학술논문

The novel mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist finerenone attenuates neointima formation after vascular injury.
Document Type
Article
Source
PLoS ONE. 9/19/2017, Vol. 12 Issue 9, p1-13. 13p.
Subject
*MINERALOCORTICOID receptors
*HEART failure treatment
*KIDNEY disease treatments
*DOSE-effect relationship in pharmacology
VASCULAR disease diagnosis
Language
ISSN
1932-6203
Abstract
Background: The novel nonsteroidal mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) antagonist finerenone holds promise to be safe and efficient in the treatment of patients with heart failure and/or chronic kidney disease. However, its effects on vascular function remain elusive. Purpose: The aim of this study was to determine the functional effect of selective MR antagonism by finerenone in vascular cells in vitro and the effect on vascular remodeling following acute vascular injury in vivo. Methods and results: In vitro, finerenone dose-dependently reduced aldosterone-induced smooth muscle cell (SMC) proliferation, as quantified by BrdU incorporation, and prevented aldosterone-induced endothelial cell (EC) apoptosis, as measured with a flow cytometry based caspase 3/7 activity assay. In vivo, oral application of finerenone resulted in an accelerated re-endothelialization 3 days following electric injury of the murine carotid artery. Furthermore, finerenone treatment inhibited intimal and medial cell proliferation following wire-induced injury of the murine femoral artery 10 days following injury and attenuated neointimal lesion formation 21 days following injury. Conclusion: Finerenone significantly reduces apoptosis of ECs and simultaneously attenuates SMC proliferation, resulting in accelerated endothelial healing and reduced neointima formation of the injured vessels. Thus, finerenone appears to provide favorable vascular effects through restoring vascular integrity and preventing adverse vascular remodeling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]