EIPA), an inhibitor of Na+/H+ exchange, and of extracellular pH on the proliferation of immortalised lymphoblasts derived from patients with essential hypertension and normotensive controls. METHODS Na+/H+ exchange activity was determined in cells loaded with the fluorescent pH indicator BCECF. Cell proliferation was determined by FACS analysis, by cell counting, and from the incorporation of [3H]-thymidine. RESULTS EIPA inhibited the Na+/H+ exchanger with an average KI value of 14 nM in all cell lines. Cell growth and DNA synthesis were only inhibited at EIPA concentrations > 10 microM suggesting a non-specific effect independent of Na+/H+ exchanger blockade. When extracellular pH was varied from 7.1 to 7.7 by changing the HCO3- concentration at constant PCO2, cell proliferation was optimal at pH 7.4, but reduced at acidic and alkaline pH in cells from normotensive and hypertensive subjects. The increased proliferation of lymphoblasts from hypertensive subjects persisted over the whole pH range. Comparable results were obtained when pH was altered by varying the PCO2 at constant HCO3-. Preincubation of cells with pertussis toxin inhibited serum stimulated DNA synthesis by 14.5% and 23.5% (P = 0.02) in cell lines from normotensive and hypertensive subjects. CONCLUSIONS The enhanced Na+/H+ exchanger activity in lymphoblasts from patients with essential hypertension is obviously not the major determinant of the enhanced proliferation of these cells. The increased sensitivity of the growth of "hypersensitive" cell lines to pertussis toxin suggests a cellular alteration which resides upstream of Na+/H+ exchange activity and proliferation control.