Perindopril prevents development of obesity and hypertension in middle aged diet-induced obese rat models of metabolic syndrome

Journal article


Connolly, Kylie, Batacan Jr, Romeo, Jackson, Douglas, Vella, Rebecca and Fenning, Andrew. (2023). Perindopril prevents development of obesity and hypertension in middle aged diet-induced obese rat models of metabolic syndrome. Life Sciences. 314, p. Article 121291. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lfs.2022.121291
AuthorsConnolly, Kylie, Batacan Jr, Romeo, Jackson, Douglas, Vella, Rebecca and Fenning, Andrew
Abstract

Aims
The therapeutic properties of anti-hypertensive medications that extend beyond blood pressure lowering have started to become important clinical targets in recent years. This study aimed to assess the cardioprotective effects of perindopril in attenuating complications associated with metabolic syndrome in diet induced obese rats.

Main methods
Male Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats aged 16 weeks were fed either standard rat chow (SC) or given a high-fat-high-carbohydrate (HFHC) diet for 20 weeks. Perindopril treatment (1 mg/kg/day) was administered to a subset of WKY rats commencing at week 8 of the 20 week HFHC feeding period. Body weights, food, water and energy intakes, blood pressure, heart rate and glucose tolerance were measured throughout the treatment period. Oxidative stress and inflammatory markers, lipid levels, cardiac collagen deposition, vascular function, aortic and cardiac electrical function were examined after the treatment.

Key findings
WKY rats developed metabolic syndrome after 20 weeks of HFHC feeding, evidenced by the presence of abdominal obesity, dyslipidaemia, glucose intolerance and hypertension. Perindopril treatment prevented the development of obesity and hypertension in WKY-HFHC. Perindopril improved blood lipid profiles in HFHC rats with decreases in LDL cholesterol, triglycerides and total cholesterol. Type I collagen levels were decreased in WKY-HFHC rats along with decreases in left ventricle mass. Perindopril treated rats also showed improved cardiac electrical function indicated by decreases in action potential at 90 % of repolarisation in WKY-HFHC rats.

Significance
These results show that perindopril has a profound effect on preventing the development of metabolic syndrome in animals fed a HFHC diet.

Keywordsperindopril; metabolic syndrome; diet-induced obesity; cardiovascular disease; high-fat high-carbohydrate diet
Year2023
JournalLife Sciences
Journal citation314, p. Article 121291
PublisherElsevier Inc.
ISSN0024-3205
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lfs.2022.121291
PubMed ID36535403
Scopus EID2-s2.0-85145838034
Page range1-11
Publisher's version
License
All rights reserved
File Access Level
Controlled
Output statusPublished
Publication dates
Online16 Dec 2022
Publication process dates
Accepted12 Dec 2022
Deposited07 Aug 2023
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