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1.
INTRODUCTION: Some studies have reported erectile dysfunction in patients receiving lithium through a mechanism that has not yet been defined. The aim of the present study was to verify the effect of acute lithium administration on the nonadrenergic noncholinergic (NANC)- and endothelium-mediated relaxation of rat isolated corpus cavernosum. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The isolated rat corporeal strips were precontracted with phenylephrine hydrochloride (7.5 microM) and electrical field stimulation (EFS) was applied at different frequencies (2, 5, 10, and 15 Hz) to obtain NANC-mediated relaxation or relaxed by adding cumulative doses of acetylcholine (10nM-1mM) to obtain endothelium-dependent relaxation in the presence or absence of lithium (0.3, 0.5, 1, and 5mM). Also, effects of combining lithium (0.3mM) with 30 nM and 0.1 nM L-NAME (an NO synthase inhibitor) on NANC- and acetylcholine-mediated relaxation was investigated, respectively. Moreover, effects of combining lithium (1mM) with 0.1mM and 10 microM L-arginine (a precursor of NO) on NANC- and endothelium-mediated relaxation was assessed, respectively. Also, the effect of lithium (1mM) on relaxation to sodium nitroprusside (SNP; 1nM-1mM), an NO donor, was investigated. RESULTS: The NANC-mediated relaxation was significantly (P<0.001) reduced by 1 and 5mM, but not by 0.3 and 0.5mM lithium. Lithium significantly (P<0.001) attenuated the maximum response to acetylcholine in a concentration-dependent manner. Combination of lithium (0.3mM) with 30 and 0.1 nM L-NAME, which separately had a minimum effect on NANC- and endothelium-mediated relaxation, significantly (P<0.001) reduced the NANC- and endothelium-mediated relaxation, respectively. Although L-arginine at 10 microM and 0.1mM did not alter the relaxant responses to acetylcholine and EFS, it improved the inhibition by lithium (1mM) of relaxant responses to acetylcholine and EFS, respectively. Also, SNP produced similar concentration-dependent relaxations from both groups. DISCUSSION: Our experiments indicated that lithium likely by interfering with NO pathway in both endothelium and nitrergic nerve can result in impairment of both the endothelium- and NANC-mediated relaxation of rat corpus cavernosum.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating peptide (PACAP-38) and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) were investigated in the gastric fundus strips of the mouse. In carbachol (CCh) precontracted strips, in the presence of guanethidine, electrical field stimulation (EFS) elicited a fast inhibitory response that may be followed, at the highest stimulation frequencies employed, by a sustained relaxation. The fast response was abolished by the nitric oxide (NO) synthesis inhibitor L-N(G)-nitro arginine (L-NNA) or by the guanylate cyclase inhibitor (ODQ), the sustained one by alpha-chymotrypsin. alpha-Chymotrypsin also increased the amplitude of the EFS-induced fast relaxation. PACAP-38 and VIP caused tetrodotoxin-insensitive sustained relaxant responses that were both abolished by alpha-chymotrypsin. Apamin did not influence relaxant responses to EFS nor relaxation to both peptides. PACAP 6-38 abolished EFS-induced sustained relaxations, increased the amplitude of the fast ones and antagonized the smooth muscle relaxation to both PACAP-38 and VIP. VIP 10-28 and [D-p-Cl-Phe6,Leu17]-VIP did not influence the amplitude of both the fast or the sustained response to EFS nor influenced the relaxation to VIP and PACAP-38. The results indicate that in strips from mouse gastric fundus peptides, other than being responsible for EFS-induced sustained relaxation, also exerts a modulatory action on the release of the neurotransmitter responsible for the fast relaxant response, that appears to be NO.  相似文献   

3.
We have determined that the methanolic extract of L. caulescens (MELc) produced a significant vasodilator effect in a concentration-dependent and endothelium-dependent manner. This relaxation was blocked by N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methylester (L-NAME), indicating that MELc vasodilator properties are endothelium mediated due to liberation of nitric oxide (NO). In this paper we aimed to corroborate its mode of action. MELc effects on noradrenaline (NA)-induced contraction in isolated rat aortic thoracic rings with endothelium (+E), in the presence of atropine (0.1 microM) and 1-H-[1,2,4]-oxadiazolo-[4,3a]-quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ, 1 microM) were conducted. MELc relaxation curve was significantly shifted to the right in the presence of ODQ and atropine, thus confirming that its mode of action is related with activation of nitric oxide synthase (NOS) and the consequent increment in NO formation. Bio-guided study of MELc allowed the isolation of ursolic acid (UA, 50 mg) and ursolic-oleanolic acids mixture [UA/OA (7:3), 450 mg]. The relaxant effect of UA (0.038-110 microM) was evaluated in functional experiments. UA induced a significant relaxation in a concentration- and endothelium-dependent manner (IC(50)=44.15 microM) and did not produce a vasorelaxant effect on contraction evoked by KCl (80 mM). In addition, NA-induced contraction was significantly displaced to the right by UA (30 microM). In order to determine its mode of action, UA-induced relaxant effect was evaluated in the presence of atropine (0.1 microM), indomethacin (10 microM), L-NAME (100 microM) and ODQ (1 microM). Relaxation was blocked by L-NAME and ODQ. On the other hand, UA (3 microM) provoked a significant displacement to the left in the relaxation curve induced by sodium nitroprusside (SNP, 0.32 nM to 0.1 microM), but it was not significant in the presence of Carbamoyl choline (carbachol, 1 nM to 10 microM). These results indicate that UA-mediated relaxation is endothelium dependent, probably due to NO release, and the consequent activation of vascular smooth muscle soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), a signal transduction enzyme that forms the second messenger cGMP.  相似文献   

4.
The aim of this study was to investigate, in mouse duodenum, the role of nitric oxide (NO) in the relaxation of longitudinal muscle evoked by nerve activation and the coupled action mechanism. Electrical field stimulation (EFS; 0.5 ms, 10-s train duration, supramaximal voltage, at various frequencies) under nonadrenergic noncholinergic conditions evoked muscular relaxation occasionally followed, at the higher stimulus frequencies, by rebound contractions. Inhibition of the synthesis of NO by N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME; 100 microM) virtually abolished the evoked relaxation. The relaxation was reduced also by apamin (0.1 microM) and by 1H-[1,2,4]oxadiazolo[4,3-a]quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ; 1 microM), a guanylyl cyclase inhibitor. The coadministration of apamin and ODQ produced additive effects on the responses to EFS. Sodium nitroprusside (0.1-100 microM) produced a concentration-dependent reduction of the phasic spontaneous activity and at the highest dose used suppressed phasic activity and induced muscular relaxation. These effects were tetrodotoxin and L-NAME resistant and were antagonized both by apamin and by ODQ. 8-Bromoguanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (0.1-100 microM) reduced in a concentration-dependent manner the spontaneous mechanical activity and at 100 microM suppressed the phasic activity and induced muscular relaxation, not antagonized by apamin. This study indicates that NO is the primary transmitter released by inhibitory nerves supplying the longitudinal muscle of mouse duodenum and that guanylate cyclase stimulation and opening of Ca(2+)-dependent K(+) channels are independent mechanisms working in parallel to mediate NO action.  相似文献   

5.
This study evaluated whether increased release of nitric oxide (NO) from the nitrergic component of the nonadrenergic, noncholinergic (NANC) nerves may be partly responsible for the decrease in gastrointestinal motility observed during pregnancy. Segments of fundal strip, ileum, and colon were obtained from nonpregnant rats, rats in midpregnancy (days 9-11), and rats in late pregnancy (days 18-20). NANC activity was studied by assessing changes in tone after application of electric field stimulation (EFS). The role of NO was determined by observing the effects of EFS in the presence and absence of the NO synthase (NOS) inhibitor N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) and the reversibility of the effects of L-NAME by L-arginine. The magnitude of change in cGMP levels in the tissues after application of EFS was also assessed. Our studies indicate that there was increased magnitude of relaxation of isolated strips of rat gastric fundus and rat colon, after application of EFS to tissues obtained only from animals in late pregnancy. These results paralleled the changes in cGMP levels in tissues. NOS activity in the gastric fundus was significantly increased in animals in late pregnancy compared with nonpregnant controls. Our studies suggest that the delay in gastric emptying and increase in colonic transit time observed in rats during pregnancy may be caused in part by increased activity of the nitrergic component of the NANC nerves innervating these organs.  相似文献   

6.
F S Tam  K Hillier 《Life sciences》1992,51(16):1277-1284
Electrical field stimulation (EFS) of isolated longitudinal muscle of human taenia coli at 4Hz produced relaxation which was abolished by tetrodotoxin but not adrenergic and cholinergic blockade (NANC-relaxation). NG-nitro L-arginine (L-NOARG; 1-100 microM), an NO synthesis inhibitor, produced a concentration-dependent partial inhibition of the NANC response; 10 microM L-NOARG inhibited EFS-induced relaxation by 48.6 +/- 5.20% and 100 microM L-NOARG by 54.2 +/- 10.1%. L-Arginine (1mM), but not D-arginine (1mM) partially reversed the inhibitory effect and this was inversely proportional to the concentration of L-NOARG used. Cumulative administration of NO (acidified sodium nitrite solution; 1-100 microM) produced a concentration-dependent relaxation of the strips. L-NOARG (1 mM) did not affect either NO or isoprenaline-induced relaxations. These results provide the first preliminary evidence that NO is partially responsible for the NANC inhibitory transmission in the longitudinal muscle of the taenia coli of human colon.  相似文献   

7.
Nonadrenergic noncholinergic (NANC) vasodilator mechanisms may contribute to the maintenance of adult pulmonary and systemic vascular tone. However, their actions in the neonatal circulation have not been studied. We aimed to investigate NANC vasorelaxation in neonatal and 2-week-old piglet pulmonary and mesenteric arteries and to examine the potential role of nitric oxide (NO) in this phenomenon. Responses to electric field stimulation (EFS, 50V, 0.25-32 Hz) were investigated in pulmonary and mesenteric artery rings (external diameter 150-200 microm) precontracted with the thromboxane A2 mimetic U46619, in the presence of guanethidine (10 microM) and atropine (10 microM). Under these conditions, EFS resulted in a frequency dependent relaxation of newborn pulmonary (maximal relaxation of 53+/-9.1%), mesenteric (68.8.2+/-7.1%) and 2-wk-old mesenteric (46 6.3%) arteries but this relaxation was significantly reduced (4.5+/-2.2%) in 2-week-old pulmonary arteries. In neonatal pulmonary arteries, the neurotoxin tetrodotoxin (0.3 muM), the NO synthase inhibitor L-NAME (0.1 mM), and the guanylyl cyclase inhibitor ODQ (10 microM) abolished EFS-induced relaxations, suggesting that NANC relaxation of porcine neonatal pulmonary arteries is mediated by NO, which is probably neuronal in origin. However, The expression in pulmonary arteries of the neuronal NO synthase (nNOS), as determined by Western-blot analysis, increased with postnatal age whereas the expression of the endothelial NOS (eNOS) did not change. In conclusion, NANC relaxation is present in neonatal pulmonary and mesenteric arteries and it is, at least partially, mediated through NO. NANC relaxation of porcine pulmonary and mesenteric arteries decreases with postnatal maturation.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of the putatively selective inhibitor of neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) 1-(2-trifluoromethylphenyl) imidazole (TRIM) were investigated on contractility, intracellular calcium and nitrergic relaxations in the rat anococcygeus muscle. TRIM (100-1000 microM) reduced the tension of rat anococcygeus muscles when contracted with guanethidine (10 microM) and clonidine (0.1 microM). Relaxations to TRIM persisted in the presence of the non-selective NOS inhibitor L-NAME (100 microM) and the inhibitor of soluble guanylate cyclase ODQ (1 microM). TRIM also reduced tension when muscles were contracted with phenylephrine (3 microM), noradrenaline (3 microM) or high K physiological salt solution (high KPSS; 60mM). Influx of calcium ([Ca(2+)](i)) in response to high KPSS was significantly reduced in the presence of TRIM (1mM). TRIM also inhibited the influx of (45)Ca(2+) induced by KPSS, but had no effect on the influx induced by phenylephrine (10 microM). TRIM (300 microM) had a modest, but significant, inhibitory effect on nitrergic relaxations that were evoked by electrical field stimulation (1-10 Hz, 15 V, 10s trains) in muscles contracted with guanethidine and clonidine. In contrast, L-NAME (1-100 microM) inhibited these nitrergic responses with an IC(50) of 9.31+/-0.87 microM (n=4). The results suggest that the smooth muscle relaxant effect of TRIM in the rat anococcygeus muscle may affect the entry of Ca(2+) possibly through voltage-operated calcium channels. Furthermore, the relatively modest effect of TRIM on nitrergic responses indicates that it is not a particularly reliable inhibitor of nNOS.  相似文献   

9.
In vitro extracellular Mg(2+) concentration ([Mg(2+)](0)) produces endothelium-dependent and endothelium-independent relaxations in rat aorta in a concentration-dependent manner. These relaxant effects of Mg(2+) on intact rat aortic rings, but not denuded rat aortic rings, were suppressed by either N(G)-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA), N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), or methylene blue. The inhibitory effects of L-NMMA and L-NAME could be reversed partly by L-arginine. [Mg(2+)](0)-induced dilatation in vivo in rat mesenteric arterioles and venules was almost completely inhibited by N(G)-nitro-L-arginine and L-NMMA. Removal of extracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](0)) or buffering intracellular Ca(2+) concentration in endothelial cells, with 10 microM 1, 2-bis(2-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid-AM, markedly attenuated the relaxant effects of Mg(2+). Mg(2+) produced nitric oxide (NO) release from the intact aortic rings in a concentration-dependent manner. Removal of [Ca(2+)](0) diminished the increased NO release induced by elevated levels of [Mg(2+)](0). In vivo infusion of increasing doses (1-30 microM/min) of MgSO(4), directly into the femoral veins of anesthetized rats, elicited significant concentration-dependent sustained increases in serum total Mg and concomitant decreases in arterial blood pressure. Before and after employment of various doses of MgSO(4), intravenous administration of either L-NMMA (10 mg/kg) or L-NAME (10 mg/kg) increased (i.e., reversed) the MgSO(4)-lowered blood pressure markedly, and intravenous injection of L-arginine restored partially the increased blood pressure effects of both L-NMMA and L-NAME. Our results suggest that 1) small blood vessels are very dependent on NO release for Mg(2+) dilatations and 2) the endothelium-dependent relaxation induced by extracellular Mg(2+) is mediated by release of endothelium-derived relaxing factor-NO from the endothelium, and requires Ca(2+) and formation of guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate.  相似文献   

10.
The present study examines possible mechanisms by which the flavonoid isokaempferide (IKPF; 5,7,4'-trihydroxy-3-methoxyflavone) from Amburana cearensis, a Brazilian medicinal plant popularly used as bronchodilator, induces relaxation of guinea-pig isolated trachea. In the trachea (with intact epithelium) contracted by carbachol, IKPF (1-1000 microM) caused a graded relaxation, and the epithelium removal increased the sensitivity of the airway smooth muscle to IKPF (EC50, in intact tissue: 77.4 [54.8-109.2] microM; in denuded epithelium: 15.0 [11.3-20.1] microM). The IKPF-induced relaxation was inhibited in 41% by the nitric oxide (NO) synthase inhibitor L-NAME (100 microM); in 31% and 50% by the soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) inhibitor ODQ (3 and 33 microM); by propranolol (31%) and also by capsaicin (37%). In the trachea pre-contracted by 40 mM KCl the pre-incubation with glibenclamide (33 microM) or iberiotoxin (IbTX, 0.1 microM), selective K(+) channel inhibitors, inhibited the IKPF-induced relaxation by 39% and 38%, respectively. On the other hand, 4-aminopyridine (100 microM), a nonselective K(+) channel antagonist, did not significantly influence the effect of IKPF, while IbTX induced a rightward displacement of the IKPF concentration-response curve. However, in muscle pre-contracted with 120 mM KCl the relaxant effect of IKPF was significantly reduced and not affected by glibenclamide. In conclusion, these results indicate a direct and epithelium-independent relaxant effect of IKPF on smooth muscle fibers. Although this IKPF relaxant action seems to be multi-mediated, it occurs via both Ca(2+) and ATP-sensitive K(+) channels, but some other possible mechanisms unrelated to K(+) channels cannot be excluded.  相似文献   

11.
The aim of the present study was to analyze the mechanisms involved in the relaxation induced by 1 microM acetylcholine (ACh) in aortic segments from fetal rats at term precontracted with 3 microM prostaglandin F2alpha (PGF2alpha) and incubated with 1 microM indomethacin. The endothelium-dependent relaxation caused by ACh was reduced by the nitric oxide (NO) synthase inhibitor NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA, 0.1 mM), such an effect was reversed by 0.1 mM L-arginine (L-Arg). After precontraction of segments with 50 mM KCl the relaxant response to ACh was smaller than that after precontraction with PGF2alpha; this reduction was increased by L-NMMA, whereas L-NMMA plus L-Arg potentiated the relaxation. Thiopentone sodium (0. 1 mM), ouabain (10 microM), tetraethylammonium (TEA, 0.5 mM) and apamin (1 microM), inhibitors of cytochrome P450 monooxygenases, Na+ pump, Ca2+-activated (KCa) and small-conductance (SKCa) K+ channels, respectively, reduced the relaxation to ACh, which was unaffected by charybdotoxin (0.1 microM) and glibenclamide (1 microM), inhibitors of large-conductance BKCa and ATP-sensitive K+ channels. The L-NMMA/indomethacin-resistant relaxation to ACh was markedly reduced by thiopentone sodium, and similarly decreased by either ouabain or TEA. The endothelium-independent relaxation induced by exogenous NO (10 microM) in segments precontracted with PGF2alpha was unaltered by ouabain, glibenclamide, TEA and after precontraction with 50 mM KCl, and potentiated by L-NMMA. The potentiation of NO responses by L-NMMA was also observed in segments precontracted with KCl. These results suggest that ACh relaxes the fetal rat aorta by endothelial release of both NO and endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor (EDHF), a metabolite derived from cytochrome P450 monooxygenases, that hyperpolarizes smooth muscle cells by activation of KCa, essentially SKCa channels, and Na+ pump. It seems that when the effect of EDHF is abolished, the formation of NO could be increased.  相似文献   

12.
The present experiments were designed to investigate the effects of omeprazole, a H(+)-K+ ATPase inhibitor, on corporal smooth muscle tone in vitro. All spontaneous contractile activity in the corpus cavernosum was blocked following omeprazole (0.1 mM-1 mM) administration. However atropine (1 microM), Nw-nitro L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME, 30 microM) or indomethacin (10 microM) did not affect the spontaneous contraction. Omeprazole (10 microM-1 mM) concentration-dependently induced relaxation in corporal smooth muscle precontracted with 10 microM phenylephrine or 80 mM KCl. Pretreatment of corporal tissue with L-NAME (30 microM), indomethacin (10 microM), ammonium chloride (7.5 mM), sodium acetate (7.5 mM), tetraethyl ammonium chloride (0.5 mM) or glibenclamide (1 microM) had no effect on the omeprazole induced relaxant responses. Nimodipine, an L-type Ca++ channel blocker, relaxed corporal strips precontracted with 80 mM KCl. Collectively, these results indicate that the inhibition of spontaneous contraction and the relaxation of precontracted corporal smooth muscle by omeprazole is probably mediated by the blockade of calcium channels. Further work is needed to determine the cellular mechanism(s) of action by which omeprazole acts on corpus cavernosum smooth muscle.  相似文献   

13.
The peptide hormone relaxin has been reported to depress the amplitude of contractile responses in the mouse gastric fundus by upregulating nitric oxide (NO) biosynthesis at the neural level. In the present study, we investigated whether relaxin also influenced nonadrenergic, noncholinergic (NANC) gastric relaxant responses in mice. Female mice in proestrus or estrus were treated for 18 h with relaxin (1 microg s.c.) or vehicle (controls). Mechanical responses of gastric fundal strips were recorded via force-displacement transducers. In carbachol precontracted strips from control mice and in the presence of guanethidine, electrical field stimulation (EFS) elicited fast relaxant responses that may be followed by a sustained relaxation. All relaxant responses were abolished by tetrodotoxin. Relaxin increased the amplitude of the EFS-induced fast relaxation without affecting either the sustained one or the direct smooth muscle response to papaverine. In the presence of the NO synthesis inhibitor L-N(G)-nitro arginine (L-NNA), that abolished the EFS-induced fast relaxation without influencing the sustained one, relaxin was ineffective. In strips from relaxin-pretreated mice, EFS-induced fast relaxations were enhanced in amplitude with respect to the controls, while sustained ones as well as direct smooth muscle responses to papaverine were not changed. Further addition of relaxin to the bath medium did not influence neurally induced fast relaxant responses, whereas L-NNA did. In conclusion, in the mouse gastric fundus, relaxin enhances the neurally induced nitrergic relaxant responses acting at the neural level.  相似文献   

14.
We examined whether endogenous inhibitors of nitric oxide (NO) synthesis are involved in the impaired cavernosal relaxation with ischemia in rabbits. Two weeks after cavernosal ischemia caused by partial vessel occlusion, endothelium-dependent and electrical field stimulation (EFS)-induced neurogenic NO-mediated relaxations, but not sodium nitroprusside (SNP)-induced relaxation, were significantly impaired in the isolated corpus cavernosum. The Ca(2+)-dependent NO synthase (NOS) activity and the basal and stimulated cGMP productions with carbachol or EFS were significantly decreased after ischemia. Supplementation of excess L-arginine partially recovered both of the impaired relaxations. The contents of N(G)-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA) and asymmetric N(G), N(G)-dimethyl-L-arginine (ADMA) but not L-arginine and symmetric N(G),N'(G)-dimethyl-L-arginine (SDMA) were increased in the cavernosal tissues after ischemia. Authentic L-NMMA and ADMA but not SDMA concentration dependently inhibited both relaxations without affecting the relaxation produced by SNP in the control. Excess L-arginine abolished the inhibition with L-NMMA and ADMA. These results suggest that the impaired NO-mediated cavernosal relaxations after ischemia are closely related to the decreased NOS activity and the increased accumulation of L-NMMA and ADMA.  相似文献   

15.
In women, during pregnancy, there is decreased motility of the gastrointestinal tract leading to a delay in gastric emptying and an increase in colonic transit time. Whether the rise in estradiol (E2) or progesterone (P4) is responsible for this effect is controversial. As the nitrergic component of the nonadrenergic, noncholinergic (NANC) nerves is responsible for modulating gastrointestinal motility in vivo, the purpose of this study was to evaluate whether the increased release of nitric oxide (NO) from the nitrergic component of the NANC nerves innervating the gastric fundus and colon that occurs during late pregnancy in rats is mediated by E2 or P4. Ovariectomized rats treated with E2 or P4 alone or in combination were used for our studies. We also wanted to assess the cellular and molecular mechanisms involved. The NANC activity was studied by assessing changes in tone after application of electric field stimulation (EFS). The role of NO was determined by observing the effects of EFS in the presence and absence of the NO synthase (NOS) inhibitor N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) and the reversibility of the effects of L-NAME by L-arginine. Our studies indicated that there was increased magnitude of relaxation of isolated strips of rat gastric fundus and rat colon after application of EFS to tissues obtained from animals treated with E2 alone or a combination of E2 + P4 but not from those treated with P4 alone. L-NAME attenuated relaxation responses in E2- and E2 + P4-treated animals. To elucidate whether the increased NO release may be due to an increase in neuronal NOS (nNOS) protein, we used both Western blot analysis and immunohistochemistry. We also used RT-PCR to determine whether there was an increase in nNOS mRNA after treatment with sex steroids. In nonpregnant animals, nNOS was detected by Western blot in the fundus and the colon and was barely detectable in the ileum. In pregnancy, there was an increase in nNOS in both the gastric fundus and the colon. The nNOS protein was also increased in ovariectomized animals treated with either E2 alone or E2 + P4 but not P4 alone when compared with ovariectomized animals receiving vehicle. Our results indicated that there was an increase in nNOS protein that was localized to the neurons of the myenteric plexus in the gastric fundus and colon in E2- and E2 + P4-treated animals, but this increase was not observed in animals treated with P4 alone. This increase in nNOS protein was accompanied by an increase in nNOS mRNA. These results suggest the possibility that E2, rather than P4, may be responsible for the delay in gastric emptying and increase in colonic transit time observed in pregnancy.  相似文献   

16.
Experiments were undertaken to investigate the existence of inhibitory nonadrenergic, noncholinergic (i-NANC) nerve activity by using in vitro functional and immunohistochemical techniques in rat main pulmonary arterial rings. Vessels precontracted with phenylephrine (3 microM) relaxed in response to electrical field stimulation (EFS) (50 V, 0.2 ms, 0.1-10 Hz for 5 s) in the presence of atropine (1 microM) and guanethidine (1 microM). Tetrodotoxin (0.3 microM) abolished this response, indicating that it is neuronal in origin. l-NAME (30 microM), methylene blue (10 microM), and removal of endothelium significantly reduced the EFS-induced relaxations. The inhibitory action of l-NAME was completely reversed by l-arginine (1 mM) but not by d-arginine (1 mM). Moreover l-arginine alone potentiated the magnitude of the relaxations elicited by EFS. On the other hand, immunohistochemical work clearly demonstrated the existence of neuronal nitric oxide synthase in the pulmonary artery vessel wall. All these results are consistent with the suggestion that nitric oxide is the likely mediator of this vasodilatation. However, the incomplete blockade of the responses by l-NAME gives evidence of an additional inhibitory NANC neurotransmitter(s) mediating the residual relaxation, which requires further experiments to clarify its nature.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of 3-(5'-hydroxymethyl-2'-furyl)-1-benzyl indazole (YC-1) on responses to sodium nitroprusside (SNP), S-nitroso-N-acetyl-penicillamine (SNAP), the nitroxyl anion donor Angeli's salt, and nitrergic nerve stimulation, as well as the release of NO from nitrergic nerves, were studied in the rat isolated anococcygeus muscle. YC-1 (1-100 microM) produced concentration-dependent relaxations in contracted muscles, which were partially but significantly reduced by the inhibitor of soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), 1H-[1,2,4]oxadiazolo[4,3,-a]quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ, 1 and 10 microM). At a concentration that did not affect tissue tension, YC-1 (1 microM) significantly enhanced relaxations to SNP, SNAP, and Angeli's salt but did not affect relaxations to papaverine (10 microM). Nitrergic relaxations elicited by short periods (1 Hz for 10 s, 15 V) and long periods of EFS (5 Hz for 5 min, 15 V) were also enhanced by YC-1. YC-1 (100 microM), in an l-NAME and tetrodotoxin-insensitive manner, also increased the amount of NO detected in the organ bath media after the tissue was field stimulated (5 Hz for 5 min), which may have resulted from the electrolytic degradation of YC-1, as this effect was also seen in the absence of tissue. In summary, YC-1 enhanced relaxations to donors of NO, Angeli's salt, and nitrergic nerve stimulation in the rat anococcygeus muscle; however, the enhanced release of NO by YC-1 following nitrergic nerve stimulation was not a tissue-dependent effect.  相似文献   

18.
Sildenafil relaxes rabbit clitoral corpus cavernosum   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The role of phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibition in the modulation of female sexual dysfunction was investigated by assessing its effects on in vitro relaxation of rabbit clitoris. Stimulation of the non-adrenergic, non-cholinergic neurons of the clitorus elicited a frequency-dependent relaxation response. Inhibition of NO synthase with L-NAME (100 microM) or inhibition of soluble guanylate cyclase with ODQ (1.0 microM) almost completely abolished the electrical field stimulation-induced relaxation of clitorus suggesting that NO-cGMP pathway mediates the relaxation response to electrical field stimulation. Similarly, tetrodotoxin, a neuronal sodium channel blocker abolished the electrical field stimulation-induced clitoral relaxation implying a neuronal release of NO contributes to the electrical field stimulation elicited relaxation. Pretreatment of the clitoral corpus cavernosum strips with sildenafil (100 nM) enhanced the electrical field stimulation-induced relaxations both in magnitude and duration. The results suggest that sildenafil enhances electrical field stimulation elicited clitoral relaxation by a NO-cGMP dependent pathway. These data also imply that sildenafil may be useful to treat female sexual dysfunction.  相似文献   

19.
NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) has been used extensively as a paradigmatic inhibitor of NO synthase and has been shown to cause antinociception in several experimental models. We describe here how L-NAME produced a dose-dependent antinociceptive effect when injected intraperitoneally in the mouse after acetic acid induced writhings, or intraplantarly in the rat paw pressure hyperalgesia induced by carrageenin or prostaglandin E2. In contrast another NO synthase inhibitor, NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA), had no significant effect per se but inhibited L-NAME systemic induced antinociception in mice and local induced antinociception in the rat paw hyperalgesia test. D-NAME had no antinociceptive effect upon carrageenin-induced hyperalgesia. Pretreatment of the paws with two inhibitors of guanylate cyclase, methylene blue (MB) and 1H-:[1,2,4]-oxadiazolo-:[4,3-a] quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ) abolished the antinociceptive effect of L-NAME. L-Arginine and the cGMP phosphodiesterase inhibitor, MY 5445 significantly enhanced the L-NAME antinociceptive effect. The central antinociceptive effect of L-NAME was blocked by co-administration of L-NMMA, ODQ and MB. The present series of experiments shows that L-NAME, but not L-NMMA, has an antinociceptive effect. It can be suggested that L-NAME causes the antinociceptive effect by stimulation of the arginine/ NO/ cGMP pathway, since the antinociceptive effect of L-NAME can be antagonized by L-NMMA and abolished by the guanylate cyclase inhibitors (MB and ODQ). In addition, the NO synthase substrate, L-arginine and the cGMP phosphodiesterase inhibitor, MY5445 were seen to potentiate the effects of L-NAME. Thus, L-NAME used alone, has limitations as a specific inhibitor of the arginine-NO-cGMP pathway and may therefore be a poor pharmacological tool for use in characterising participation in pathophysiological processes.  相似文献   

20.
Involvement of nitric oxide (NO) in the regulation of insulin secretion from pancreatic beta-cells was investigated by measuring cytosolic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) in isolated rat pancreatic beta-cells. At 7.0 mM glucose, L-arginine (0.1 mM) elevated [Ca2+]i in about 50% of the beta-cells examined. The response was partially inhibited by an NO synthase inhibitor, N(G)-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMA; 0.1 mM), suggesting that part of the response was mediated by the production of NO from L-arginine. D-Arginine at higher concentrations (3 or 10 mM) also increased [Ca2+]i at 7.0 mM glucose; however, the response was not affected by L-NMA (0.1 mM). Similar [Ca2+]i elevation was produced by NO (10 nM) and sodium nitroprusside (SNP; 10 microM) at 7.0 mM glucose. The SNP-induced increase in [Ca2+]i was abolished by nicardipine (1 microM), suggesting that the [Ca2+]i response is mediated by Ca2+ influx through L-type voltage-operated Ca2+ channels. In the presence of oxyhemoglobin (1 microM), the [Ca2+]i elevation induced by NO (10 nM) was abolished. Neither degradation products of NO, NO2- nor NO3-, caused any changes in [Ca2+]i. 8-Bromo-cyclic GMP (8-Br-cGMP; 3 mM) and atrial natriuretic peptide (0.1 microM) elevated [Ca2+]i at 7.0 mM glucose. We conclude that NO, which is produced from L-arginine in pancreatic islets, facilitates glucose-induced [Ca2+]i increase via the elevation of cGMP in rat pancreatic beta-cells. NO-cGMP system may physiologically regulate insulin secretion from pancreatic beta-cells.  相似文献   

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