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1.
The mechanisms underlying vascular adaptations in pregnancy remain to be fully elucidated. One of the contributory mechanisms for reduced vascular tone may be a reduction of myogenic tone. Myogenic tone was assessed as the difference between internal diameter in the presence and absence of external calcium at different intramural pressure steps (60-100 mmHg). Myogenic responses were reduced in resistance-sized mesenteric and main uterine arteries in late pregnant compared with nonpregnant C57BL/6J mice. In vessels from pregnant, but not nonpregnant mice, the myogenic response was enhanced by preincubation with nitric oxide (NO) synthase inhibitor N(G)-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester, was further elevated by the gap junction inhibitor 18-alpha glycyrrhetinic acid, but was unaltered by the prostaglandin H synthase inhibitor meclofenamate. Endothelium removal enhanced myogenic tone only in the vessels from pregnant animals, thus confirming the role of the endothelium in modulating myogenic tone in pregnancy. These results suggest that endothelium-derived NO as well as gap junction communications modulate myogenic tone in mouse pregnancy.  相似文献   

2.
Oxidative stress mediated by prooxidants has been implicated in the pathogenesis of vascular disorders. However, the effect of prooxidants on myogenic regulation of vascular function and the differential influence of gender is not known. SOD, an intracellular enzyme, restricts excess prooxidant levels and may limit vascular dysfunction. We therefore tested the effects of Cu,Zn SOD deficiency on vascular tone in both male and female SOD knockout (SOD-/-) mice. We hypothesized that myogenic tone would be enhanced in SOD-/- mice by excess prooxidants compared with wild-type control mice. Indeed, resistance-sized mesenteric arteries from SOD-/- mice exhibited enhanced myogenic tone compared with control mice. Myogenic tone was lower in female than male control mice. Interestingly, this gender effect was absent in SOD-/- mice, such that myogenic tone of mesenteric arteries from females was equated to that of arteries from males. Furthermore, the pathways that modulate myogenic tone were diverse. In both male and female control mice, inhibition of prostaglandin H synthase (PGHS) and nitric oxide synthase (NOS) pathways enhanced myogenic tone. In female SOD-/- mice, inhibition of PGHS and NOS pathways enhanced myogenic tone to a greater extent compared with control mice. Conversely, in male SOD-/- mice, NOS and PGHS inhibition did not alter tone and only inhibition of gap junctions enhanced myogenic tone. In conclusion, this study revealed enhanced myogenic tone in SOD-/- mice compared with control mice. Furthermore, Cu,Zn SOD deficiency particularly enhanced myogenic tone in female mice such that their vascular tone attained the level of male SOD-/- mice, possibly mediated by prooxidants.  相似文献   

3.
Results of epidemiological and animal studies suggest a link between poor in utero growth and cardiovascular disease in adult offspring. Few studies, however, have examined the effects of maternal undernutrition on the vasculature of pregnant female offspring, and to our knowledge, no studies have examined myogenic responses, which are essential to vascular tone development, in these animal models. Thus, myogenic responses were assessed in radial uterine arteries of pregnant female offspring to determine if diet restriction during pregnancy could contribute to transgenerational effects. These results were compared to those in mesenteric arteries, which greatly contribute to peripheral vascular resistance. Myogenic responses in the presence and absence of inhibitors for nitric oxide synthase (NOS) and prostaglandin H synthase (PGHS) were measured in arteries isolated from pregnant, 3-mo-old female offspring of control-fed (C(off)) and globally diet-restricted (DR(off)) rat dams. Although no differences were found in pregnancy weight gain, litter size, or fetal weights, placental size was significantly reduced in DR(off) compared to C(off). Enhanced myogenic reactivity was observed at the highest pressure tested (110 mm Hg) in uterine, but not in mesenteric, arteries from DR(off) compared to C(off). Inhibition of NOS, but not of PGHS, significantly increased myogenic responses in uterine arteries at pressures greater than 80 mm Hg in C(off) but, interestingly, not in DR(off) compared to untreated uterine arteries. Thus, impaired uterine vascular function in diet-restricted pregnant rat dams, which leads to similar impairment in their pregnant offspring, may be a mechanism through which transgenerational effects of unhealthy pregnancies occur.  相似文献   

4.
During pregnancy, reduced vascular responses to constrictors contribute to decreased uterine and total vascular resistance. Thromboxane A(2) (TxA(2)) is a potent vasoconstrictor that exerts its actions via diverse signaling pathways, and its biosynthesis increases in preeclampsia. In this study, we hypothesized that maternal vascular responses to TxA(2) will be attenuated via Rho kinase, PKC, p38 MAPK, and ERK1/2 signaling pathways. Isolated ring segments of uterine and small mesenteric arteries from late pregnant (19-21 days) and virgin rats were suspended in a myograph, and isometric force was measured. Pregnancy did not affect uterine and mesenteric artery responses to the TxA(2) analog U-46619 (10(-9)-10(-5) M), but transduction signals associated with these contractions were different between pregnant and nonpregnant rats. Inhibition of Rho kinase (10(-6) M Y-27632) reduced sensitivity to U-46619 in virgin uterine vessels but did not inhibit these contractions in pregnant uterine arteries and had no effect on mesenteric vessels. Treatment of arterial segments with a PKC inhibitor (10(-6) M bisindolylmaleimide I) reduced U-46619-induced contractions in virgin uterine and mesenteric arteries and in pregnant mesenteric arteries. Pregnant uterine arteries, however, were unresponsive to PKC inhibition. Inhibition of ERK1/2 (10(-5) M PD-98059) and p38 MAPK (10(-5) M SB-203580) reduced U46619-induced contractions in nonpregnant vessels and in pregnant uterine and mesenteric vessels. These data suggest that normal pregnancy does not affect uterine and mesenteric contractile responses to TxA(2) but reduces the contribution of Rho kinase and PKC signaling pathways to these contractions in the uterine vasculature. In contrast, the role of ERK1/2 and p38 MAPK in U-46619-induced uterine contractions remains unchanged with pregnancy. TxA(2)-associated transduction signals and its regulators might present potential targets for the development of new treatments for preeclampsia and other pregnancy-associated vascular diseases.  相似文献   

5.
The uterine vasculature plays an important role during pregnancy by providing adequate perfusion of the maternal-fetal interface. To this end, substantial remodeling of the uterine vasculature occurs with consequent changes in responsiveness to contractile agents. The purpose of our study was to characterize the vasorelaxant effects of estrogens on vascular smooth muscles of the rat uterine artery during pregnancy and to evaluate the involvement of estrogen receptors (ESR) and nitric oxide synthases (NOS). To do so, we measured NOS expression in the whole uterine and mesenteric circulatory bed by Western blotting. Vasorelaxant effects of 17beta-estradiol (17beta-E(2)) were assessed on endothelium-denuded uterine arteries with wire myographs in the absence and presence of pharmacological modulators [nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), ICI-182780, tamoxifen]. All experiments were performed on arteries from nonpregnant (NP) and late pregnant (P) rats. In the uterine vasculature of the latter group, NOS3 (endothelial NOS) expression was increased, while NOS1 (neuronal NOS) was reduced compared with NP rats. Expression of the NOS2 (inducible NOS) isoform was undetectable in the two groups. Both 17beta-E(2) and 17alpha-E(2) induced uterine artery relaxation, but the latter evoked lower responses. Endothelium-denuded arteries from NP rats showed larger relaxation with 17beta-E(2) than P rats. This larger relaxation disappeared in the presence of L-NAME. The ESR antagonist ICI-182780 did not affect acute relaxation with 17beta-E(2) and 17alpha-E(2). Moreover, membrane-nonpermeant 17beta-E(2):BSA (estradiol conjugated to bovine serum albumin) did not induce any vasorelaxation. Our results indicate that estrogens exert direct acute vasorelaxant effects in smooth muscles of the rat uterine artery that are mediated by mechanisms independent of ESR activation, but with some stereospecificity. Part of this effect, in NP rats only, is due to nitric oxide produced from muscle NOS1.  相似文献   

6.
Human and rodent studies have demonstrated that calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), a potent vasodilator, relaxes uterine tissue during pregnancy but not during labor. The vascular sensitivity to CGRP is enhanced during pregnancy, compared to nonpregnant human uterine arteries. In the present study, we hypothesized that uterine artery relaxation effects of CGRP are enhanced in pregnant rats compared to nonpregnant diestrus rats (NP-DE) and that several secondary messenger systems are involved in this process. We also hypothesized that the expression of CGRP-A receptor components, calcitonin receptor-like receptor (CRLR), receptor activity-modifying protein (RAMP1), and CGRP-B receptors are greater in pregnant rats. For vascular relaxation studies, uterine arteries from either NP-DE or Day 18 pregnant rats were isolated, and responsiveness of the vessels to CGRP was examined with a small vessel myograph. CGRP-A and CGRP-B receptor expressions were assessed by RT-PCR and Western immunoblotting, respectively. CGRP (10(-10)--10(-7) M) produced a concentration-dependent relaxation of norepinephrine-induced contractions in both NP-DE and Day 18 pregnant rat uterine arteries. Pregnancy increased the vasodilator sensitivity to CGRP significantly (P < 0.05) compared to NP-DE rats. CGRP receptor antagonist, CGRP8-37, inhibited CGRP-induced relaxation of pregnant uterine arteries. The CGRP-induced relaxation was not affected by NG-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) (nitric oxide inhibitor, 10(-4) M) but was significantly (P < 0.05) attenuated by inhibitors of guanylate cyclase (ODQ, 10(-5) M) and adenylate cyclase (SQ 22536, 10(-5) M). CGRP-induced vasorelaxation was significantly (P < 0.05) attenuated by potassium channel blockers KATP (glybenclamide, 10(-5) M) and K(CA) (tetraethylammonium, 10(-3) M). The expression of CRLR and RAMP1 was significantly (P < 0.05) elevated during pregnancy compared to nonpregnant diestrus state (NP-DE). However, CGRP-B receptor proteins in uterine arteries were not altered with pregnancy compared to those of NP-DE. These studies suggest that CGRP-induced increases in uterine artery relaxation may play a role in regulating blood flow to the uterus during pregnancy and, therefore, in fetal growth and survival.  相似文献   

7.
The role of estrogen in the maternal systemic cardiovascular adaptations during pregnancy is still controversial. Female Sprague-Dawley rats were implanted at day 14 of pregnancy with either a 50-mg tamoxifen pellet (estrogen receptor blocker, n = 10) or placebo pellet (n = 10). Virgin female rats were a nonpregnant control (n = 7). At days 20-22 of pregnancy, resistance-sized mesenteric arteries were mounted onto a dual-chamber arteriograph system. Pregnancy significantly blunted the pressor response to phenylephrine [measurement of the effective concentration that yielded 50% maximum response (EC(50)) values were 1.5 +/- 0.22 vs. 0.69 +/- 0.16 microM (P < 0.05)] and enhanced vasodilation to ACh [EC(50) = 1.13 +/- 2.53 vs. 3.13 +/- 6.04 nM (P < 0.05)] compared with nonpregnant rats. However, tamoxifen treatment during pregnancy reversed these effects. Inhibition of nitric oxide (NO) synthase with N(G)-monomethyl-L-arginine (250 microM) shifted only the responses of the placebo-treated pregnant group to both phenylephrine and ACh. Arterial distensibility in the placebo-treated pregnant group was also significantly increased (P < 0.05) compared with nonpregnant and tamoxifen-treated pregnant animals. In summary, endogenous estrogen during pregnancy increases NO-dependent modulation of vessel tone and arterial distensibility.  相似文献   

8.
The reduction in estrogen in postmenopausal women contributes to an increase in vascular dysfunction. Models of aging have shown that this is due, in part, to increased prostaglandin H synthase (PGHS)-dependent vasoconstriction. We showed previously that inducible PGHS-2-dependent vasoconstriction is increased with aging. In the present study, we hypothesized that estrogen suppresses PGHS-2-dependent constriction in the aged rat. Isolated mesenteric arteries from placebo- or estrogen-treated, ovariectomized aged (24 mo) Fisher rats were assessed for endothelium-dependent relaxation in the absence or presence of PGHS inhibitors. PGHS inhibition (meclofenamate, 1 micromol/l) enhanced methacholine-induced relaxation only in the placebo group. Specific PGHS-2 inhibition (NS-398, 10 micromol/l) increased arterial relaxation to a greater extent than PGHS-1 inhibition (valeryl salicylate, 3 mmol/l). Estrogen prevented the PGHS-dependent constrictor effect but did not enhance nitric oxide-dependent relaxation in this model. PGHS-1 and endothelial nitric oxide synthase were not altered by estrogen, whereas PGHS-2 expression was decreased in the estrogen-replaced rats (P < 0.05). In summary, estrogen replacement improved vasodilation in aged rats by decreasing PGHS-dependent constriction.  相似文献   

9.
Cardiovascular adaptation is a hallmark of pregnancy. Here we report on vascular hyperresponsiveness to an endogenous vasodilator, adrenomedullin (ADM), during pregnancy. Intravenous administration of ADM dose dependently decreased the mean arterial pressure, and the decrease was significantly greater in pregnant compared with nonpregnant rats without affecting the heart rate. In endothelium-intact mesenteric artery precontracted by ED70 concentration of norepinephrine, the potency and efficacy of ADM in causing the vasodilation of mesenteric arterial rings from pregnant rats are significantly higher compared with nonpregnant females at diestrus. The magnitude of inhibition of concentration-dependent response to ADM by the inhibition of either soluble guanylate cyclase or adenylate cyclase was greater in pregnant rats. Moreover, ADM-induced cyclic nucleotide generation, both cGMP and cAMP, in the mesenteric artery was elevated during pregnancy and was sensitive to the receptor antagonist, ADM22-52. These findings suggest that during pregnancy the vasodilatory effects of ADM are greater and are associated with increased generation of cyclic nucleotides in resistance vessels, and these changes may be part of the cardiovascular adaptations that occur during pregnancy.  相似文献   

10.

Background and Purpose

We investigated whether pregnancy was associated with changed function in components of perivascular mesenteric innervation and the mechanism/s involved.

Experimental Approach

We used superior mesenteric arteries from female Sprague-Dawley rats divided into two groups: control rats (in oestrous phase) and pregnant rats (20 days of pregnancy). Modifications in the vasoconstrictor response to electrical field stimulation (EFS) were analysed in the presence/absence of phentolamine (alpha-adrenoceptor antagonist) or L-NAME (nitric oxide synthase-NOS- non-specific inhibitor). Vasomotor responses to noradrenaline (NA), and to NO donor DEA-NO were studied, NA and NO release measured and neuronal NOS (nNOS) expression/activation analysed.

Key Results

EFS induced a lower frequency-dependent contraction in pregnant than in control rats. Phentolamine decreased EFS-induced vasoconstriction in segments from both experimental groups, but to a greater extent in control rats. EFS-induced vasoconstriction was increased by L-NAME in arteries from both experimental groups. This increase was greater in segments from pregnant rats. Pregnancy decreased NA release while increasing NO release. nNOS expression was not modified but nNOS activation was increased by pregnancy. Pregnancy decreased NA-induced vasoconstriction response and did not modify DEA-NO-induced vasodilation response.

Conclusions and Implications

Neural control of mesenteric vasomotor tone was altered by pregnancy. Diminished sympathetic and enhanced nitrergic components both contributed to the decreased vasoconstriction response to EFS during pregnancy. All these changes indicate the selective participation of sympathetic and nitrergic innervations in vascular adaptations produced during pregnancy.  相似文献   

11.
Myogenic tone (MT) is a primary modulator of blood flow in the resistance vasculature of the brain, kidney, skeletal muscle, and perhaps in other high-flow organs such as the pregnant uterus. MT is known to be regulated by endothelium-derived factors, including products of the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) and/or the cyclooxygenase (COX) pathways. We asked whether pregnancy influenced MT in myometrial arteries (MA), and if so, whether such an effect could be attributed to alterations in NOS and/or COX. MA (200-300 μm internal diameter, 2-3 mm length) were isolated from 10 nonpregnant and 12 pregnant women undergoing elective hysterectomy or cesarean section, respectively. In the absence of NOS and/or COX inhibition, pregnancy was associated with increased MT in endothelium-intact MA compared with MA from nonpregnant women (P < 0.01). The increase in MT was not due to increased Ca(2+) entry via voltage-dependent channels since both groups of MA exhibited similar levels of constriction when exposed to 50 mM KCl. NOS inhibition (N(ω)-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester, l-NAME) or combined NOS/COX inhibition (l-NAME/indomethacin) increased MT in MA from pregnant women (P = 0.001 and P = 0.042, respectively) but was without effect in arteries from nonpregnant women. Indomethacin alone was without effect on MT in MA from either nonpregnant or pregnant women. We concluded that MT increases in MA during human pregnancy and that this effect was partially opposed by enhanced NOS activity.  相似文献   

12.
The present study tested the hypothesis that chronic hypoxia alters pregnancy-mediated adaptation of Ca2+ homeostasis and contractility in the uterine artery. Uterine arteries were isolated from nonpregnant and near-term pregnant ewes of normoxic control or high-altitude (3820 m) hypoxic (oxygen pressure in the blood [PaO2], 60 mm Hg) treatment for 110 days. Contractions and intracellular-free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) were measured simultaneously in the same tissue. In normoxic animals, pregnancy increased norepinephrine (NE), but not 5-hydroxy-thymide (5-HT) or KCl, contractile sensitivity in the uterine artery. Chronic hypoxia significantly attenuated NE-induced contractions in the pregnant, but not nonpregnant, uterine arteries. Similarly, 5-HT-mediated contractions of nonpregnant arteries were not changed. In the pregnant uterine artery, chronic hypoxia significantly increased NE-mediated Ca2+ mobilization, but decreased the Ca2+ sensitivity. In addition, hypoxia increased the calcium ionophore A23187-induced relaxation in pregnant, but not nonpregnant, uterine arteries. However, the A23187-mediated reduction of [Ca2+]i was significantly impaired in hypoxic arteries. In contrast, hypoxia significantly increased the slope of the [Ca2+]i-tension relationship of A23187-induced reductions in [Ca2+]i and tension in the pregnant uterine artery. The results suggest that the contractility of nonpregnant uterine artery is insensitive to moderate chronic hypoxia, but the adaptation of sympathetic tone that normally occurs in the uterine artery during pregnancy is inhibited by chronic hypoxia. In addition, changes in Ca2+ sensitivity of myofilaments play a predominant role in the adaptation of uterine artery contractility to pregnancy and chronic hypoxia.  相似文献   

13.
Little is known about the adaptation of uterine artery smooth muscle contractile mechanisms to pregnancy. The present study tested the hypothesis that pregnancy differentially regulates thick- and thin-filament regulatory pathways in uterine arteries. Isometric tension, intracellular free Ca(2+) concentration, and phosphorylation of 20-kDa myosin light chain (MLC(20)) were measured simultaneously in uterine arteries isolated from nonpregnant and near-term (140 days gestation) pregnant sheep. Phenylephrine-mediated intracellular free Ca(2+) concentration, MLC(20) phosphorylation, and contraction tension were significantly increased in uterine arteries of pregnant compared with nonpregnant animals. In contrast, phenylephrine-mediated Ca(2+) sensitivity of MLC(20) phosphorylation was decreased in the uterine arteries of pregnant sheep. Simultaneous measurement of phenylephrine-stimulated tension and MLC(20) phosphorylation in the same tissue indicated a decrease in MLC(20) phosphorylation-independent contractions in the uterine arteries of pregnant sheep. In addition, activation of PKC produced significantly lower sustained contractions in uterine arteries of pregnant compared with nonpregnant animals in the absence of changes in MLC(20) phosphorylation levels in either vessels. In uterine arteries of nonpregnant sheep, the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase/extracellular signal-regulated kinase inhibitor PD-098059 significantly increased phenylephrine-mediated, MLC(20) phosphorylation-independent contractions. The results suggest that in uterine arteries, pregnancy upregulates alpha(1)-adrenoceptor-mediated Ca(2+) mobilization and MLC(20) phosphorylation. In contrast, pregnancy downregulates the Ca(2+) sensitivity of myofilaments, which is mediated by both thick- and thin-filament pathways.  相似文献   

14.
We tested the hypothesis that chronic high-altitude (3,820 m) hypoxia during pregnancy was associated with the upregulation of endothelial nitric oxide (NO) synthase (eNOS) protein and mRNA in ovine uterine artery endothelium and enhanced endothelium-dependent relaxation. In pregnant sheep, norepinephrine-induced dose-dependent contractions were increased by removal of the endothelium in both control and hypoxic uterine arteries. The increment was significantly higher in hypoxic tissues. The calcium ionophore A23187-induced relaxation of the uterine artery was significantly enhanced in hypoxic compared with control tissues. However, sodium nitroprusside- and 8-bromoguanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate-induced relaxations were not changed. Accordingly, chronic hypoxia significantly increased basal and A23187-induced NO release. Chronic hypoxia increased eNOS protein and mRNA levels in the endothelium from uterine but not femoral or renal arteries. In nonpregnant animals, chronic hypoxia increased eNOS mRNA in uterine artery endothelium but had no effects on eNOS protein, NO release, or endothelium-dependent relaxation. Chronic hypoxia selectively augments pregnancy-associated upregulation of eNOS gene expression and endothelium-dependent relaxation of the uterine artery.  相似文献   

15.
Late pregnancy in rats is characterized by a decrease in arterial pressure and in isolated arterial vessels response to vasoconstrictors. In uterine arteries the pregnancy-associated attenuation of the response to vasoconstrictors has been attributed to an increase in basal and agonist-induced endothelial NO production. However, the role of NO in pregnancy-associated changes of systemic arteries reactivity to vasoactive agents remains to be fully elucidated. We examined whether pregnancy influences the reactivity of systemic arteries to vasodilator or vasoconstrictor agents through NO-dependent mechanisms. Thoracic aortic rings and mesenteric arterial bed of late pregnant rats showed refractoriness to phenylephrine-induced vasoconstriction that was abolished by NO synthase inhibition. The potency of L-NNA to enhance tension of aortic rings preconstricted with phenylephrine (10–20% of their maximal response) was significantly lower in preparations from pregnant animals. In phenylephrine-contracted aortas and mesenteric bed, the effects of the endothelium-dependent vasodilators acetylcholine, A23187 and bradykinin, were not influenced by pregnancy. Similarly, pregnancy did not affect the vasodilator responses of adenosine, isoproterenol, capsaicin, nitroprusside, forskolin, and Hoe234 in the mesenteric bed. NO synthase activity measured by determining the conversion of L−[3H]-arginine to L−[3H]-citrulline in aorta and mesenteric arteries homogenates was not altered by pregnancy. These findings show that endothelial-dependent and -independent vasodilators action as well as NO synthase activity in systemic arteries is uninfluenced by pregnancy, whereas pregnancy-associated hyporeactivity of systemic arteries to vasoconstrictors is related to an enhanced endothelial NO production either spontaneous or elicited directly or indirectly by vasoconstrictor agents. This interpretation implies that the enhanced NO production observed in systemic arteries during late pregnancy involves cellular pathways other than the ones involved in the response to endothelium-dependent vasodilators such as acetylcholine.  相似文献   

16.
Vasodilation that occurs during normal pregnancy is associated with enhanced relaxation and decreased contractile response to agonists, which are in part due to increased stimulated and basal nitric oxide (NO). In preeclampsia and/or pregnancies carried at high altitude (HA), this normal vascular adjustment is reversed or diminished. We previously reported that HA exposure did not inhibit the pregnancy-associated decrease in contractile response to agonist or basal NO in guinea pig uterine arteries (UA). We therefore sought to determine whether altitude interfered with effects of pregnancy on endothelium-dependent relaxation through a reduction in stimulated NO. We examined the relaxation response to ACh in UA and bradykinin in thoracic arteries (TA) and effects of NO inhibition with 200 microM N(G)-nitro-L-arginine (L-NNA) in arterial rings isolated from nonpregnant and pregnant guinea pigs exposed throughout gestation to low altitude (LA, 1,600 m, n = 26) or HA (3,962 m, n = 22). In pregnant UA, relaxation to ACh was enhanced (P < 0.05) at both altitudes and NO inhibition diminished, but did not reverse, ACh relaxation. The effect of L-NNA on the relaxation response to ACh was less in HA than in LA animals (P = 0.0021). In nonpregnant UA, relaxation to ACh was similar in LA and HA animals. L-NNA reversed the relaxation response to ACh at HA but not at LA. In TA, relaxation to bradykinin was unaltered by pregnancy or altitude and was completely reversed by NO inhibition. These data suggest that effects of NO inhibition are diminished in UA during pregnancy at HA. Additional studies are needed to confirm whether these effects are mediated through inhibition of stimulated NO. HA exposure did not inhibit relaxation to ACh, perhaps because of stimulation of other vasodilators.  相似文献   

17.
Previous studies have demonstrated that nitric oxide (NO) is involved in the uterine host defense against bacterial infection. In nonpregnant rats, NO production in the uterus was shown to be lower, and inducible NO synthase (NOS) expression was undetectable. However, studies in pregnant rats show abundant expression of inducible NOS with significant elevation in NO production in the uterus. We have recently reported that intrauterine Escherichia coli infection caused a localized increase in uterine NO production and inducible NOS expression in the nonpregnant rat. In our present study, we examined whether the uterine NO production, NOS expression, and uterine tumor necrosis factor-alpha protein are increased in pregnant rats with intrauterine pathogenic Escherichia coli infection. Unlike the nonpregnant state, the NO production in the infected uterine horn of pregnant rats was not significantly elevated after bacterial inoculation compared with the contralateral uterine horn. The expression of uterine NOS (types II and III) also did not show significant upregulation in the infected horn. This is in contrast to that in nonpregnant animals, in which type II NOS was induced in the uterus on infection. Moreover, intrauterine infection induced an elevated expression of tumor necrosis factor-alpha protein in the infected horn both of nonpregnant and of pregnant rats. These data suggest that the sequential stimulation of NOS expression, especially the inducible isoform, and generation of uterine NO are lacking during pregnancy despite an elevated tumor necrosis factor-alpha after infection. In summary, NO synthesis response may be maximal at pregnancy, and infection may not further induce the NO system. Present studies, together with our previous report that intrauterine infection-induced lethality in pregnancy rats was amplified with the inhibition of NO, suggest that pregnancy is a state predisposed for increased complications associated with intrauterine infection and that the constitutively elevated uterine NO during pregnancy may help contain or even reduce the risk of infection-related complications.  相似文献   

18.
Administration of the ovarian hormone relaxin to nonpregnant rats vasodilates the renal circulation comparable to pregnancy. This vasodilation is mediated by endothelin (ET), the ET(B) receptor, and nitric oxide. Furthermore, endogenous relaxin mediates the renal vasodilation and hyperfiltration that occur during gestation. The goal of this study was to investigate whether myogenic reactivity of small renal and mesenteric arteries is reduced in relaxin-treated rats comparable to the pregnant condition. Relaxin or vehicle was administered to virgin female Long-Evans rats for 5 days at 4 microg/h, thereby producing midgestational blood levels of the hormone. The myogenic responses of small renal arteries (200-300 microm in diameter) isolated from these animals were evaluated in an isobaric arteriograph system. Myogenic reactivity was significantly reduced in the small renal arteries from relaxin-treated compared with vehicle-treated rats. The reduced myogenic responses were mediated by the ET(B) receptor and nitric oxide since the selective ET(B) receptor antagonist RES-701-1 and the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester restored myogenic reactivity to virgin levels. The influence of relaxin was not limited to the renal circulation because myogenic reactivity was also reduced in small mesenteric arteries isolated from relaxin-treated rats. Thus relaxin administration to nonpregnant rats mimics pregnancy, insofar as myogenic reactivity of small renal and mesenteric arteries is reduced in both conditions.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of alcohol on maternal vascular adaptations to pregnancy is unknown. This study was designed to determine the effect of alcohol consumption on nitric oxide-mediated vascular function in mice during pregnancy. Female pregnant or nonpregnant C57BL/6J mice were fed a control diet or a liquid diet of 25% ethanol-derived calories for 13 days (from gestational days 6-18). Phenylephrine vasoconstriction was blunted in pregnancy compared with the nonpregnant state due to enhanced nitric oxide modulation, which was impaired by ethanol exposure. Although the EC50 and maximal responses to methacholine were not different in nonpregnant vs. pregnant mice, the nitric oxide component to methacholine-induced vasorelaxation was greater in the pregnant mice. Interestingly, alcohol affected only the pregnant animals in their response to methacholine. These data indicate that alcohol reduced the nitric oxide modulation of vascular response, which was more pronounced during pregnancy. These studies provide novel information regarding the effects of alcohol on the maternal vascular system during pregnancy and thereby contribute to further understanding of the adverse effects associated with prenatal alcohol exposure.  相似文献   

20.
The vascular response to pregnancy has been frequently studied in mesenteric artery models by investigating endothelial cell (EC)- and smooth muscle cell (SMC)-dependent responses to mechanical (flow-mediated vasodilation, myogenic reactivity, and vascular compliance) and pharmacological stimuli (G protein-coupled receptor responses: Gq(EC), Gs(SMC), Gq(SMC)). It is unclear to what extent these pathways contribute to normal pregnancy-induced vasodilation across species, strains, and/or gestational age and at which receptor level pregnancy affects the pathways. We performed a meta-analysis on responses to mechanical and pharmacological stimuli associated with pregnancy-induced vasodilation of mesenteric arteries and included 55 (188 responses) out of 398 studies. Most included studies (84%) were performed in Wistar and Sprague-Dawley rats (SDRs) and compared late gestation versus nonpregnant controls (80%). Pregnancy promotes flow-mediated vasodilation in all investigated species. Only in SDRs, pregnancy additionally stimulates both vasodilator Gq(EC) sensitivity (EC(50) reduced by -0.76 [-0.92, -0.60] log[M]) and Gs(SMC) sensitivity (EC(50) reduced by -0.51 [-0.82, -0.20] log[M]), depresses vasopressor Gq(SMC) sensitivity (EC(50) increase in SDRs by 0.23 [0.16, 0.31] log[M]), and enhances arterial compliance. We conclude that 1) pregnancy facilitates flow-mediated vasodilation at term among all investigated species, and the contribution of additional vascular responses is species and strain specific, and 2) late pregnancy mediates vasodilation through changes at the receptor level for the substances tested. The initial steps of vasodilation in early pregnancy remain to be elucidated.  相似文献   

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