Role of the Vascular Wall in Sodium Homeostasis and Salt Sensitivity |
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Authors: | Rik HG Olde Engberink Nienke MG Rorije Jaap J Homan van der Heide Bert-Jan H van den Born Liffert Vogt |
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Institution: | Department of *Internal Medicine.;Divisions of †Nephrology, and;‡Vascular Medicine, Academic Medical Centre, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands |
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Abstract: | Excessive sodium intake is associated with both hypertension and an increased risk of cardiovascular events, presumably because of an increase in extracellular volume. The extent to which sodium intake affects extracellular volume and BP varies considerably among individuals, discriminating subjects who are salt-sensitive from those who are salt-resistant. Recent experiments have shown that, other than regulation by the kidney, sodium homeostasis is also regulated by negatively charged glycosaminoglycans in the skin interstitium, where sodium is bound to glycosaminoglycans without commensurate effects on extracellular volume. The endothelial surface layer is a dynamic layer on the luminal side of the endothelium that is in continuous exchange with flowing blood. Because negatively charged glycosaminoglycans are abundantly present in this layer, it may act as an intravascular buffer compartment that allows sodium to be transiently stored. This review focuses on the putative role of the endothelial surface layer as a contributor to salt sensitivity, the consequences of a perturbed endothelial surface layer on sodium homeostasis, and the endothelial surface layer as a possible target for the treatment of hypertension and an expanded extracellular volume. |
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Keywords: | sodium BP salt sensitivity EnNaC endothelial cells cardiovascular |
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