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1.
Pulmonary vascular responses to endothelin-2 and sarafotoxin 6b were investigated in the feline pulmonary vascular bed under natural flow and constant flow conditions. Injections of endothelin-2 and sarafotoxin 6b in a dose of 0.3 nmol/kg iv increased pulmonary arterial and left atrial pressures and cardiac output, and caused a biphasic change in calculated pulmonary vascular resistance. Endothelin-2 caused a biphasic change in systemic arterial pressure, while sarafotoxin 6b only decreased arterial pressure. Under constant flow conditions in the intact-chest cat, injections of endothelin-2 and sarafotoxin 6b in doses of 0.1-1 nmol into the perfused lobar artery increased lobar arterial pressure in a dose-related manner but were less potent than the thromboxane A2 mimic, U46619. An ET analog with only the Cys1-Cys15 disulfide bond and an amidated carboxy terminus had no significant activity in the pulmonary vascular bed. The present data show that endothelin-2 and sarafotoxin 6b have significant vasoconstrictor activity in the pulmonary vascular bed of the cat.  相似文献   

2.
Airway responses to endothelin (ET) 1, ET-2, ET-3, and sarafotoxin 6b (S6b) were investigated in paralyzed, anesthetized, mechanically ventilated cats. Intravenous injections of ET-1 (0.1-1 nmol/kg) increased transpulmonary pressure (Ptp) and lung resistance (RL) and decreased dynamic compliance (Cdyn) in a dose-related manner. Airway responses to ET-1 were decreased significantly by sodium meclofenamate, a cyclooxygenase inhibitor, and by SKF 96148, a thromboxane receptor blocking agent. In terms of relative bronchoconstrictor activity, the thromboxane mimic, U-46619, was threefold more potent than ET-1 on a molar basis in increasing Ptp. ET-1 and ET-3 had similar bronchoconstrictor activity, and these peptides were less potent than ET-2 and S6b. Bronchoconstrictor responses to ET-2, ET-3, and S6b were also decreased significantly by meclofenamate and by thromboxane receptor blocking agents. The ET-1 precursor ET-1-(1-38) (big ET-1) caused a significant slowly developing increase in Ptp, RL, and aortic pressure (PAO) and a decrease in Cdyn, whereas a monocyclic ET-1 analogue and ET-1-(16-21) hexapeptide fragment had little or no activity in the airways. The present data indicate that ET-1, ET-2, ET-3, and S6b have significant bronchoconstrictor activity in the cat and that responses are dependent in part on the release of arachidonic acid and the formation of thromboxane A2. These data also suggest that big ET-1 is converted into a mature peptide in the cat and that ET-1-(16-21) hexapeptide fragment and a monocyclic ET-1 analogue have little if any bronchoconstrictor activity in the anesthetized cat.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of two isoforms of human endothelin (ET) on the pulmonary and systemic vascular beds were compared in the anesthetized intact-chest rabbit under conditions of constant pulmonary blood flow and left atrial pressure. Intralobar bolus injections of ET-1 (0.1-1 micrograms) and ET-3 (1-3 micrograms) produced modest vasoconstriction in the pulmonary vascular bed, whereas both peptides decreased systemic arterial pressure. The pulmonary vasoconstrictor response to ET-1 and ET-3 was inhibited by intralobar infusion of nitrendipine but was not altered by indomethacin. In contrast to the small effects of ET-1 and ET-3 on intact pulmonary resistance vessels, both peptides markedly contracted isolated pulmonary conductance vessels, with greater activity on venous than on arterial segments. Intravenous bolus injection of ET-1 (0.1-0.3 micrograms) or ET-3 (0.3-1 microgram) decreased systemic arterial pressure, increased cardiac output, and markedly decreased systemic vascular resistance. Higher doses of ET-1 produce a biphasic systemic vascular response with a prominent secondary pressor component. The present data suggest that the pulmonary vasoconstrictor activity of ET-1 is greater than that of ET-3 and their pressor activity depends on an extracellular source of calcium. The pulmonary and systemic hemodynamic effects of ET-1 and ET-3 in the rabbit do not depend on cyclooxygenase products. The systemic vasodilator response to ET-1 is not altered by first-pass lung transit. Furthermore the systemic vasodilator response to both peptides occurs independent of activation of muscarinic, beta 2-adrenergic, and platelet-activating factor receptors. Although ET-1 and ET-3 were initially reported as vasoconstrictor peptides, the present data suggest that, by having unique and potent systemic vasodilator activity, ET-1 and ET-3 act differently in the systemic and pulmonary vascular beds under resting conditions in the rabbit.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of an increase in base-line tone on pulmonary vascular responses to acetylcholine were investigated in the pulmonary vascular bed of the intact-chest cat. Under conditions of controlled blood flow and constant left atrial pressure, intralobar injections of acetylcholine under low-tone base-line conditions increased lobar arterial pressure in a dose-related manner. When tone was increased moderately by alveolar hypoxia, acetylcholine elicited dose-dependent decreases in lobar arterial pressure, and at the highest dose studied, acetylcholine produced a biphasic response. When tone was raised to a high steady level with the prostaglandin analogue, U46619, acetylcholine elicited marked dose-related decreases in lobar arterial pressure. Atropine blocked both vasoconstrictor responses at low tone and vasodilator responses at high tone, whereas meclofenamate and BW 755C had no effect on responses to acetylcholine at low or high tone. The vasoconstrictor response at low tone was blocked by pirenzepine (20 and 50 micrograms/kg iv) but not gallamine (10 mg/kg iv). The vasodilator response at high tone was not blocked by pirenzepine (50 micrograms/kg iv) or gallamine or pancuronium (10 mg/kg iv). The present data support the concept that pulmonary vascular responses to acetylcholine are tone dependent and suggest that the vasoconstrictor response under low-tone conditions is mediated by a high-affinity muscarinic (M1)-type receptor. These data also suggest that vasodilator responses under high-tone conditions are mediated by muscarinic receptors that are neither M1 nor M2 low-affinity muscarinic-type receptor and that responses to acetylcholine are not dependent on the release of cyclooxygenase or lipoxygenase products.  相似文献   

5.
To evaluate leukotriene (LT) C4 as a mediator of hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction, we examined the effects of FPL55712, a putative LT antagonist, and indomethacin, a cyclooxygenase inhibitor, on vasopressor responses to LTC4 and hypoxia (inspired O2 tension = 25 Torr) in isolated ferret lungs perfused with a constant flow (50 ml.kg-1.min-1). Pulmonary arterial injections of LTC4 caused dose-related increases in pulmonary arterial pressure during perfusion with physiological salt solution containing Ficoll (4 g/dl). FPL55712 caused concentration-related inhibition of the pressor response to LTC4 (0.6 micrograms). Although 10 micrograms/ml FPL55712 inhibited the LTC4 pressor response by 61%, it did not alter the response to hypoxia. At 100 microgram/ml, FPL55712 inhibited the responses to LTC4 and hypoxia by 73 and 71%, respectively, but also attenuated the vasoconstrictor responses to prostaglandin F2 alpha (78% at 8 micrograms), phenylephrine (68% at 100 micrograms), and KCl (51% at 40 mM). At 0.5 microgram/ml, indomethacin significantly attenuated the pressor response to arachidonic acid but did not alter responses to LTC4 or hypoxia. These results suggest that in isolated ferret lungs 1) the vasoconstrictor response to LTC4 did not depend on release of cyclooxygenase products and 2) LTC4 did not mediate hypoxic vasoconstriction.  相似文献   

6.
Pulmonary vascular responses to endothelin (ET-1), a peptide derived from endothelial cells in culture, were investigated in the ovine fetus delivered by cesarean section from chloralose-anesthetized ewes with intact umbilical circulation. Circulation to the lower left lobe of the fetal lung was isolated in situ and perfused at constant flow with blood withdrawn from the inferior vena cava. Injection of graded doses of ET-1 into the left pulmonary artery decreased pulmonary arterial perfusion pressure in a dose-related manner. At doses of 100, 300, and 1,000 ng, pulmonary vascular resistance per kilogram body weight (PVR/kg) was decreased 30, 40, and 42%, respectively. However, when fetuses were ventilated with 100% oxygen, 100- and 300-ng doses of ET-1 decreased PVR/kg by 5 and 9%, respectively. In contrast, injection of 1,000 ng of ET-1 resulted in a reversal of the response, and PVR/kg was increased by 70%. Ventilation of the right lung alone resulted in a similar reversal of the vasodilator response to 1,000 ng of ET-1, and a 138% increase in PVR/kg was recorded. These studies demonstrate for the first time that ET-1 has vasodilator activity in the normally high-tone ovine fetal pulmonary circulation. In addition, these results show that ET-1 has vasoconstrictor activity in the newly ventilated low-tone pulmonary vasculature. The present data indicate the pulmonary vascular responses to ET-1 are tone dependent in the ovine fetal pulmonary circulation.  相似文献   

7.
Cardiac and vascular actions of sarafotoxin S6b and endothelin-1   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Snake venom-derived sarafotoxin S6B (SRT) and porcine endothelium-derived endothelin-1 (ET) have striking structural similarities. In conscious, freely-moving rats, ET (0.67 nmol/kg) produced a transient tachycardia and fall in arterial blood pressure which was followed by a long-lasting increase in arterial pressure, bradycardia, decrease in cardiac output (CO) and marked increase in total peripheral resistance. In contrast, SRT (0.67 nmol/kg) produced only the sustained cardiovascular responses. The sustained cardiovascular effects of SRT or ET were similarly attenuated by nifedipine. SRT and ET (30 nM) produced vasoconstriction in the isolated perfused mesenteric vascular bed without initial vasodilation. SRT and ET had potent positive inotropic and negative chronotropic effects on isolated perfused hearts and induced toxic reactions including coronary vasospasm, arrhythmias, A-V block and ventricular fibrillation. In addition to SRT lacking the initial depressor response in vivo, several differences in the activities of the peptides were also observed. ET produced greater and longer-lasting actions than SRT in producing pressor and vasoconstrictor responses in all 3 preparations, and in its ability to induce toxic effects on the heart.  相似文献   

8.
We investigated the effect of indomethacin on responses to isoproterenol, bradykinin and nitroglycerin in the feline pulmonary vascular bed when pulmonary vascular resistance was actively increased by infusion of U46619 in order to determine if vasodilator responses to these agents were dependent on the integrity of the cyclooxygenase pathway. Since pulmonary blood flow and left atrial pressure were held constant, changes in lobar arterial pressure directly reflect changes in lobar vascular resistance. Intralobar injections of isoproterenol, bradykinin, and nitroglycerin decreased lobar arterial pressure in a dose-related manner. Pulmonary vasodilator responses to the lower and midrange doses of bradykinin and nitroglycerin were unchanged in the presence of indomethacin whereas pulmonary responses to the highest doses of nitroglycerin and bradykinin were increased by cyclooxygenase blockade. In contrast, pulmonary vasodilator responses to isoproterenol were significantly attenuated in the presence of propranolol, whereas pulmonary vasodilator responses to bradykinin and nitroglycerin were unchanged after beta blockade. The present data indicate that isoproterenol, bradykinin, and nitroglycerin have significant vasodilator activity in the cat when pulmonary vascular tone is actively increased. These data suggest that the formation of vasodilator cyclooxygenase products such as PGI2 do not mediate vasodilator responses to isoproterenol, bradykinin, and nitroglycerin in the feline pulmonary vascular bed.  相似文献   

9.
We investigated the effect of indomethacin on responses to isoproterenol, bradykinin and nitroglycerin in the feline pulmonary vascular bed when pulmonary vascular resistance was actively increased by infusion of U46619 in order to determine if vasodilator responses to these agents were dependent on the integrity of the cyclooxygenase pathway. Since pulmonary blood flow left atrial pressure were held constant, changes in lobar arterial pressure directly reflect changes in lobar vascular resistance. Intralobar injections of isoproterenol, bradykinin, and nitroglycerin decreased lobar arterial pressure in a dose-related manner. Pulmonary vasodilator responses to the lower and midrange doses of bradykinin and nitrogylcerin were unchanged in the presence of indomethacin whereas pulmonary responses to the highest doses of nitroglycerin and bradykinin were increased by cyclooxygenase blockade. In contrast, pulmonary vasodilator responses to isoproterenol were significantly attenuated in the presence of propranolol, whereas pulmonary vasodilator responses to bradykinin and nitroglycerin were unchanged after beta blockade. The present data indicate that isoproterenol, bladykinin, and nitroglycerin have significant vasodilator activity in the cat when pulmonary vascular tone is actively increased. These data suggest that the formation of vasodilator cyclooxygenase products such as PGI2 do not mediate vasodilator responses to isoproterenol, bradykinin, and nitroglycerin in the feline pulmonary vascular bed.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of OKY-1581, a thromboxane synthesis inhibitor, on pulmonary vascular responses to arachidonic acid (AA) were investigated under baseline and elevated tone conditions in the intact chest cat. Under conditions of controlled blood flow at baseline tone, intralobar injections of AA increased lobar arterial pressure in a dose-related manner. These pressor responses were reduced by OKY-1581, and a small vasodilator response was unmasked. The administration of indomethacin to these same animals abolished all responses to AA. When baseline tone in the pulmonary vascular bed was elevated by infusion of U46619, intralobar injections of AA caused a biphasic change in lobar arterial pressure characterized by an initial increase followed by a secondary fall in pressure. Treatment with OKY-1581 attenuated the pressor component of the response and enhanced the depressor component of the response. All responses to AA at elevated tone were also blocked by indomethacin. Pressor responses to intralobar injections of U46619 were not altered by OKY-1581 or indomethacin and were similar under baseline and high pulmonary vascular tone conditions. The results of this study suggest that the pulmonary pressor response to AA in the cat is dependent in large part on the formation of TXA2 and also suggest that TXA2, PGI2, and vasoconstrictor prostaglandins (PGF2 alpha, PGD2, PGE2) are formed from AA in the cat lung.  相似文献   

11.
Losartan has been reported to have inhibitory effects on thromboxane (TP) receptor-mediated responses. In the present study, the effects of 2 nonpeptide angiotensin II (AT1) receptor antagonists, losartan and candesartan, on responses to angiotensin II, the thromboxane A2 mimic, U46619, and norepinephrine were investigated and compared in the pulmonary and systemic vascular beds of the intact-chest rat. In this study, intravenous injections of angiotensin II, U46619, and norepinephrine produced dose-related increases in pulmonary and systemic arterial pressure. Losartan and candesartan, in the doses studied, decreased or abolished responses to angiotensin II. Losartan, but not candesartan, and only in a higher dose, produced small, but statistically significant, reductions in pressor responses to U46619 and to norepinephrine in the pulmonary and systemic vascular beds. Furthermore, losartan significantly reduced arachidonic acid-induced platelet aggregation, whereas candesartan had no effect. Pressor responses to angiotensin II were not changed by thromboxane and alpha-adrenergic receptor antagonists, or by cyclooxygenase and NO synthase inhibitors. These results show that losartan and candesartan are potent selective AT1 receptor antagonists in the pulmonary and systemic vascular beds and that losartan can attenuate thromboxane and alpha-adrenergic responses when administered at a high dose, whereas candesartan in the highest dose studied had no effect on responses to U46619 or to norepinephrine. The present data show that the effects of losartan and candesartan on vasoconstrictor responses are different and that pulmonary and systemic pressor responses to angiotensin II are not modulated or mediated by the release of cyclooxygenase products, activation of TP receptors, or the release of NO in the anesthetized rat.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of PGA1 and PGA2 were studied in the canine pulmonary vascular bed. Infusion of PGA1 into the lobar artery decreased lobar arterial and venous pressure but did not change left atrial pressure. In contrast, PGA2 infusion increased lobar arterial and venous pressure and the effects of this substance were similar in experiments in which the lung was perfused with dextran or with blood. These data indicate that under conditions of controlled blood flow PGA1 decreases pulmonary vascular resistance by dilating intrapulmonary veins and to a lesser extent vessels upstream to the small veins, presumably small arteries. The present data show that PGA2 increases pulmonary vascular resistance by constricting intrapulmonary veins and upstream vessels. The predominant effect of PGA2 was on upstream vessels and the pressor effect was not due to interaction with formed elements in the blood or platelet aggregation.  相似文献   

13.
The cardiovascular and pulmonary responses to vasoactive intestinal contractor (VIC) were compared with those of endothelin (ET)-1, ET-2, ET-3 and sarafotoxin 6b (S6b) and the mechanism by which ET-1 alters vascular resistance was investigated in the hindquarters vascular bed of the cat. In a manner similar to ET-1 and ET-2, VIC at a dose of 0.3 nmol/kg i.v. produced increases in pulmonary arterial pressure (PAP) and biphasic changes in systemic arterial pressure (AP), systemic vascular resistance (SVR) and pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR). The biphasic changes were characterized by initial decreases followed by increases. In contrast, ET-3 and S6b at doses of 0.3 nmol/kg i.v. produced mainly decreases in AP and SVR, increases in PAP, and biphasic changes in PVR. A monocyclic ET-1 analog and the ET-1 C-terminal hexapeptide fragment produced no effect on AP, SVR, PAP and PVR at doses of 30–100 nmol/kg i.v. ET-1 at a dose of 0.3 nmol i.a. produced a biphasic change in hindquarters perfusion pressure. The initial vasodilation and secondary vasoconstriction were not modified by a variety of blocking agents, whereas the vasoconstrictor response was significantly reduced by infusion of nimodipine, a calcium entry blocking agent. Results of the present study indicate that VIC, a peptide specific to the mouse gastrointestinal tract, elicits cardiovascular responses that are similar to those elicited by ET-1 and ET-2. The present results indicate that responses to these novel peptides are complex and while the mechanism of action remains uncertain, these data indicate that structural differences among the peptides confer differences in biological activity.  相似文献   

14.
Dog left upper lobes (LUL) were perfused in situ via the left lower lobe artery. Lobe weight was continuously monitored. Increasing lobar flow from normal to 10 times normal had little effect on left atrial pressure, which ranged from 1 to 5 mmHg. There was a flow threshold (Qth) below which lobar weight was stable. Qth ranged from 1.1 to 1.55 l/min (mean 1.27) corresponding to four times normal LUL blood flow. Above Qth, step increases in lobar flow resulted in progressive weight gain at a constant rate that was proportional to flow. The effective pressure at the filtration site (EFP) at different flow rates was estimated from the static vascular pressure that resulted in the same rate of weight gain. From this value and from mean pulmonary arterial (PA) and left atrial (LA) pressures, we calculated resistance upstream (Rus) and downstream (Rds) from filtration site. At Qth, Rds accounted for 60% of total resistance. This fraction increased progressively with flow, reaching 83% at Q of 10 times normal. We conclude that during high pulmonary blood flow EFP is closer to PA pressure than it is to LA pressure, and that this becomes progressively more so as a function of flow. As a result, the lung accumulates water at flow rates in excess of four times normal despite a normal left atrial pressure.  相似文献   

15.
It has been suggested that the endothelin (ET) ETB receptor could mediate endothelium-dependent vasodilation to ET-1 or ET-3, but its in vivo role is still largely unknown. We used sarafotoxin S6C, a selective agonist of the ETB receptor, to study the in vivo effects of ETB stimulation. SRTX S6C induced a transient decrease in blood pressure, followed by a long-lasting pressor response accompanied by a marked renal and mesenteric vasoconstriction. No constriction was observed in isolated mesenteric arteries in vitro, indicating that the in vivo vasoconstrictor effect is most likely indirect. The pressor effect of SRTX S6C was not dependent on central stimulation of ETB receptors and was not mediated by catecholamines from the adrenal medulla, prostanoids or ET-1.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of N omega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), an inhibitor of endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF) production, on vascular tone and responses were investigated in the pulmonary vascular bed of the intact-chest cat under conditions of controlled blood flow and constant left atrial pressure. When pulmonary vascular tone was elevated with U-46619, intralobar injections of acetylcholine, bradykinin, sodium nitroprusside, isoproterenol, prostaglandin E1 (PGE1), lemakalim, and 8-bromo-guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (8-bromo-cGMP) dilated the pulmonary vascular bed. Intravenous administration of L-NAME elevated lobar arterial and systemic arterial pressures without altering left atrial pressure. When U-46619 was infused after L-NAME to raise lobar arterial pressure to levels similar to those attained during the control period, vasodilator responses to acetylcholine and bradykinin were reduced significantly, whereas responses to PGE1, lemakalim, and 8-bromo-cGMP were not altered, and responses to nitroprusside were increased. There was a small effect on the response to the highest dose of isoproterenol, and pressor responses to BAY K 8644 and angiotensin II were not altered. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that EDRF production may involve the formation of nitric oxide or a nitroso compound from L-arginine and that EDRF production may have a role in the regulation of tone and in the mediation of responses to acetylcholine and bradykinin in the pulmonary vascular bed of the cat.  相似文献   

17.
Pulmonary vascular responses to acetylcholine were compared under resting and high tone conditions of the intact-chest rabbit. Under resting tone conditions, intralobar injections of acetylcholine increased lobar arterial pressure in a dose-related manner. The pressor responses to acetylcholine under resting conditions were blocked by meclofenamate, indomethacin, atropine, and pirenzepine. When lobar vascular resistance was raised to a high steady level, low doses of acetylcholine decreased lobar arterial pressure, whereas higher doses elicited a biphasic response with the pressor component predominating at the highest dose studied. Under high tone conditions, only the pressor component of the response was blocked by meclofenamate or indomethacin, whereas pressor and depressor responses were blocked by atropine or the 600-micrograms/kg iv dose of pirenzepine. Pressor responses to acetylcholine under resting and high tone conditions were blocked by pirenzepine (50 micrograms/kg iv), whereas gallamine had no effect on responses to acetylcholine. The 50-micrograms/kg iv dose of pirenzepine had no effect on depressor responses or the depressor component of the response to acetylcholine. The present data support the concept that acetylcholine has significant cyclooxygenase-dependent pressor activity in the rabbit pulmonary vascular bed and suggest that this response is mediated by a muscarinic M1-type receptor. These data also show that, under high tone conditions, a vasodilator response or a vasodilator component of a biphasic response is unmasked. This response is not dependent on the release of cyclooxygenase products and is mediated by a muscarinic receptor that is neither of the M1- nor the M2-type.  相似文献   

18.
The influence of nisoldipine, a dihydropyridine calcium entry antagonist, on vascular resistance and vasoconstrictor responses was investigated in the feline pulmonary vascular bed under conditions of controlled blood flow. The calcium channel blocking agent caused a small reduction in lobar vascular resistance and blocked pulmonary vasoconstrictor responses to BAY K 8644, an agent which promotes calcium entry. The calcium entry blocking agent also reduced pulmonary vasoconstrictor responses to methoxamine and to BHT 933, alpha 1- and alpha 2-adrenoceptor agonists, and to U 46619, an agent which mimics the actions of thromboxane A2. Although there was a marked difference in vasoconstrictor potency in the pulmonary vascular bed, responses to the thromboxane mimic and to the alpha 1- and alpha 2-adrenoceptor agonists were reduced by approximately the same extent. The increases in systemic arterial pressure in response to BAY K 8644, methoxamine, and BHT 933 were also reduced by nisoldipine, and the calcium entry antagonist reduced systemic arterial pressure and systemic vascular resistance. The results of the present study suggest that an extracellular source of calcium is required for the maintenance of vascular tone and for the expression of vasoconstrictor responses, resulting from activation of alpha 1- and postjunctional alpha 2-adrenoceptors and thromboxane receptors in the feline pulmonary vascular bed.  相似文献   

19.
The subtypes of postjunctional alpha adrenoceptors in the feline pulmonary vascular bed were studied by using selective alpha-adrenoceptor agonists and antagonists. Under conditions of controlled pulmonary blood flow and constant left atrial pressure, intralobar injections of the alpha 1 agonists phenylephrine and methoxamine, and the alpha 2 agonists UK 14,304 and B-HT 933, increased lobar arterial pressure in a dose-related manner. Prazosin, an alpha 1-adrenoceptor antagonist, reduced responses to phenylephrine and methoxamine to a greater extent than responses to UK 14,304 and B-HT 933. Yohimbine, an alpha 2 blocker, decreased responses to UK 14,304 and B-HT 933 without altering responses to phenylephrine or methoxamine. The same pattern of blockade was observed in animals pretreated with 6-hydroxydopamine, an adrenergic neuronal blocking agent. However, in propranolol-treated animals, prazosin antagonized responses to phenylephrine and methoxamine without altering responses to UK 14,304 or B-HT 933, and the selectivity of the blocking effects of yohimbine were preserved. Responses to intralobar injections of norepinephrine (NE) were markedly decreased by prazosin, whereas yohimbine had only a small effect. These data suggest the presence of both postjunctional alpha 1 and alpha 2 adrenoceptors mediating vasoconstriction in the pulmonary vascular bed. These results also indicate that the vasoconstrictor responses to injected NE in the cat pulmonary vascular bed result mainly from activation of alpha 1 adrenoceptors.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of peroxynitrite (ONOO-) on vascular responses were investigated in the systemic and hindquarters vascular bed and in the isolated perfused rat lung. Intravenous injections of ONOO- decreased systemic arterial pressure, and injections of ONOO- into the hindquarters decreased perfusion pressure in a dose-related manner. Injections of ONOO- into the lung perfusion circuit increased pulmonary arterial perfusion pressure. Responses to ONOO- were rapid in onset, short in duration, and repeatable without exhibiting tachyphylaxis. Repeated injections of ONOO- did not alter systemic, hindquarters, or pulmonary responses to endothelium-dependent vasodilators or other vasoactive agonists and did not alter the hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstrictor response. Injections of sodium nitrate or nitrite or decomposed ONOO- had little effect on vascular pressures. Pulmonary and hindquarters responses to ONOO- were not altered by a cyclooxygenase inhibitor in a dose that attenuated responses to arachidonic acid. These results demonstrate that ONOO- has significant pulmonary vasoconstrictor, systemic vasodepressor, and vasodilator activity; that short-term repeated exposure does impair vascular responsiveness; and that responses to ONOO- are not dependent on cyclooxygenase product release.  相似文献   

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