Angiotensinergic Innervation of the Human Right Atrium: Implications for Cardiac Reflexes

Abstract BACKGROUND The right atrium is densely innervated and provides sensory input to important cardiocirculatory reflexes controlling cardiac output and blood pressure. Its angiotensin (Ang) II-expressing innervation may release Ang II as a neuropeptide cotransmitter to modulate reflexes but has...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of hypertension 2018-01, Vol.31 (2), p.188-196
Hauptverfasser: Bohlender, Jürgen M, Nussberger, Jürg, Tevaearai, Hendrik, Imboden, Hans
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract BACKGROUND The right atrium is densely innervated and provides sensory input to important cardiocirculatory reflexes controlling cardiac output and blood pressure. Its angiotensin (Ang) II-expressing innervation may release Ang II as a neuropeptide cotransmitter to modulate reflexes but has not yet been characterized. METHODS Intraoperative surgical biopsies from human right atria (n = 7) were immunocytologically stained for Ang II, tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), and synaptophysin (SYN). Tissue angiotensins were extracted and quantified by radioimmunoassay. RESULTS Angiotensinergic fibers were frequent in epicardial nerves and around vessels with variable TH co-localization (none to >50%/bundle). Fibers were also widely distributed between cardiomyocytes and in the endocardium where they were typically nonvaricose, TH/SYN-negative and usually accompanied by varicose catecholaminergic fibers. In the endocardium, some showed large varicosities and were partially TH or SYN-positive. A few endocardial regions showed scattered nonvaricose Ang fibers ending directly between endothelial cells. Occasional clusters of thin varicose terminals co-localizing SYN or TH were located underneath, or protruded into, the endothelium. Endocardial density of Ang and TH-positive fibers was 30–300 vs. 200–450/mm2. Atrial Ang II, III, and I concentrations were 67, 16, and 5 fmol/g (median) while Ang IV and V were mostly undetectable. CONCLUSIONS The human right atrium harbors an abundant angiotensinergic innervation and a novel potential source of atrial Ang II. Most peripheral fibers were noncatecholaminergic afferents or preterminal vagal efferents and a minority was presumably sympathetic. Neuronal Ang II release from these fibers may modulate cardiac and circulatory reflexes independently from plasma and tissue Ang II sources.
ISSN:0895-7061
1941-7225
DOI:10.1093/ajh/hpx163