Dissociation of sodium-chloride cotransporter expression and blood pressure during chronic high dietary potassium supplementation

Dietary potassium (K+) supplementation is associated with a lowering effect in blood pressure (BP), but not all studies agree. Here, we examined the effects of short- and long-term K+ supplementation on BP in mice, whether differences depend on the accompanying anion or the sodium (Na+) intake and m...

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Veröffentlicht in:JCI insight 2023-03, Vol.8 (5)
Hauptverfasser: Little, Robert, Murali, Sathish K, Poulsen, Søren B, Grimm, Paul R, Assmus, Adrienne, Cheng, Lei, Ivy, Jessica R, Hoorn, Ewout J, Matchkov, Vladimir, Welling, Paul A, Fenton, Robert A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Dietary potassium (K+) supplementation is associated with a lowering effect in blood pressure (BP), but not all studies agree. Here, we examined the effects of short- and long-term K+ supplementation on BP in mice, whether differences depend on the accompanying anion or the sodium (Na+) intake and molecular alterations in the kidney that may underlie BP changes. Relative to the control diet, BP was higher in mice fed a high NaCl (1.57% Na+) diet for 7 weeks or fed a K+-free diet for 2 weeks. BP was highest on a K+-free/high NaCl diet. Commensurate with increased abundance and phosphorylation of the thiazide sensitive sodium-chloride-cotransporter (NCC) on the K+-free/high NaCl diet, BP returned to normal with thiazides. Three weeks of a high K+ diet (5% K+) increased BP (predominantly during the night) independently of dietary Na+ or anion intake. Conversely, 4 days of KCl feeding reduced BP. Both feeding periods resulted in lower NCC levels but in increased levels of cleaved (active) α and γ subunits of the epithelial Na+ channel ENaC. The elevated BP after chronic K+ feeding was reduced by amiloride but not thiazide. Our results suggest that dietary K+ has an optimal threshold where it may be most effective for cardiovascular health.
ISSN:2379-3708
2379-3708
DOI:10.1172/jci.insight.156437