Objective: The purpose of this study was to investigate vascular reactivity in heterozygous and homozygous offspring with a genetic predisposition for hypertension after postnatal cross-fostering to mothers with the opposite genetic inheritance of the NOS3 knockout allele.
Study design: Homozygous NOS3 knockout (C57BL/6J-NOS3(-/-KO)) and wild-type mice (NOS3(+/+WT)) were bred to obtain heterozygous litters with a paternally derived (NOS3(+/-pat)) or maternally derived (NOS3(+/-mat)) knockout allele. After delivery, heterozygous and homozygous litters were cross-fostered to a mother with the opposite NOS3 gene status. Carotid arteries were placed in a wire myograph for isometric tension recording with the use of contractile and relaxant agents. Statistical analysis with 1-way analysis of variance and Neuman-Keuls post-hoc testing was performed.
Results: Increased sensitivity to phenylephrine and absent relaxation to acetylcholine in NOS3(+/-mat) was reversed with cross-fostering, and vasorelaxation to isoproterenol was increased. Contraction to calcium was increased in the cross-fostered paternally derived and wild-type litters.
Conclusion: Postnatal interventions may alter the adult vascular profile favorably that is the result of an abnormal intrauterine environment.