A common denominator in hypertension, regardless of its etiology (essential, renovascular, malignant, or preeclamptic), is endothelial dysfunction, which involves reduced production, decreased bioavailability, and/or impaired cellular effects of NO [
6]. Therefore, various potential therapeutic targets have been identified all along the L-arginine–NO-synthase–soluble guanylyl cyclase pathway (Fig. ).
When
L-arginine is deficient, endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) can generate both superoxide anions and NO, leading to the detrimental production of peroxynitrite. It is still a matter of debate whether L-arginine deficiency occurs in vivo to limit the production of NO by eNOS, but L-arginine supplementation improves endothelial dysfunction in hypercholesterolemia and hypertension [
7]. In addition, endogenous analogues such as asymmetric dimethyl-L-arginine (ADMA) can compete with L-arginine for its specific membrane transporter and also directly for access to eNOS, where ADMA acts as an inhibitor. The plasma concentration of ADMA represents an independent predictor for all causes of cardiovascular mortality. Free dimethylarginines are the products of proteolytic degradation of arginine-methylated proteins by protein arginine N-methyltransferase type I (PRMT-I). In endothelial cells, ADMA is metabolized mainly by dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase-2 (DDAH-2). During angiotensin II administration and oxidative stress, the observed elevation in ADMA levels is associated with an increase in the activity of PRMT and a decrease in the activity of DDAH. Silencing the DDAH-2 gene impairs endothelium-dependent relaxation and NO production. Therefore, the inhibition of PRMT-I and the activation or enhanced expression of DDAH-2 could be beneficial in treating cardiovascular disease [
7].
Endothelial cells express
arginases (with arginase-2 being the predominant isoform), which metabolize L-arginine to L-ornithine and urea. Arginase-2 competes with eNOS for substrate, and its expression and activity are enhanced in cardiovascular diseases, perhaps because of increased oxidative stress. In animal models, inhibition and gene deletion of arginase-2 improve endothelium-dependent relaxations and the vascular production of NO, prevent the development of hypertension, and decrease the generation of endothelial reactive oxygen species (ROS) and the formation of atherosclerotic plaques [
8]. Arginase-2 may therefore represent a promising novel therapeutic target that could reverse vascular dysfunction in hypertension.
Reduced expression of
eNOS could be responsible for decreased NO production, but in most situations where endothelial dysfunction is encountered, the expression of eNOS is increased paradoxically, most likely because oxidative stress generates hydrogen peroxide, which increases the expression of the enzyme. Endothelial dysfunction associated with this increased expression of eNOS shows that the ability to generate NO is reduced or its bioavailability is decreased. The reduction in NO generation can be attributed to eNOS uncoupling, whereby the enzyme itself is a source of superoxide anions and a cause of endothelial dysfunction [
9].
Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH
4) is an essential cofactor that critically controls the assembly and activity of eNOS. Decreased endothelial levels of BH
4 are responsible not only for a reduction in NO production but also for the uncoupling of eNOS. BH
4 is highly susceptible to oxidation by peroxynitrite, forming BH
2 and ultimately biopterin. BH
4 is synthesized de novo from guanosine triphosphate (GTP) following a series of enzymatic reactions, whereby GTP-cyclohydrolase I (GTPCH-I) is the first and rate-limiting step. An alternative pathway for BH
4 synthesis, the “salvage pathway,” involves the formation of sepiapterin and its subsequent reduction in dihydrobiopterin (BH
2), which is further reduced by dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) to form BH
4. Following oxidation, BH
4 can be regenerated by either DHFR or dihydropteridine reductase. Increased vascular homocysteine is a risk factor for atherosclerosis; it leads to endothelial dysfunction, and some of its effects may be mediated by inhibition of BH
4 de novo synthesis [
10]. Direct supplementation with BH
4 or its precursor, sepiapterin, improves endothelial function in animals, in smokers, and in patients with hypertension, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, or coronary disease. Enhancing the expression or the activity of GTPCH-I (for de novo BH
4 synthesis) or of DHFR (for BH
4 regeneration) may prevent the occurrence of endothelial dysfunction. Alternative strategies include supplementation with folic acid, which enhances the binding affinity of BH
4 to NOS, stabilizes BH
4 chemically, and stimulates DHFR. Preventing peroxynitrite formation (and therefore BH
4 oxidation) or facilitating the recycling of BH
4 regeneration with vitamin C can also be considered [
9].
Inhibition or deletion of eNOS causes accelerated atherosclerosis in rabbits and mice. However, apoE
−/− mice overexpressing eNOS develop larger atherosclerotic lesions than control apoE
−/− mice. Again, this paradox is explained best by the peroxynitrite-dependent
uncoupling of eNOS and the subsequent production of superoxide anions. However, eNOS uncoupling can be prevented if the upregulation of eNOS is associated with an increased availability of essential cofactors such as BH
4. Compounds such as AVE9488 and AVE3085, which enhance eNOS promoter activity, possess such a coordinated activity and validate the concept that enhanced transcriptional expression of eNOS can be beneficial in preventing cardiovascular diseases [
11•].
Besides preventing eNOS uncoupling, other therapeutic strategies can be designed to restore proper NO levels. These include drugs that stimulate the release of NO by endothelial eNOS, NO donor drugs, antioxidant compounds, drugs that boost the antioxidant defense mechanisms, and inhibitors of enzymes involved in the generation of ROS.
Some antihypertensive drugs—for instance, nebivolol, various dihydropyridines, angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, angiotensin (AT
1) receptor blockers (ARBs), and possibly renin inhibitors—can directly or indirectly stimulate the release of endothelial NO. Additionally, chronic treatments with ACE inhibitors, ARBs, or renin inhibitors increase eNOS expression. Although chronic treatment with ACE inhibitors or ARBs consistently improves endothelial function in animal models of hypertension, variable effects have been reported in hypertensive patients, possibly because of the multifactorial etiology of essential hypertension or differences in the experimental clinical protocols [
12].
Besides uncoupled eNOS,
NAD(P)H oxidase is a predominant source of excess ROS in the vascular wall in essential hypertension [
13]. Thus, inactivation of superoxide anions with superoxide dismutase mimetics or scavenging of ROS with antioxidants seems an obvious way of increasing NO bioavailability. Such strategies have been successful in various animal models of hypertension. However, large clinical trials of chronic antioxidant therapy in hypertensive patients have not produced major reductions in arterial blood pressure and did not improve the associated morbidity and mortality, with the possible exception of chronic intake of polyphenols (present in red wine, fruit, and vegetables) [
14]. The reasons underlying these failures are not clear. Synthetic inhibitors of NAD(P)H oxidase have been proposed as an alternative, but it is still uncertain which isoforms of NAD(P)H should be inhibited, and the available inhibitors are neither specific nor potent enough, and they have poor pharmacokinetic properties [
15••].
Activation of the
renin-angiotensin system with subsequent stimulation of AT
1 receptors is a major stimulus for NAD(P)H oxidase and production of ROS in both animal models and in hypertensive patients [
6]. Preventing ROS generation—by deleting a subunit of NAD(P)H oxidase, for instance—causes resistance to angiotensin II–induced hypertension and markedly reduces the associated endothelial generation of superoxide anions [
16]. In rat models of hypertension, ACE inhibitors and ARBs decrease the generation of superoxide anions, diminish the amplitude of endothelium-dependent contractions, and restore the amplitude of both NO-mediated and EDHF-mediated endothelium-dependent relaxations [
17]. In addition to lowering lipids, statins also decrease the expression of NAD(P)H subunits and increase eNOS expression, improving the balance between NO and ROS. These endothelial effects may contribute to the pleiotropic effects of these compounds.
To date, the clinical use of
NO donor drugs is limited by the development of nitrate tolerance, a complex multifactorial phenomenon associated with the generation of oxidative stress and endothelial dysfunction [
18]. New chemical classes of NO donors, some of which can spontaneously release NO, have been synthesized and may have a therapeutic interest beyond the treatment of coronary disease and heart failure. Hybrid compounds possessing dual activity also have been synthesized. Earlier compounds such as nicorandil (an organic nitrate that opens potassium channels) and nipradilol (a nonselective adrenoceptor blocker with NO-releasing properties) are still predominantly prescribed for angina and glaucoma, respectively. New hybrid compounds including NO-releasing antiadrenergic drugs, NO-releasing dihydropyridines, NO-releasing statins, NO-releasing ARBs, and NO-releasing ACE inhibitors are of therapeutic interest for treating hypertension and associated end-organ damage [
19•].
The regulation of
nitric oxide bioactivity can also be achieved by modulating soluble guanylyl cyclase, the main physiological target of NO, or the half-life of the signaling molecule, cGMP, which is readily hydrolyzed by phosphodiesterases. Two different classes of compounds—stimulators and activators—interact with
soluble guanylyl cyclase [
20•,
21•]. The former stimulate the enzyme in an NO-independent but heme-dependent manner; acting as allosteric modulators, they enhance NO-dependent cGMP production. By contrast, activators of soluble guanylyl cyclase target the enzyme when its heme is oxidized and no longer responsive to NO. Both activators and stimulators of soluble guanylyl cyclase are potent vasodilators and inhibitors of platelet aggregation. The stimulators are currently undergoing clinical trials in acute decompensated heart failure and peripheral artery occlusive disease, and the activators are being evaluated in pulmonary hypertension. Potential therapeutic indications of these new compounds include hypertension, myocardial ischemia, erectile dysfunction, atherosclerosis, and thrombosis [
20•,
21•].
Phosphodiesterase 5 (PDE-5) was the first identified selective cGMP esterase in the cardiovascular system and is the major isoform involved in the hydrolysis of the cGMP pools generated by the activation of soluble guanylyl cyclase. Specific PDE-5 inhibitors are currently prescribed for erectile dysfunction but, in the future, their therapeutic indications may also include pulmonary hypertension, heart failure, and essential hypertension [
22].