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1.
The purpose of the present study was to determine whether hindlimb unloading of rats alters vasoconstrictor and myogenic responsiveness of skeletal muscle arterioles. After either 2 wk of hindlimb unloading (HU) or cage control (C), second-order arterioles were isolated from the white portion of gastrocnemius (WG; C: n = 9, HU: n = 10) or soleus (Sol; C: n = 9, HU: n = 10) muscles and cannulated with two micropipettes connected to reservoir systems for in vitro study. Intraluminal pressure was set at 60 cmH2O. The arterioles were exposed to step changes in intraluminal pressure ranging from 20 to 140 cmH2O to determine myogenic responsiveness and to KCl (10-100 mM) and norepinephrine (10(-9)-10(-4) M) to determine vasoconstrictor responsiveness. Although maximal diameter of WG arterioles was not different between C (185 +/- 12 microm) and HU (191 +/- 14 microm) rats, WG arterioles from HU rats developed less spontaneous tone (C: 33 +/- 5%, HU 20 +/-3%), were unable to maintain myogenic tone at pressures from 140 to 100 cmH2O, and were less sensitive to the vasoconstrictor effects of KCl and norepinephrine (as indicated by a higher agonist concentration that produced 50% of maximal vasoconstrictor response). In contrast, maximal diameter of Sol arterioles from HU rats (117 +/- 12 microm) was smaller than that in C rats (148 +/- 14 microm). However, the development of spontaneous tone (C: 30 +/- 4%, HU: 36 +/- 5%), myogenic activity, and the responsiveness to vasoconstrictor agonists were not different between Sol arterioles from C and HU rats. These results indicate that hindlimb unloading diminishes the myogenic autoregulatory and contractile responsiveness of arterioles from muscle composed of type IIB fibers and suggest that the compromised ability to elevate vascular resistance after exposure to microgravity may be related to these vascular alterations. In addition, hindlimb unloading appears to induce vascular remodeling of arterioles from muscle composed of type I fibers, as indicated by the decrease in maximal diameter of arterioles from Sol muscle.  相似文献   

2.
We investigated the changes in arterial blood pressure (BP) and of mesenteric arterial bed (MAB) responsiveness that accompany streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetes. BP was recorded by radiotelemetry in conscious animals before and during a 4-week period following induction of the diabetic state with STZ. At the end of this period, the MAB was isolated and perfused under constant flow conditions: perfusion pressure (PP, mmHg) was taken as an index of arteriolar tone. BP was lower (P < 0.05) in STZ-treated diabetic rats (82.9+/-5.0 mmHg) than in vehicle-treated rats (108.9+/-6.3 mmHg). Basal perfusion pressure of the MAB was lower in STZ-treated rats than in control rats and inhibition of nitric oxide (NO) synthesis with N(G)-nitro-L-arginine-methyl-ester and N(G)-nitro-L-arginine (100 microM each) failed to change this relationship. Increases in PP of MAB to phenylephrine (Phe), norepinephrine (NE), and potassium chloride (KCl) were reduced in STZ-treated rats compared with control rats. Inhibition of NO synthesis reduced responses to Phe, NE, and KCL in both STZ and control rats. The reduced responsiveness of STZ rats to Phe, NE, and KCl persisted after inhibition of NO synthesis. Acetylcholine (ACh) evoked relaxation of the MAB in a dose-dependent fashion. Maximal responses to ACh, but not sodium nitroprusside, were lower in STZ rats than in vehicle treated rats. Inhibition of NO synthesis reduced responses to ACh in both STZ and control rats. The reduced responsiveness of STZ rats to ACh persisted after inhibition of NO synthesis. The data demonstrate that STZ-induced diabetes is associated with a fall in blood pressure when pressure is recorded with radiotelemetry. The fall in blood pressure may be related to a non-specific decrease in responsiveness to vasoconstrictor stimuli mediated at least in part by NO-independent mechanisms. A decrease in responsiveness to endothelial dependent vasodilator mechanisms appeared insufficient to restore responsiveness to vasoconstrictor stimuli.  相似文献   

3.
Our previous study showed that arteriolar tone is enhanced in Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2-DM) due to an increased level of constrictor prostaglandins. We hypothesized that, in mice with T2-DM, hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) is involved in the increased synthesis of constrictor prostaglandins, hence enhanced basal tone in skeletal muscle arterioles. Isolated, pressurized gracilis muscle arterioles ( approximately 100 microm in diameter) of mice with T2-DM (C57BL/KsJ-db(-)/db(-)) exhibited greater basal tone to increases in intraluminal pressure (20-120 mmHg) than that of control vessels (at 80 mmHg, control: 25 +/- 5%; db/db: 34 +/- 4%, P < 0.05), which was reduced back to control level by catalase (db/db: 24 +/- 4%). Correspondingly, in carotid arteries of db/db mice, the level of dichlorofluorescein-detectable and catalase-sensitive H(2)O(2) was significantly greater. In control arterioles, exogenous H(2)O(2) (0.1-100 micromol/l) elicited dilations (maximum, 58 +/- 10%), whereas in arterioles of db/db mice H(2)O(2) caused constrictions (-28 +/- 8%), which were converted to dilations (maximum, 16 +/- 5%) by the thromboxane A(2)/prostaglandin H(2) (TP) receptor antagonist SQ-29548. In addition, arteriolar constrictions in response to the TP receptor agonist U-46619 were not different between the two groups of vessels. Endothelium denudation did not significantly affect basal tone and H(2)O(2)-induced arteriolar responses in either control or db/db mice. Also, in arterioles of db/db mice, but not in controls, 3-nitrotyrosine staining was detected in the endothelial layer of vessels. Thus we propose that, in mice with T2-DM, arteriolar production of H(2)O(2) is enhanced, which leads to increased synthesis of the constrictor prostaglandins thromboxane A(2)/prostaglandin H(2) in the smooth muscle cells, which enhance basal arteriolar tone. These alterations may contribute to disturbed regulation of skeletal muscle blood flow in Type 2 diabetes mellitus.  相似文献   

4.
Exercise capacity and skeletal muscle blood flow during exercise are reduced with advancing age. This reduction in blood flow capacity may be related to increased reactivity of skeletal muscle resistance vessels to vasoconstrictor stimuli. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that aging results in increased vasoconstrictor responses of skeletal muscle resistance arterioles. First-order (1A) arterioles (90-220 microm) from the gastrocnemius and soleus muscles of young (4 mo) and aged (24 mo) Fischer-344 rats were isolated, cannulated, and pressurized via hydrostatic reservoirs. Vasoconstriction in response to increases in norepinephrine (NE; 1 x 10(-9)-1 x 10(-4) M) and KCl (20-100 mM) concentrations and increases in intraluminal pressure (10-130 cmH(2)O) were evaluated in the absence of flow. Responses to NE and KCl were similar in both soleus and gastrocnemius muscle arterioles from young and aged rats. In contrast, active myogenic responses to changes in intraluminal pressure were diminished in soleus and gastrocnemius arterioles from aged rats. To assess whether alterations in the mechanical properties of resistance arterioles underlie altered myogenic responsiveness, passive diameter responses to pressure and mechanical stiffness were evaluated. There was no effect of age on the structural behavior (passive pressure-diameter relationship) or stiffness of arterioles from either the soleus or gastrocnemius muscles. These results suggest that aging does not result in a nonspecific decrease in vasoconstrictor responsiveness of skeletal muscle arterioles. Rather, aging-induced adaptations of vasoreactivity of resistance arterioles appear to be limited to mechanisms that are uniquely involved in the signaling of the myogenic response.  相似文献   

5.
It has been hypothesized that microgravity-induced orthostatic hypotension may result from an exaggerated vasodilatory responsiveness of arteries. The purpose of this study was to determine whether skeletal muscle arterioles exhibit enhanced vasodilation in rats after 2 wk of hindlimb unloading (HU). First-order arterioles isolated from soleus and white gastrocnemius muscles were tested in vitro for vasodilatory responses to isoproterenol (Iso), adenosine (Ado), and sodium nitroprusside (SNP). HU had no effect on responses induced by Iso but diminished maximal vasodilation to Ado and SNP in both muscles. In addition, vasodilatory responses in arterioles from control rats varied between muscle types. Maximal dilations induced by Iso (soleus: 42 +/- 6%; white gastrocnemius: 60 +/- 7%) and Ado (soleus: 51 +/- 8%; white gastrocnemius: 81 +/- 6%) were greater in arterioles from white gastrocnemius muscles. These data do not support the hypothesis that microgravity-induced orthostatic hypotension results from an enhanced vasodilatory responsiveness of skeletal muscle arterioles. Furthermore, the data support the concept that dilatory responsiveness of arterioles varies in muscle composed of different fiber types.  相似文献   

6.
Acute physiological hyperinsulinemia increases skeletal muscle capillary blood volume (CBV), presumably to augment glucose and insulin delivery. We hypothesized that insulin-mediated changes in CBV are impaired in type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) and are improved by angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition (ACE-I). Zucker obese diabetic rats (ZDF, n = 18) and control rats (n = 9) were studied at 20 wk of age. One-half of the ZDF rats were treated with quinapril (ZDF-Q) for 15 wk prior to study. CBV and capillary flow in hindlimb skeletal muscle were measured by contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEU) at baseline and at 30 and 120 min after initiation of a euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamp (3 mU.min(-1).kg(-1)). At baseline, ZDF and ZDF-Q rats were hyperglycemic and hyperinsulinemic vs. controls. Glucose utilization in ZDF rats was 60-70% lower (P < 0.05) than in controls after 30 and 120 min of hyperinsulinemia. In ZDF-Q rats, glucose utilization was impaired at 30 min but similar to controls at 120 min. Basal CBV was lower in ZDF and ZDF-Q rats compared with controls (13 +/- 4, 7 +/- 3, and 9 +/- 2 U, respectively). With hyperinsulinemia, CBV increased by about twofold in control animals at 30 and 120 min, did not change in ZDF animals, and increased in ZDF-Q animals only at 120 min to a level similar to controls. Anatomic capillary density on immunohistology was not different between groups. We conclude that insulin-mediated capillary recruitment in skeletal muscle, which participates in glucose utilization, is impaired in animals with DM and can be partially reversed by chronic ACE-I therapy.  相似文献   

7.
The present study evaluated the contribution of cytochrome P-450 omega-hydroxylase in modulating the reactivity of cremaster muscle arterioles in normotensive rats on high-salt (HS) and low-salt (LS) diet and in rats with reduced renal mass hypertension (RRM-HT). Changes in arteriolar diameter in response to ACh, sodium nitroprusside (SNP), ANG II, and elevated O(2) were measured via television microscopy under control conditions and following cytochrome P-450 omega-hydroxylase inhibition with 17-octadecynoic acid (17-ODYA) or N-methylsulfonyl-12,12-dibromododec-11-enamide (DDMS). In normotensive rats on either LS or HS diet, resting tone was unaffected and arteriolar reactivity to ACh or SNP was minimally affected by cytochrome P-450 omega-hydroxylase inhibition. In RRM-HT rats, cytochrome P-450 omega-hydroxylase inhibition reduced resting tone and significantly enhanced arteriolar dilation to ACh and SNP. Treatment with 17-ODYA or DDMS inhibited arteriolar constriction to ANG II and O(2) in all the groups, although the degree of inhibition was greater in RRM-HT than in normotensive animals. These results suggest that metabolites of cytochrome P-450 omega-hydroxylase contribute to the altered reactivity of skeletal muscle arterioles to vasoconstrictor and vasodilator stimuli in RRM-HT.  相似文献   

8.
The Zucker diabetic fatty (ZDF) rat is a model of type II diabetes and metabolic syndrome based on impaired glucose tolerance caused by the inherited insulin-resistance gene. The ZDF rat exhibits progressive nephropathy; however, the detailed mechanisms have remained unclear. This study was performed to examine the possible involvement of enhanced intrarenal angiotensinogen in the development of renal injury in ZDF rats. Genetic pairs of male ZDF rats and control lean rats (N=6 each) were maintained from 12 to 17 weeks of age. At 17 weeks of age, fasting blood glucose and urinary 8-isoprostane levels were significantly higher in ZDF rats compared with the controls. Systolic blood pressure progressively increased in ZDF rats from 120+/-1 to 137+/-1 mmHg during this period. In contrast, systolic blood pressure did not increase in the controls. Kidney angiotensinogen protein levels were significantly increased in ZDF rats compared with the controls (1.83+/-0.34 vs. 1.00+/-0.17, relative ratio). Expression of angiotensin II type 1a receptor mRNA was similar between these groups. The measured indices of renal damage in the present study (glomerular sclerosis, interstitial expansion, glomerular macrophage infiltration, and renal arterial proliferation) were not significantly increased at this stage in ZDF rats. However, we previously showed that the increased reactive oxygen species-related angiotensinogen enhancement plays an important role in the development of renal injury in a genetic salt-sensitive hypertension. Thus, the present data suggest that elevated reactive oxygen species and reactive oxygen species-associated augmentation of intrarenal angiotensinogen may initiate the development of renal injury in ZDF rats.  相似文献   

9.
Insulin exerts both NO-dependent vasodilator and endothelin-dependent vasoconstrictor effects on skeletal muscle arterioles. The intracellular enzymes 1-phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-kinase) and Akt have been shown to mediate the vasodilator effects of insulin, but the signaling molecules involved in the vasoconstrictor effects of insulin in these arterioles are unknown. Our objective was to identify intracellular mediators of acute vasoconstrictor effects of insulin on skeletal muscle arterioles. Rat cremaster first-order arterioles (n=40) were isolated, and vasoreactivity to insulin was studied using a pressure myograph. Insulin induced dose-dependent vasoconstriction of skeletal muscle arterioles (up to -22 +/- 3% of basal diameter; P <0.05) during PI3-kinase inhibition with wortmannin (50 nmol/l). Insulin-induced vasoconstriction was abolished by inhibition of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2) with PD-98059 (40 micromol/l). In addition, inhibition of ERK1/2 without PI3-kinase inhibition uncovered insulin-mediated vasodilatation in skeletal muscle arterioles (up to 37 +/- 10% of baseline diameter; P <0.05). Effects of insulin on ERK1/2 activation in arterioles were then investigated by Western blot analysis. Insulin induced a transient 2.4-fold increase in ERK1/2 phosphorylation (maximal at approximately 15 min) in skeletal muscle arterioles (P <0.05). Removal of the arteriolar endothelium abolished insulin-induced vasoconstriction, which suggests that activation of ERK1/2 in endothelial cells is involved in acute insulin-mediated vasoconstriction. To investigate this, acute effects of insulin on ERK1/2 phosphorylation were studied in human microvascular endothelial cells. In support of the findings in skeletal muscle arterioles, insulin induced a 1.9-fold increase in ERK1/2 phosphorylation (maximal at approximately 15 min) in microvascular endothelial cells (P <0.05). We conclude that acute vasoconstrictor effects of insulin in skeletal muscle arterioles are mediated by activation of ERK1/2 in endothelium. This ERK1/2-mediated vasoconstrictor effect antagonizes insulin-induced, PI3-kinase-dependent vasodilatation in skeletal muscle arterioles. These findings provide a novel mechanism by which insulin may determine blood flow and glucose disposal in skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

10.
In addition to the long-term renal complications, previous studies suggested that after acute renal failure (ARF), rats manifest an increased pressor response to an overnight infusion of ANG II. The present study tested whether recovery from ARF results in alterations in sensitivity to the peripheral vasculature. ARF was induced in Sprague-Dawley rats by 45 min of bilateral renal ischemia and reperfusion. Animals were allowed to recover renal structure and function for 5-8 wk, after which the acute pressor responses to ANG II were evaluated either in vivo in in situ skeletal muscle arterioles or in isolated gracilis muscle arteries in vitro. Baseline arterial pressure was not different in ARF rats vs. sham-operated controls, although ARF rats exhibited an enhanced pressor response to bolus ANG II infusion compared with control rats. Steady-state plasma ANG II concentration and plasma renin activity were similar between ARF and control rats. Constrictor reactivity of in situ cremasteric arterioles from ARF rats was enhanced in response to increasing concentrations of ANG II; however, no difference was observed in arteriolar responses to elevated PO2, norepinephrine, acetylcholine, or sodium nitroprusside. Isolated gracilis muscle arteries from ARF rats also showed increased vasoconstriction in response to ANG II but not norepinephrine. In conclusion, recovery from ischemic ARF is not associated with hypertension but is associated with increased arteriolar constrictor reactivity to ANG II. Although the mechanisms of this altered responsiveness are unclear, such changes may relate, in part, to cardiovascular complications in patients with ARF and/or after renal transplant.  相似文献   

11.
Schwaninger RM  Sun H  Mayhan WG 《Life sciences》2003,73(26):3415-3425
The goals of this study were to determine the effects of type II diabetes mellitus on nitric oxide synthase-dependent responses of cerebral arterioles and on endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) protein in cerebral arterioles. We examined dilatation of cerebral (pial) arterioles in 13-15 week old male lean and diabetic obese Zucker rats in response to nitric oxide synthase-dependent agonists (acetylcholine and adenosine diphosphate (ADP)) and a nitric oxide synthase-independent agonist (nitroglycerin). We found that acetylcholine (10 microM) increased cerebral arteriolar diameter by 10 +/- 3% (mean +/- SE) in lean Zucker rats, but by only 2 +/- 2% in diabetic obese Zucker rats (p<0.05). In addition, ADP (100 microM) increased cerebral arteriolar diameter by 20 +/- 2% in lean Zucker rats, but by only 8 +/- 2% in diabetic obese Zucker rats (p<0.05). In contrast, nitroglycerin produced similar vasodilatation in lean and diabetic obese Zucker rats. Thus, impaired dilatation of cerebral arterioles in diabetic obese Zucker rats is not related to non-specific impairment of vasodilatation. Following these functional studies, we harvested cerebral microvessels for Western blot analysis of eNOS protein. We found that eNOS protein was significantly higher in diabetic obese Zucker rats than in lean Zucker rats (p<0.05). Thus, type II diabetes mellitus impairs nitric oxide synthase-dependent responses of cerebral arterioles. In addition, eNOS protein from cerebral blood vessels is increased in diabetic obese Zucker rats.  相似文献   

12.
We tested the hypothesis that constriction of cerebral arterioles during acute increases in blood pressure is attenuated by activation of potassium (K(+)) channels. We tested the effects of inhibitors of calcium-dependent K(+) channels [iberiotoxin (50 nM) and tetraethylammonium (TEA, 1 mM)] on changes in arteriolar diameter during acute hypertension. Diameter of cerebral arterioles (baseline diameter = 46 +/- 2 microm, mean +/- SE) was measured using a cranial window in anesthetized rats. Arterial pressure was increased from a control value of 96 +/- 1 mmHg to 130, 150, 170, and 200 mmHg by intravenous infusion of phenylephrine. Increases in arterial pressure from baseline to 130 and 150 mmHg decreased the diameter of cerebral arterioles by 5-10%. Greater increases in arterial pressure produced large increases in arteriolar diameter (i.e., "breakthrough of autoregulation"). Iberiotoxin or TEA inhibited increases in arteriolar diameter when arterial pressure was increased to 170 and 200 mmHg. The change in arteriolar diameter at 200 mmHg was 20 +/- 3% and -1 +/- 4% in the absence and presence of iberiotoxin, respectively. These findings suggest that calcium-dependent K(+) channels attenuate cerebral microvascular constriction during acute increases in arterial pressure, and that increases in arteriolar diameter at high levels of arterial pressure are not simply a passive phenomenon.  相似文献   

13.
Hindlimb unweighting (HLU) has been shown to alter myogenic tone distinctly in arterioles isolated from skeletal muscles composed predominantly of fast-twitch (white gastrocnemius) compared with slow-twitch (soleus) fibers. Based on these findings, we hypothesized that HLU would alter myogenic tone differently in arterioles isolated from distinct fiber-type regions within a single skeletal muscle. We further hypothesized that alterations in myogenic tone would be associated with alterations in voltage-gated Ca(2+) channel current (VGCC) density of arteriolar smooth muscle. After 14 days of HLU or weight bearing (control), first-order arterioles were isolated from both fast-twitch and mixed fiber-type regions of the gastrocnemius muscle, cannulated, and pressurized at 90 cmH(2)O. Mixed gastrocnemius arterioles of HLU rats demonstrated increased spontaneous tone [43 +/- 5% (HLU) vs. 27 +/- 4% (control) of possible constriction] and an approximately twofold enhanced myogenic response when exposed to step changes in intraluminal pressure (10-130 cmH(2)O) compared with control rats. In contrast, fast-twitch gastrocnemius arterioles of HLU rats demonstrated similar levels of spontaneous tone [6 +/- 2% (HLU) vs. 6 +/- 2% (control)] and myogenic reactivity to control rats. Neither KCl-induced contractile responses (10-50 mM KCl) nor VGCC density was significantly different between mixed gastrocnemius arterioles of HLU and control rats. These results suggest that HLU produces diverse adaptations in myogenic reactivity of arterioles isolated from different fiber-type regions of a single skeletal muscle. Furthermore, alterations in myogenic responses were not attributable to altered VGCC density.  相似文献   

14.
Derangements in skeletal muscle fatty acid (FA) metabolism associated with insulin resistance in obesity appear to involve decreased FA oxidation and increased accumulation of lipids such as ceramides and diacylglycerol (DAG). We investigated potential lipid-related mechanisms of metformin (Met) and/or exercise for blunting the progression of hyperglycemia/hyperinsulinemia and skeletal muscle insulin resistance in female Zucker diabetic fatty rats (ZDF), a high-fat (HF) diet-induced model of diabetes. Lean and ZDF rats consumed control or HF diet (48 kcal %fat) alone or with Met (500 mg/kg), with treadmill exercise, or with both exercise and Met interventions for 8 wk. HF-fed ZDF rats developed hyperglycemia (mean: 24.4 +/- 2.1 mM), impairments in muscle insulin-stimulated glucose transport, increases in the FA transporter FAT/CD36, and increases in total ceramide and DAG content. The development of hyperglycemia was significantly attenuated with all interventions, as was skeletal muscle FAT/CD36 abundance and ceramide and DAG content. Interestingly, improvements in insulin-stimulated glucose transport and increased GLUT4 transporter expression in isolated muscle were seen only in conditions that included exercise training. Reduced FA oxidation and increased triacylglycerol synthesis in isolated muscle were observed with all ZDF rats compared with lean rats (P < 0.01) and were unaltered by therapeutic intervention. However, exercise did induce modest increases in peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator-1alpha, citrate synthase, and beta-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase activity. Thus reduction of skeletal muscle FAT/CD36 and content of ceramide and DAG may be important mechanisms by which exercise training blunts the progression of diet-induced insulin resistance in skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

15.
We investigated amino acid metabolism in the Zucker diabetic fatty (ZDF Gmi fa/fa) rat during the prediabetic insulin-resistant stage and the frank type 2 diabetic stage. Amino acids were measured in plasma, liver, and skeletal muscle, and the ratios of plasma/liver and plasma/skeletal muscle were calculated. At the insulin-resistant stage, the plasma concentrations of the gluconeogenic amino acids aspartate, serine, glutamine, glycine, and histidine were decreased in the ZDF Gmi fa/fa rats, whereas taurine, alpha-aminoadipic acid, methionine, phenylalanine, tryptophan, and the 3 branched-chain amino acids were significantly increased. At the diabetic stage, a larger number of gluconeogenic amino acids had decreased plasma concentrations. The 3 branched-chain amino acids had elevated plasma concentrations. In the liver and the skeletal muscles, concentrations of many of the gluconeogenic amino acids were lower at both stages, whereas the levels of 1 or all of the branched-chain amino acids were elevated. These changes in amino acid concentrations are similar to changes seen in type 1 diabetes. It is evident that insulin resistance alone is capable of bringing about many of the changes in amino acid metabolism observed in type 2 diabetes.  相似文献   

16.
Increasing afferent renal nerve activity decreases efferent renal nerve activity and increases urinary sodium excretion. Activation of renal pelvic mechanosensory nerves is impaired in streptozotocin (STZ)-treated rats (model of type 1 diabetes). Decreased activation of renal sensory nerves would lead to increased efferent renal nerve activity, sodium retention, and hypertension. We examined whether the reduced activation of renal sensory nerves in STZ rats was due to increased renal angiotensin activity and whether activation of the renal sensory nerves was impaired in obese Zucker diabetic fatty (ZDF) rats (model of type 2 diabetes). In an isolated renal pelvic wall preparation from rats treated with STZ for 2 wk, PGE2 failed to increase the release of substance P, from 5 +/- 1 to 6 +/- 1 pg/min. In pelvises from sham STZ rats, PGE2 increased substance P release from 6 +/- 1 to 13 +/- 2 pg/min. Adding losartan to the incubation bath increased PGE2-mediated release of substance P in STZ rats, from 5 +/- 1 to 10 +/- 2 pg/min, but had no effect in sham STZ rats. In pelvises from obese ZDF rats (22-46 wk old), PGE2 increased substance P release from 12.0 +/- 1.2 to 18.3 +/- 1.2 pg/min, which was less than that from lean ZDF rats (10.3 +/- 1.6 to 22.5 +/- 2.4 pg/min). Losartan had no effect on the PGE2-mediated substance P release in obese or lean ZDF rats. We conclude that the mechanisms involved in the decreased responsiveness of the renal sensory nerves in STZ rats involve activation of the renin angiotensin system in STZ but not in obese ZDF rats.  相似文献   

17.
The coupling of tissue blood flow to cellular metabolic demand involves oxygen-dependent adjustments in arteriolar tone, and arteriolar responses to oxygen can be mediated, in part, by changes in local production of 20-HETE. In this study, we examined the long-term effect of dietary salt on arteriolar oxygen responsiveness in the exteriorized, superfused rat spinotrapezius muscle and the role of 20-HETE in this responsiveness. Rats were fed either a normal-salt (NS, 0.45%) or high-salt (HS, 4%) diet for 4-5 wk. There was no difference in steady-state tissue Po(2) between NS and HS rats, and elevation of superfusate oxygen content from 0% to 10% caused tissue Po(2) to increase by the same amount in both groups. However, the resulting reductions in arteriolar diameter and blood flow were less in HS rats than NS rats. Inhibition of 20-HETE formation with N-methylsulfonyl-12,12-dibromododec-11-enamide (DDMS) or 17-octadecynoic acid (17-ODYA) attenuated oxygen-induced constriction in NS rats but not HS rats. Exogenous 20-HETE elicited arteriolar constriction that was greatly reduced by the large-conductance Ca(2+)-activated potassium (K(Ca)) channel inhibitors tetraethylammonium chloride (TEA) and iberiotoxin (IbTx) in NS rats and a smaller constriction that was less sensitive to TEA or IbTx in HS rats. Arteriolar responses to exogenous angiotensin II were similar in both groups but more sensitive to inhibition with DDMS in NS rats. Norepinephrine-induced arteriolar constriction was similar and insensitive to DDMS in both groups. We conclude that 20-HETE contributes to oxygen-induced constriction of skeletal muscle arterioles via inhibition of K(Ca) channels and that a high-salt diet impairs arteriolar responses to increased oxygen availability due to a reduction in vascular smooth muscle responsiveness to 20-HETE.  相似文献   

18.
I G Joshua 《Peptides》1991,12(1):37-41
The in vivo responsiveness of small arterioles and venules in the rat cremaster muscle to topical administration of neuropeptide Y was assessed using closed-circuit television microscopy. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital (50 mg/kg) and the cremaster muscle was exposed to increasing bath concentrations of neuropeptide Y (10(-10)-10(-7) M). Neuropeptide Y produced dose-dependent constrictions in first (90 +/- 8 microns), second (50 +/- 6 microns) and third (21 +/- 4 microns) order arterioles. Arteriolar reactivity to the peptide was inversely related to vessel diameters. Venules were relatively unresponsive to neuropeptide Y. Exposure to the alpha-adrenergic receptor antagonist, phentolamine (10(-6) M), failed to modify the arteriolar constrictor responses to neuropeptide Y, while pretreatment with the sympathetic neuronal blocking agent, guanethidine (10(-5) M), produced a small, but significant, reduction in sensitivity. These data suggest that neuropeptide Y causes constriction of arterioles of skeletal muscle, primarily by acting directly on vascular smooth muscle to induce contraction, and not via release of endogenous norepinephrine.  相似文献   

19.
Previous studies from this laboratory suggest that during juvenile growth, structural changes in the arteriolar network are accompanied by changes in some of the mechanisms responsible for regulation of tissue blood flow. To test the hypothesis that arteriolar myogenic behavior is altered with growth, we studied gracilis muscle arterioles isolated from Sprague-Dawley rats at two ages: 21-28 and 42-49 days. When studied at their respective in vivo pressures, the myogenic index (instantaneous slope of the active pressure-diameter curve) of arterioles from 42-49-day-old rats was more negative than that of arterioles from 21-28-day-old rats, indicating greater myogenic responsiveness. Endothelial denudation, or prostaglandin H(2) (PGH(2))/thromboxane A(2) (TxA(2)) receptor antagonism without denudation, significantly reduced the myogenic responsiveness of arterioles from the older rats over a wide range of pressures but had no consistent effects on the myogenic responsiveness of arterioles from the younger rats. The heme oxygenase inhibitor chromium (III) mesoporphyrin IX chloride had no effect on the myogenic activity of arterioles from either age group. These findings indicate that microvascular growth in young animals is accompanied by an increase in the myogenic behavior of arterioles, possibly because PGH(2) or TxA(2) assumes a role in reinforcing myogenic activity over this period. As a result, the relative contribution of myogenic activity to blood flow regulation in skeletal muscle may increase during rapid juvenile growth.  相似文献   

20.
This study determined alterations to nitric oxide (NO)-dependent dilation of skeletal muscle arterioles from obese (OZR) versus lean Zucker rats (LZR). In situ cremaster muscle arterioles from both groups were viewed via television microscopy, and vessel dilation was measured with a video micrometer. Arteriolar dilation to acetylcholine and sodium nitroprusside was reduced in OZR versus LZR, although dilation to aprikalim was unaltered. NO-dependent flow-induced arteriolar dilation (via parallel microvessel occlusion) was attenuated in OZR, impairing arteriolar ability to regulate wall shear rate. Vascular superoxide levels, as assessed by dihydroethidine fluorescence, were elevated in OZR versus LZR. Treatment of cremaster muscles of OZR with the superoxide scavengers polyethylene glycol-superoxide dismutase and catalase improved arteriolar dilation to acetylcholine and sodium nitroprusside and restored flow-induced dilation and microvascular ability to regulate wall shear rate. These results suggest that NO-dependent dilation of skeletal muscle microvessels in OZR is impaired due to increased levels of superoxide. Taken together, these data suggest that the development of diabetes and hypertension in OZR may be associated with an impaired skeletal muscle perfusion via an elevated vascular oxidant stress.  相似文献   

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