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Endothelial C-type natriuretic peptide maintains vascular homeostasis

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posted on 2025-05-10, 10:32 authored by Amie J. Moyes, Rayomand S. Khambata, Michela I. Simone, Filipa Mota, Fernando Rivilla, Susana Vallejo, Concepcion Peiró, Carlos F. Sánchez Ferrer, Snezana Djordjevic, Mark J. Caulfield, Raymond J. MacAllister, David L. Selwood, Immaculada Villar, Amrita Ahluwalia, Adrian J. Hobbs, Kristen J. Bubb, Reshma S. Baliga, Natalie G. Lumsden, Fang Xiao, Paul J. Gane, Anne-Sophie Rebstock, Roberta J. Worthington
The endothelium plays a fundamental role in maintaining vascular homeostasis by releasing factors that regulate local blood flow, systemic blood pressure, and the reactivity of leukocytes and platelets. Accordingly, endothelial dysfunction underpins many cardiovascular diseases, including hypertension, myocardial infarction, and stroke. Herein, we evaluated mice with endothelial-specific deletion of Nppc, which encodes C-type natriuretic peptide (CNP), and determined that this mediator is essential for multiple aspects of vascular regulation. Specifically, disruption of CNP leads to endothelial dysfunction, hypertension, atherogenesis, and aneurysm. Moreover, we identified natriuretic peptide receptor–C (NPR-C) as the cognate receptor that primarily underlies CNP-dependent vasoprotective functions and developed small-molecule NPR-C agonists to target this pathway. Administration of NPR-C agonists promotes a vasorelaxation of isolated resistance arteries and a reduction in blood pressure in wild-type animals that is diminished in mice lacking NPR-C. This work provides a mechanistic explanation for genome-wide association studies that have linked the NPR-C (Npr3) locus with hypertension by demonstrating the importance of CNP/NPR-C signaling in preserving vascular homoeostasis. Furthermore, these results suggest that the CNP/NPR-C pathway has potential as a disease-modifying therapeutic target for cardiovascular disorders.

History

Journal title

Journal of Clinical Investigation

Volume

124

Issue

9

Pagination

4039-4051

Publisher

American Society for Clinical Investigation

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Science and Information Technology

School

School of Environmental and Life Sciences

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