ORIGINAL RESEARCH
Circadian rhythms of leukemia inhibitory factor in the blood of patients with essential hypertension
1 Institute of Medicine, National Research Mordovia State University, Saransk, Russia
2 State Research Institute of Highly Pure Biopreparations, FMBA, St. Petersburg, Russia
3 North Caucasus Health Center, Pyatigorsk, Russia
Correspondence should be addressed: Olga A. Radaeva
Ulianova, 26a, Saransk, 430000; ur.liam@97_fybwbltv
Compliance with ethical standards: the study was approved by the Ethics Committee of National Research Mordovia State University (Protocol No. 12 dated December 14, 2008). Written informed consent was obtained from all study participants. Blood samples were collected in compliance with the Declaration of Helsinki (2008), the protocol of European Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine (1999) and the additional protocol to the Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine concerning Biomedical Research (2005).
Author contribution: Radaeva OA designed the study, analyzed the results, formulated the conclusions and wrote the manuscript; Simbirtsev AS formulated the objective of the study, revised its conclusions and the manuscript itself; Gromova EV designed the study, carried out laboratory tests, and contributed to writing the manuscript; Iskandiarova MS analyzed the literature, supervised blood collection, followed up with the patients, contributed to writing the manuscript; Belyaeva SV analyzed the literature, supervised blood collection, followed up with the patients.
Leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) exerts multidirectional effects in the setting of essential hypertension (EH). There is a mounting body of evidence refuting the postulate about identical STAT3 signaling in cardiomyocytes and endothelial/smooth muscle cells, which is important in the situation of extended exposure to gp 130 ligands (LIF in particular). At the same time, there are no reports on the circadian dynamics of peripheral blood LIF concentrations and possible secondary changes to the pathophysiological effects of this cytokine. This study aimed to analyze the circadian dynamics of LIF concentrations in the peripheral blood serum measured at 5 different time points in patients with stage II EH in the presence/absence of antihypertensive therapy and their relationship with the frequency of complications developing within a 5-year follow-up. Blood serum LIF was measured in 60 patients with stage II EH using ELISA at 8:00, 14:00, 20:00, 2:00, and 8:00 o’clock before putting the patients on antihypertensive therapy and one year after its onset. The identified patterns of diurnal LIF concentrations (a rise by ≥15% at 20:00, p < 0.001; a further rise by ≥22% peaking at 2:00, p < 0.001 relative to the values at 8:00) can be regarded as pathologic; their persistence after one year of antihypertensive therapy is a sign of EH progression and puts the patients at 6-fold risk for cardiovascular complications, including myocardial infarction and acute cerebrovascular events.
Keywords: essential hypertension, LIF, leukemia inhibitory factor, cytokine circadian rhythms