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1.
Smooth muscle and endothelial cells in the arterial wall are exposed to mechanical stress. Indeed blood flow induces intraluminal pressure variations and shear stress. An increase in pressure may induce a vessel contraction, a phenomenon known as the myogenic response. Many muscular vessels present vasomotion, i.e., rhythmic diameter oscillations caused by synchronous cytosolic calcium oscillations of the smooth muscle cells. Vasomotion has been shown to be modulated by pressure changes. To get a better understanding of the effect of stress and in particular pressure on vasomotion, we propose a model of a blood vessel describing the calcium dynamics in a coupled population of smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells and the consequent vessel diameter variations. We show that a rise in pressure increases the calcium concentration. This may either induce or abolish vasomotion, or increase its frequency depending on the initial conditions. In our model the myogenic response is less pronounced for large arteries than for small arteries and occurs at higher values of pressure if the wall thickness is increased. Our results are in agreement with experimental observations concerning a broad range of vessels.  相似文献   

2.
Contractile sensitivity and reactivity to alpha- and beta-adrenoceptor stimulation was studied in incubated rabbit pulmonary artery cylindrical segments of differing diameters. Distinct differences were noted between the responses of extra- and intra-pulmonary pulmonary arteries to norepinephrine and isoproterenol. The sensitivity to norepinephrine was largest in the intrapulmonary pulmonary arteries. Arterial reactivity to norepinephrine was greatest in the larger of the intrapulmonary vessel segments, diminishing considerably as the vessels became smaller. Cocaine did not cause substantial alterations in the response of any of the arterial segments to the alpha-agonist. Phentolamine, however, exerted its influence primarily in the smaller arterial segments. Vascular sensitivity to isoproterenol was least in the intrapulmonary pulmonary arteries. These smaller vessel segments, however, were more reactive to isoproterenol than were the extrapulmonary pulmonary arterial segments. Propranolol, at a concentration of 10(-8) M, was an effective antagonist of the beta-agonist; at a concentration of 10(-7) M, however, this antagonist was related to isoproterenol-induced arterial contraction, apparently by stimulation of alpha-receptor sites. The results of this study demonstrated a regional heterogeneity in the contractile response of the pulmonary artery to alpha- and beta-stimulation. The extrapulmonary arterial segments were found to be more sensitive to beta-stimulation than were the smaller, intrapulmonary, segments. The intrapulmonary arterial segments, on the other hand, were found to be more sensitive to alpha-stimulation than were the extrapulmonary segments.  相似文献   

3.
Furchgott et al. demonstrated in 1980 that relaxation of arterial smooth muscle cells in response to acetylcholine is dependent on the integrity of endothelium. They named the factor responsible of this intercellular relationship EDRF (Endothelium Derived Relaxing Factor), which was identified 7 years latter as nitric oxide (NO), a free radical gas. In vessels, NO is generated locally by the endothelial NO synthase and its effect is mainly paracrine (relaxation of the underlying smooth muscle cells, and inhibition of platelet aggregation). The in vivo half-life of NO is short, and the assessment of its production is thus difficult. Invasive and non invasive techniques are now available to explore the variations of arterial diameter or flow. Furchgott's pioneering work anticipated the whole pathophysiology of endothelial-dependent relaxation. Indeed, numerous diseases, in particular atherosclerosis, are accompanied by abnormalities of endothelial-dependent vasodilation ("endothelial dysfunction"). Whereas acetylcholine (or serotonin) infused in a normal artery elicits a vasodilation, in contrast, it promotes a vasoconstriction in an atheromatous artery, as a consequence of a decrease in NO bioavailability. This defect in NO favors arterial spasm, interaction between platelets and arterial wall and thrombosis, and thus probably cardiovascular events. NO cannot be measured directly in humans, except in exhaled NO. In vivo, NO is rapidly oxidized in nitrite (NO2-) and in nitrate (NO3-), the summation being NOx. We shall detail the limitations of this measurement as a biochemical index of NO production from "endothelial" origin.  相似文献   

4.
We recently reported the existence of a bronchial epithelium-derived relaxing factor (BrEpRF) capable of reducing pulmonary arterial smooth muscle force generation in the newborn rat. We reasoned in this study that BrEpRF has physiological significance in the control of pulmonary vascular tone. We hypothesized that the release and/or activity of this factor can be stimulated and is suppressed prenatally or under hypoxic conditions postnatally. Therefore, we evaluated the pathways stimulated by the BrEpRF in fetal and newborn rat intrapulmonary arteries mounted with their adjacent bronchi in a wire myograph under both normoxic and hypoxic conditions. Under normoxic conditions, BrEpRF release/activation was observed in newborn vessels following methacholine stimulation of M(2) muscarinic receptors, which was mediated via a nitric oxide (NO)-dependent mechanism involving the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase pathway. Hypoxia suppressed the BrEpRF-dependent modulation of basal and methacholine-induced pulmonary arterial muscle tone in newborn vessels without altering endothelium-dependent or -independent NO-mediated relaxation. In fetal pulmonary arteries studied under normoxic conditions, BrEpRF neither was active under basal conditions nor could it be stimulated with methacholine. We conclude that release/activation of the BrEpRF occurs by an oxygen-dependent mechanism in the newborn and is suppressed during late fetal life. These results suggest that the BrEpRF may be involved in postnatal adaptation of the pulmonary circulation and that its suppression may contribute to hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction.  相似文献   

5.
The pathogenesis of cigarette smoke-induced pulmonary hypertension is not understood. We have previously shown that smoke rapidly and persistently, but discoordinately, upregulates gene expression of mediators that control vasoconstriction, vasoproliferation, and vasorelaxation in small intrapulmonary arteries. To investigate the possibility that smoke also induces endothelial dysfunction, a finding common to other forms of pulmonary hypertension, we exposed guinea pigs to smoke or air (control) daily for 2 wk and then prepared precision-cut lung slices. After exposure to endothelin-1, a vasoconstrictor, intra-acinar arteries in lung slices derived from smoke-exposed animals constricted more rapidly (greater constriction at a given concentration of endothelin) than did vessels from air-exposed animals. To examine relaxation responses, arteries were constricted with the vasoconstrictor U-46619 and then relaxed with progressively increasing doses of acetylcholine. Vessels from smokers had a delayed response to acetylcholine compared with vessels from controls. The NO synthase inhibitor N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester reduced relaxation in both control and smoke-exposed arteries, whereas the NO donor sodium nitroprusside increased relaxation of the smoke-exposed arteries, confirming that endothelial dysfunction with decreased effective NO production is present. These findings show that precision cut lung slices can be used to examine the physiological effects of cigarette smoke on intra-acinar pulmonary arteries and indicate that even relatively short-term exposure to smoke produces endothelial dysfunction with a resulting tendency to earlier constriction and later relaxation in cigarette smokers. These changes may be important in the development of pulmonary hypertension.  相似文献   

6.
Postobstructive pulmonary vasculopathy (POPV) was produced by chronic ligation (120 days) of the left main pulmonary artery of seven dogs. To explain the abnormal physiological changes found using arterial and venous occlusion (AVO) in POPV (J. Appl. Physiol. 69: 1022-1032, 1990), the light-microscopic morphology, morphometry (n = 5), and ultrastructure (n = 6) of ligated left lower lobes were compared with contralateral control right lower lobes. First, there was a proliferation of bronchial vessels around pulmonary vessels and airways to explain bronchial blood flow rates of 330 ml/min in left lower lobes. The walls of the bronchial vessels contained smooth muscle with minimal elastic tissue and prominent myoendothelial junctions. Second, focal bronchopulmonary anastomoses were seen in pulmonary arteries approximately equal to 100 microns diam, which is consistent with our conclusion that the major site of communication is at the precapillary level and suggests that the limit between arterial and middle segments defined by AVO may lie in arteries of approximately equal to 100 microns. Third, to explain the increased arterial resistance in POPV, the pulmonary arteries had an increased percent medial muscle thickness, peripheral muscularization, and focal intimal thickening but had no plexiform lesions. The ultrastructure of the arteries revealed new intimal cells and numerous myoendothelial junctions rarely found in controls. Capillaries and veins were only subtly altered. Fourth, the hyperreactivity of arteries to serotonin and of veins to histamine found using AVO was partially explained by the increased medial thickness and decreased diameter but may also be due to increased receptor concentration or related to the myoendothelial junctions. We conclude that most of the hemodynamic alterations in POPV are related to morphological abnormalities and that this model has clinical and experimental relevance in the study of bronchopulmonary vascular interactions.  相似文献   

7.
Although one of the common characteristics of pulmonary hypertension is abnormal sustained vasoconstriction, the signaling pathways that mediate this heightened pulmonary vascular response are still not well defined. Protein kinase C (PKC) and Rho-kinase are regulators of smooth muscle contraction induced by G protein-coupled receptor agonists including endothelin-1 (ET-1), which has been implicated as a signaling pathway in pulmonary hypertension. Toward this end, it was hypothesized that both Rho-kinase and PKC mediate the pulmonary vascular response to ET-1 in hypertensive pulmonary arterial smooth muscle, and therefore, the purpose of this study was to determine the role of PKC and Rho-kinase signaling in ET-1-induced vasoconstriction in both normotensive (Sprague-Dawley) and hypertensive (Fawn-Hooded) rat pulmonary arterial smooth muscle. Results indicate that ET-1 caused greater vasoconstriction in hypertensive pulmonary arteries compared with the normal vessels, and treatment with the PKC antagonists chelerythrine, rottlerin, and G? 6983 inhibited the vasoconstrictor response to ET-1 in the hypertensive vessels. In addition, the specific Rho-kinase inhibitor Y-27632 significantly attenuated the effect of ET-1 in both normotensive and hypertensive phenotypes, with greater inhibition occurring in the hypertensive arteries. Furthermore, Western blot analysis revealed that ET-1 increased RhoA expression in both normotensive and hypertensive pulmonary arteries, with expression being greater in the hypertensive state. These results suggest that both PKC and Rho/Rho-kinase mediate the heightened pulmonary vascular response to ET-1 in hypertensive pulmonary arterial smooth muscle.  相似文献   

8.
Although airway and pulmonary vessel tone are regulated predominantly by cholinergic and adrenergic impulses, biologically active peptides such as calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) may significantly influence human smooth muscle tone in normal and pathophysiological states. In the present study, the expression of CGRP and its receptor CGRPR-1 and the biological effect of the peptide were investigated in human airways and pulmonary arteries. Immunohistochemistry revealed the presence of CGRP in human airway nerves and neuro-epithelial cells, whereas the receptor was found in epithelial cells and smooth muscle myocytes of the bronchi and in pulmonary artery endothelium. On precontracted bronchi (3-4 mm in diameter) alpha-CGRP (0.01-10 nM) caused a concentration-dependent contraction on epithelium-denuded bronchi, whereas no significant effect was recorded in bronchi with intact epithelium. In pulmonary arteries (2-6 mm in diameter), alpha-CGRP caused a concentration-dependent relaxation of endothelium intact and denuded vessels. Pre-treatment with indomethacin, but not with l-NAME, prevented the relaxation induced by alpha-CGRP in pulmonary arteries suggesting that prostaglandins but not nitric oxide (NO) are involved in the intracellular signal transduction pathway. The effects induced by alpha-CGRP in bronchi and vessels were prevented by application of the antagonist CGRP((8-37)). In summary, the present studies examined the biological function of CGRP in human airways and demonstrated a constrictory effect of CGRP only in epithelium-denuded airway smooth muscle indicating an alteration of CGRP airway effects in respiratory tract pathological states with damaged epithelium such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or bronchial asthma.  相似文献   

9.
Endotoxemia is associated with changed pulmonary vascular function with respect to vasoreactivity, endothelial permeability, and activation of inducible nitric oxide synthase II (NOSII). However, whether altered passive arterial wall mechanics contribute to this endotoxin-induced pulmonary vascular dysfunction is still unknown. Therefore, we investigated whether endotoxin affects the passive arterial mechanics and compliance of isolated rat pulmonary arteries. Pulmonary arteries of pentobarbital-anesthetized Wistar rats (n = 55) were isolated and exposed to Escherichia coli endotoxin (50 microg/ml) for 20 h. Endotoxin increased pulmonary artery diameter and compliance (transmural pressure = 13 mmHg) in an endothelium-, Ca2+-, or NOSII-induced NO release-independent manner. Interestingly, the endotoxin-induced alterations in the passive arterial mechanics were accompanied by disassembly of the smooth muscle cell (SMC) F-actin cytoskeleton. Disassembly of F-actin by incubation of control arteries with the cytoskeleton-disrupting agent cytochalasin B or the Rho-kinase inhibitor Y-27632 induced a similar increase in passive arterial diameter and compliance. In contrast, RhoA activation by lysophosphatidic acid prevented the endotoxin-induced alterations in the pulmonary SMC F-actin cytoskeleton and passive mechanics. In conclusion, these findings indicate that disassembly of the SMC F-actin cytoskeleton and RhoA/Rho-kinase signaling act as mediators of endotoxin-induced changes in the pulmonary arterial mechanics. They imply the involvement of F-actin rearrangement and RhoA/Rho-kinase signaling in endotoxemia-induced vascular lung injury.  相似文献   

10.
The objective of this study was to develop an X-ray computed tomographic method for measuring pulmonary arterial dimensions and locations within the intact rat lung. Lungs were removed from rats and their pulmonary arterial trees were filled with perfluorooctyl bromide to enhance X-ray absorbance. The lungs were rotated within the cone of the X-ray beam projected from a microfocal X-ray source onto an image intensifier, and 360 images were obtained at 1 degrees increments. The three-dimensional image volumes were reconstructed with isotropic resolution using a cone beam reconstruction algorithm. The vessel diameters were obtained by fitting a functional form to the image of the vessel circular cross section. The functional form was chosen to take into account the point spread function of the image acquisition and reconstruction system. The diameter measurements obtained over a range of vascular pressures were used to characterize the distensibility of the rat pulmonary arteries. The distensibility coefficient alpha [defined by D(P) = D(0)(1 + alphaP), where D(P) is the diameter at intravascular pressure (P)] was approximately 2.8% mmHg and independent of vessel diameter in the diameter range (about 100 to 2,000 mm) studied.  相似文献   

11.
Although the level of myogenic tone (MT) varies considerably from vessel to vessel, the regulatory mechanisms through which the actual diameter set point is determined are not known. We hypothesized that a unifying principle may be the equalization of active force at the contractile filament level, which would be reflected in a normalization of wall stress or, more specifically, media stress. Branched segments of rat cerebral arteries ranging from <50 microm to >200 microm in diameter were cannulated and held at 60 mmHg with the objectives of: 1) evaluating the relationship between arterial diameter and the extent of myogenic tone, 2) determining whether differences in MT correlate with changes in cytosolic calcium ([Ca(2+)](i)), and 3) testing the hypothesis that a normalization of wall or media stress occurs during the process of tone development. The level of MT increased significantly as vessel size decreased. At 60 mmHg, vascular smooth muscle [Ca(2+)](i) concentrations were similar in all vessels studied (averaging 230 +/- 9.2 nM) and not correlated with vessel size or the extent of tone. Wall tension increased with increasing arterial size, but wall stress and media stress were similar in large versus small arteries. Media stress, in particular, was quite uniform in all vessels studied. Both morphological and calcium data support the concept of equalization of media stress (and, hence, vascular smooth muscle cell stress and force) as an underlying mechanism in determining the level of tone present in any particular vessel. The equalization of active (vascular smooth muscle cell) stress may thus explain differences in MT observed in the different-sized vessels constituting the arterial network and provide a link between arterial structure and function, in both short- and long-term (hypertension) pressure adaptation.  相似文献   

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

13.
In this study, we present a new approach for using the pressure vs. time data obtained after various vascular occlusion maneuvers in pump-perfused lungs to gain insight into the longitudinal distribution of vascular resistance with respect to vascular compliance. Occlusion data were obtained from isolated dog lung lobes under normal control conditions, during hypoxia, and during histamine or serotonin infusion. The data used in the analysis include the slope of the arterial pressure curve and the zero time intercept of the extrapolated venous pressure curve after venous occlusion, the equilibrium pressure after simultaneous occlusion of both the arterial inflow and venous outflow, and the area bounded by equilibrium pressure and the arterial pressure curve after arterial occlusion. We analyzed these data by use of a compartmental model in which the vascular bed is represented by three parallel compliances separated by two series resistances, and each of the three compliances and the two resistances can be identified. To interpret the model parameters, we view the large arteries and veins as mainly compliance vessels and the small arteries and veins as mainly resistance vessels. The capillary bed is viewed as having a high compliance, and any capillary resistance is included in the two series resistances. With this view in mind, the results are consistent with the major response to serotonin infusion being constriction of large and small arteries (a decrease in arterial compliance and an increase in arterial resistance), the major response to histamine infusion being constriction of small and large veins (an increase in venous resistance and a decrease in venous compliance), and the major response to hypoxia being constriction of the small arteries (an increase in arterial resistance). The results suggest that this approach may have utility for evaluation of the sites of action of pulmonary vasomotor stimuli.  相似文献   

14.
Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) is a ubiquitous, pollutant gas that produces a broad range of pathological and physiological effects on the lung. Absorption of inhaled NO2 is coupled to near-interfacial reactions between the solute gas and constituents of the airway and alveolar epithelial lining fluid. Although alveolar surfactant imparts limited resistance to respiratory gas exchange compared with that contributed by either the pulmonary membrane or uptake in red blood cells, resistance to NO2 flux could have a significant effect on NO2 absorption kinetics. To investigate the effect of interfacial surfactant on NO2 absorption, we designed an apparatus permitting exposure of variably compressed monolayers. Our results suggest that compressed monolayers enriched in 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-3-glycero-phosphocholine present significant resistance to NO2 absorption even at surface tensions greater than those achieved in vivo. However, monolayers composed of pure unsaturated phospholipids failed to alter NO2 absorption significantly when compressed, in spite of similar reductions in surface tension. The results demonstrate that phospholipid monolayers appreciably limit NO2 absorption and further that monolayer-induced resistance to NO2 flux is related to physicochemical properties of the film itself rather than alterations within the aqueous and gas phases. On the basis of these findings, we propose that pulmonary surfactant may influence the intrapulmonary gas phase distribution of inhaled NO2.  相似文献   

15.
Septic shock is characterized by an increase in cardiac output and a fall in systemic vascular resistance index and mean arterial pressure. Endotoxin alters the smooth muscle function of blood vessels, probably by means of an increased production of the potent vasodilator nitric oxide (NO). The present study was accomplished to determine how the inhibition of NO synthesis influences cardiovascular performance in an ovine model of hyperdynamic endotoxemia. Endotoxemia was induced in five range ewes (41 +/- 2 kg) by continuous infusion of Escherichia coli endotoxin (LPS, 10 ng.kg-1.min-1) over the entire study period. After 24 h of LPS infusion, cardiac output increased from 5.2 +/- 0.3 to 7.9 +/- 0.6 (SE) 1/min (P less than 0.05) and mean arterial pressure and systemic vascular resistance index fell from 92 +/- 5 to 79 +/- 6 mmHg (P = 0.08) and from 1,473 +/- 173 to 824 +/- 108 dyn.s.cm-5.m2 (P less than 0.05), respectively. The pulmonary shunt fraction increased from 0.23 +/- 0.03 to 0.32 +/- 0.03 (P less than 0.05). The intravenous administration of the NO synthase inhibitor N omega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (25 mg/kg) 24 h after the start of the LPS infusion changed these values to approximately baseline levels over the subsequent 4 h. Although N omega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester increased pulmonary arterial pressure and pulmonary vascular resistance (P less than 0.05), right and left ventricular stroke volume index showed no significant changes. It is concluded that NO has a major function in cardiovascular performance in endotoxemia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Investigating the recruitment and synchronization of smooth muscle cells (SMCs) is the key to understanding the physical mechanisms leading to contraction and spontaneous diameter oscillations of arteries, called vasomotion. We improved a method that allows the correlation of calcium oscillations (flashing) of individual SMCs with mean calcium variations and arterial contraction using confocal microscopy. Endothelium-stripped rat mesenteric arteries were cut open, loaded with dual calcium fluorescence probes, and stimulated by increasing concentrations of the vasoconstrictors phenylephrine (PE) and KCl. We found that the number and synchronization of flashing cells depends on vasoconstrictor concentration. At low vasoconstrictor concentration, few cells flash asynchronously and no local contraction is detected. At medium concentration, recruitment of cells is complete and synchronous, leading to strip contraction after KCl stimulation and to vasomotion after PE stimulation. High concentration of PE leads to synchronous calcium oscillations and fully contracted vessels, whereas high concentration of KCl leads to a sustained nonoscillating increase of calcium and to fully contracted vessels. We conclude that the number of simultaneously recruited cells is an important factor in controlling rat mesenteric artery contraction and vasomotion.  相似文献   

17.
Nitric oxide (NO) reacts with superoxide anion to form the peroxynitrite anion (ONOO-), a molecule with pulmonary vasodilator properties in the adult rat. The purpose of this study was to compare the effects of ONOO- on intrapulmonary arteries from the newborn (days 4-7), juvenile (day 14), and adult rat. Following thromboxane A2 (TXA2) analogue (U46619) prestimulation, newborn vessels were more sensitive to ONOO- -induced muscle contraction, compared to both the juvenile and the adult vessels. Peroxynitrite-induced contraction in newborn vessels was abrogated by ibuprofen, an endothelin B-receptor blocker (A-192621), or a rho-kinase-specific inhibitor (Y27632) (all p < 0.01). Following KCl stimulation and TXA2 receptor blockade, ONOO- induced NO-dependent muscle relaxation in newborn vessels via stimulation of the endothelial and inducible nitric oxide synthases. However, in the presence of ONOO-, the pulmonary artery relaxation response to endothelium-dependent stimulation was significantly reduced (p < 0.01). Finally, newborn but not adult pulmonary arteries exposed to ONOO- showed a 10-fold increase in 8-isoprostane production, a possible mediator of ONOO- -induced contraction. We conclude that exposure to ONOO- results in a unique response in newborn intrapulmonary arteries characterized by increased 8-isoprostane generation, which we believe is responsible for its vasoconstrictor effect. This unique response potentially renders the newborn more susceptible to ONOO- -induced pulmonary hypertension than older animals.  相似文献   

18.
Theoretical mass transfer rates and concentration distributions were determined for transient diffusion of free nitric oxide (NO) generated in vivo from vascular endothelial cells. Our analytical framework is typical of the bronchial circulation in the human pulmonary system but is applicable to the microvascular circulation in general. We characterized mass transfer rates in terms of the fractional mass flux across a boundary relative to the total endothelial NO production rate. NO concentration in the tissue surrounding blood vessels was expressed in terms of fractional soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) activity. Our results suggest that endothelium-derived free NO is capable of vascular smooth muscle dilation despite its rapid consumption by hemoglobin in blood. An optimal blood vessel radius of 20 microm was estimated for NO signaling. We hypothesize intermittent generation of endothelial NO as a possible mechanism for sGC activation in vascular smooth muscle. This mechanism enhances the efficacy of NO-modulated vascular smooth muscle dilation while minimizing NO losses to blood and surrounding tissue.  相似文献   

19.
The concept of endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF) implies that nitric oxide (NO) produced by NO synthase (NOS) in the endothelium in response to vasorelaxants such as acetylcholine (ACh) acts on the underlying vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC) inducing vascular relaxation. The EDRF concept was derived from experiments on denuded blood vessel strips and, in frames of this concept, VSMC were regarded as passive recipients of NO from endothelial cells. However, it was later found that VSMC express NOS by themselves, but the principal question remained unanswered, is the NO generation by VSMC physiologically relevant? We hypothesized that the destruction of the vascular wall anatomical integrity by rubbing off the endothelial layer might increase vascular superoxides that, in turn, reduced the NO bioactivity as a relaxing factor. To test our hypothesis, we examined ACh-induced vasorelaxation under protection against oxidative stress and found that superoxide scavengers restored vasodilatory responses to ACh in endothelium-deprived blood vessels. These findings imply that VSMC can release NO in amounts sufficient to account for the vasorelaxatory response and challenge the concept of the obligatory role of endothelial cells in the relaxation of arterial smooth muscle.  相似文献   

20.
Knowledge of the contributions of arterialand venous transit time dispersion to the pulmonary vascular transittime distribution is important for understanding lung function and forinterpreting various kinds of data containing information aboutpulmonary function. Thus, to determine the dispersion of blood transittimes occurring within the pulmonary arterial and venous trees, imagesof a bolus of contrast medium passing through the vasculature ofpump-perfused dog lung lobes were acquired by using an X-ray microfocalangiography system. Time-absorbance curves from the lobar artery andvein and from selected locations within the intrapulmonary arterial tree were measured from the images. Overall dispersion within the lunglobe was determined from the difference in the first and second moments(mean transit time and variance, respectively) of the inlet arterialand outlet venous time-absorbance curves. Moments at selected locationswithin the arterial tree were also calculated and compared with thoseof the lobar artery curve. Transit times for the arterial pathwaysupstream from the smallest measured arteries (200-µm diameter) wereless than ~20% of the total lung lobe mean transit time. Transittime variance among these arterial pathways (interpathway dispersion)was less than ~5% of the total variance imparted on the bolus as itpassed through the lung lobe. On average, the dispersion that occurredalong a given pathway (intrapathway dispersion) was negligible. Similar results were obtained for the venous tree. Taken together, the resultssuggest that most of the variation in transit time in theintrapulmonary vasculature occurs within the pulmonary capillary bedrather than in conducting arteries or veins.

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