Publication | Open Access
Aldosterone Synthase Inhibitors as Promising Treatments for Mineralocorticoid Dependent Cardiovascular and Renal Diseases
60
Citations
66
References
2014
Year
HypertensionRenal InflammationCardiovascular PharmacologyPromising TreatmentsPharmacotherapyExcessive AldosteroneAldosterone BiosynthesisOxidative StressMolecular PharmacologyRenal DiseasesRenal FunctionMetabolic SignalingChronic Kidney DiseaseEndocrine HypertensionBiochemistrySodium HomeostasisAntihypertensive TherapyVascular PharmacologyAldosterone SynthaseVascular BiologyRenal PathophysiologyPharmacologyPotassium HomeostasisAldosterone Synthase InhibitorsAldosterone PhysiologyUrologyCardiovascular DiseasePhysiologyDiabetic Kidney DiseasePrimary AldosteronismMetabolismMedicineNephrologyKidney Research
Besides the well-known roles of aldosterone as a mineralocorticoid in regulating homeostasis of electrolytes and volume, recent studies revealed that it is also a potent proinflammation factor inducing reactive oxygen species and up-regulating a panel of fibrosis related genes. Under pathological circumstances, excessive aldosterone is involved in a lot of chronic diseases, including hypertension, cardiac fibrosis, congestive heart failure, ventricular remodeling, and diabetic nephropathy. Therefore, the inhibition of aldosterone synthase (CYP11B2), which is the pivotal enzyme in aldosterone biosynthesis, was proposed as a superior approach. Expected pharmacodynamic effects have been demonstrated in both animal models and clinical trials after the application of CYP11B2 inhibitors. The importance of selectivity over other steroidogenic CYP enzymes, in particular 11β-hydroxylase (CYP11B1), was also revealed. Recently, much more selective CYP11B2 inhibitors have been reported, which could be promising drug candidates for the treatment of aldosterone related diseases.
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