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1.
Responses to proadrenomedullin NH2-terminal 20 peptide (hPAMP), a truncated analogue [hPAMP(12–20)], and adrenomedullin (hADM) were investigated in the mesenteric vascular bed of the cat. Under constant-flow conditions, injections of hPAMP, hPAMP(12–20), and hADM caused dose-related decreases in mesenteric perfusion pressure. hADM was 100-fold more potent than hPAMP, and 1000-fold more potent than hPAMP(12–20). Vasodilator responses to hPAMP and hADM were not altered by adrenergic-blocking agents, were similar in innervated and denervated preparations, and were similar when tone was increased by sympathetic nerve stimulation or phenylephrine infusion. Vasodilator responses to hPAMP and hADM were increased in duration by rolipram, a cAMP phosphodiesterase inhibitor. The present data suggest that vasodilator responses to the hPAMP and hADM are mediated by an increase in cAMP and that an interaction with the adrenergic nervous system is not involved.  相似文献   

2.
Responses to rat (r) adrenomedullin (ADM) and human (h) ADM were compared in the hindlimb vascular bed of the cat under conditions of controlled blood flow. Intra-arterial injections of rADM and hADM in doses of 0.03–1 nmol caused dose-related decreases in hindlimb perfusion pressure. In terms of relative vasodilator activity, rADM was similar to hADM. The time course of the vasodilator response and the recovery half times (T1/2) for the vasodilator response to rADM and hADM were not significantly different. Decreases in hindlimb perfusion pressure in response to rADM and hADM were not altered by the calcitonin gene-related peptide receptor antagonist, rCGRP(8–37), at the same time, vasodilator responses to calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) were significantly reduced. The T1/2 of the vasodilator response to rADM and hADM were significantly greater after administration of the cAMP-selective, type IV phosphodiesterase inhibitor, rolipram. These data demonstrate that decreases in hindlimb perfusion pressure in response to rADM and hADM are similar and that vasodilator responses to rADM are not dependent on the activation of CGRP receptors in the hindlimb vascular bed of the cat. These data further suggest that decreases in hindlimb perfusion pressure in response to rADM are mediated by smooth muscle increases in cAMP levels.  相似文献   

3.
In order to examine whether the truncated fragments of hCGRP, hCGRP(8-37) or hCGRP(12-37), behave as competitive CGRP receptor antagonists in the vascular system of the rat, systemic blood pressure was continually monitored in pentobarbital-anesthetized Sprague-Dawley rats. The IV administration of 7.9-527 pmol hCGRP/rat caused dose-related reductions in mean arterial blood pressure that lasted, depending on the dose, about 3-10 min. In contrast, hCGRP fragments 8-37 or 12-37 proved inactive up to 60,000 pmol/rat. Pretreatment with either 10 or 30 nmol hCGRP(8-37) or 20 or 90 nmol hCGRP(12-37)/rat reduced the magnitude of the CGRP-induced hypotensive responses caused by 79 pmol hCGRP/rat; pretreatment with 10 nmol of the hCGRP fragments displaced about 3-fold the hCGRP as well as the [Cys(ACM)2.7]hCGRP dose-response curve to the right in a parallel fashion. The specificity of hCGRP(8-37) as a CGRP receptor antagonist was documented by the finding that it did not antagonize the hypotensive responses induced with bradykinin, histamine or substance P.  相似文献   

4.
Vasodilator responses to human adrenomedullin (hADM), a newly discovered hypotensive peptide, human calcitonin gene-related peptide- (hCGRP-) and hCGRP-, which share structural homology with hADM, were compared in the hindlimb vascular bed of the cat under constant flow conditions. Injections of hADM (0.003-1 nmol), hCGRP-, and hCGRP- (0.003-0.3 nmol) into the perfusion circuit caused dose-related decreases in hindlimb perfusion pressure. Vasodilator responses to hCGRP- and hCGRP- were similar in potency and duration, and the doses of hCGRP- and hCGRP- required to reduce hindlimb perfusion pressure 40 mm Hg (ED40 mm Hg) were significantly lower than the ED40 mm Hg for hADM. The duration of the hindlimb vasodilator responses to hCGRP- and hCGRP- were significantly longer than the duration of the response to hADM. Amylin, a peptide that shares structural homology with ADM and with CGRP, had no significant effect on hindlimb perfusion pressure when injected in doses up to 1 nmol. Decreases in hindlimb perfusion pressure in response to hADM, hCGRP-, and hCGRP- were not altered by L-N5-(1-iminoethyl)-ornithine (L-NIO) in a dose of the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor that decreased the vasodilator response to acetylcholine or by the cyclooxygenase inhibitor, meclofenamate, in a dose that decreased the vasodilator response to archidonic acid. The present data demonstrate that hADM, hCGRP-, and hCGRP- have potent, but relatively short-lasting, vasodilator activity, and that vasodilator responses are not dependent on the release of nitric oxide or vasodilator prostaglandins in the hindlimb vascular bed of the cat.  相似文献   

5.
Communication between vascular smooth muscle (VSM) cells via low-resistance gap junctions may facilitate vascular function by synchronizing the contractile state of individual cells within the vessel wall. We hypothesized that inhibition of gap junctional communication would impair constrictor responses of mesenteric resistance arteries. Immunohistochemical experiments revealed positive staining for connexin 37 (Cx37) in both endothelium and smooth muscle of rat mesenteric arterioles, whereas connexin 43 (Cx43) immunoreactivity was not detected in the mesenteric vasculature. Administration of the gap junction inhibitory peptide Gap27, which targets Cx37 and Cx43, significantly diminished myogenic vasoconstriction (8.6 +/- 3.8% of passive diameter at 100 Torr) and changes in vessel wall intracellular [Ca2+] of mesenteric resistance arteries compared with vessels treated with either vehicle (physiological saline solution) (33.5 +/- 6.1%) or a control peptide (32.1 +/- 6.5%). Administration of 18alpha-glycyrrhetinic acid, structurally distinct from Gap27, also significantly attenuated myogenic constriction compared with its vehicle control (DMSO) (9.6 +/- 3.2% vs. 23.8 +/- 4.6%). In contrast, phenylephrine-induced vasoconstriction was not altered by gap junction blockers. Attenuated myogenic vasoconstriction resulting from inhibition of gap junctions persisted after disruption of the endothelium. In additional experiments, VSM cell membrane potential was recorded in mesenteric resistance arteries pressurized to 20 or 100 Torr. VSM membrane potential was depolarized at 100 Torr compared with 20 Torr. However, VSM cells in arteries treated with Gap27 were significantly hyperpolarized (-48.6 +/- 1.4 mV) at the higher pressure compared with vehicle (-41.4 +/- 1.5 mV) and Gap20-treated (-38.4 +/- 0.7 mV) vessels. Our findings suggest that inhibition of smooth muscle gap junctions attenuates pressure-induced VSM cell depolarization and myogenic vasoconstriction.  相似文献   

6.
S Akiyama  H Kawasaki  A Shimogai  Y Kurosaki 《Peptides》2001,22(11):1887-1893
We have reported that the rat mesenteric resistance artery has innervation of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)-containing vasodilator nerves (CGRPergic nerves). We also demonstrated that adrenomedullin (AM) causes mesenteric vasodilation through activation of CGRP receptors. The present study was designed to examine the effect of AM on neurotransmission of CGRPergic nerves in rat mesenteric arteries. In preconstricted preparations without endothelium, periarterial nerve stimulation (PNS, 1 and 2 Hz) induced a frequency-dependent vasodilation. A bolus injection of CGRP (10 pmol) into the perfusate also caused a vasodilation. AM (0.1 to 10 nM) concentration-dependently caused 40% to 60% inhibition of the PNS-induced vasodilation, but AM did not attenuate vasodilation induced by exogenous CGRP injection. The inhibitory effect of AM (10 nM) on PNS-induced vasodilation was further potentiated by CGRP [8-37] (CGRP receptor antagonist, 50 nM), which attenuated the vasodilator response to the CGRP injection. Combined perfusion of AM [22-52] (AM receptor antagonist, 10 to 100 nM) resulted in further inhibition of PNS-induced neurogenic vasodilation without affecting the vasodilator response to the CGRP injection. CGRP [8-37] but not AM [22-52] antagonized vasodilation induced by AM perfusion. These findings suggest that AM presynaptically inhibits neurotransmission of CGRPergic nerves, probably decreasing CGRP release, via receptors different from CGRP receptors.  相似文献   

7.
Akiyama S  Hobara N  Maruo N  Hashida S  Kitamura K  Eto T  Kawasaki H 《Peptides》2005,26(11):2222-2230
Adrenomedullin (AM) is a potent vasodilator peptide whose major source is the vascular wall. In the present study, the mechanism of release of AM was investigated in the rat mesenteric resistance artery. The isolated mesenteric vascular bed was perfused with Krebs solution at a constant flow rate (5 ml/min) and AM in the perfusate was measured by a highly sensitive enzyme immunoassay (Immunoenzymometric assay; IEMA) method. In preparations without endothelium, spontaneous release of AM was detected in the perfusate (68.7+/-5.8 fmol/ml, n=45). Periarterial nerve stimulation (PNS, 4 and 8 Hz) caused 11.4+/-3.9% (4 Hz) and 9.1+/-3.5% (8 Hz) decreases in the spontaneous release of AM. Removal of Ca2+ from the medium did not affect the spontaneous AM release, but abolished the PNS-induced inhibition of spontaneous AM release. Perfusion of 10nM calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) or 0.1 microM capsaicin (inducer of CGRP release) inhibited significantly the spontaneous AM release. PNS (8 Hz)-induced inhibition of spontaneous AM release was antagonized by CGRP(8-37) (CGRP receptor antagonist). These results suggest that AM is mainly released from vascular smooth muscle cells of the rat mesenteric artery and endogenous or exogenous CGRP inhibits AM release.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of histamine on the isolated rat common carotid, renal and cranial mesenteric arteries was examined. Histamine (10(-8)-10(-4) M) caused concentration-dependent relaxations of the arteries during contractions induced with phenylephrine (10(-8)-10(-7) M). Removal of the vascular endothelium inhibited the histamine-induced relaxations. Pyrilamine (6 X 10(-6) M), but not metiamide (10(-6) M), abolished the relaxant effect of histamine. Moreover, pyrilamine (6 X 10(-6) M) did not affect endothelium-dependent relaxations of the arteries produced with acetylcholine. These results indicate that histamine causes endothelium-dependent relaxations of the rat peripheral large conduit arteries, which appeared to be mediated via H1-histaminergic receptors.  相似文献   

9.
This study investigated the hypothesis that atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) responses are mediated by particulate guanylate cyclase in the pulmonary vascular bed of the cat. When tone in the pulmonary vascular bed was raised to a high steady level with the thromboxane mimic U-46619, injections of ANP caused dose-related decreases in lobar arterial pressure. After administration of HS-142-1, an ANP-A- and ANP-B-receptor antagonist, vasodilator responses to ANP were reduced. The nitric oxide (NO) synthase inhibitor N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) enhanced ANP vasodilator responses, suggesting that inhibition of NO modulates ANP responses. L-NAME administration with constant 8-bromo-cGMP infusion attenuated the increased vasodilator response to ANP, suggesting that supersensitivity to ANP occurs upstream to activation of a cGMP-dependent protein kinase. In pulmonary arterial rings, ANP produced concentration-related vasorelaxant responses with and without endothelium. Methylene blue, L-NAME, or N(omega)-monomethyl-L-arginine did not alter ANP vasorelaxant responses. These data show that ANP supersensitivity observed in the intact pulmonary vascular bed is not seen in isolated pulmonary arterial segments, suggesting that it may only occur in resistance vessel elements. These results suggest that ANP responses occur through activation of ANP-A and/or -B receptors in an endothelium-independent manner and are modulated by NO in resistance vessel elements in the pulmonary vascular bed of the cat.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of captopril treatment on neurally induced vasoconstrictor and vasodilator responses was examined in the isolated mesenteric arterial bed from normotensive and one-kidney, one clip hypertensive (1K1C) rats. In isolated mesenteric beds, electrical field stimulation (EFS) of perivascular nerves at basal tone induced a frequency-dependent increase in perfusion pressure that was greater in preparations from hypertensive rats compared with those from normotensive rats. Captopril treatment was associated with a decrease in vasoconstrictor responses in the hypertensive group compared with its non-treated control. Responses to norepinephrine (320 ng) were greater in hypertensive than normotensive groups; captopril reduced this response only in the hypertensive group. In preconstricted mesenteric arteries perfused with solutions containing guanethidine (5 microM) and atropine (1 microM), EFS elicited a frequency-dependent decrease in perfusion pressure that was abolished by tetrodotoxin (1 microM). Vasodilator responses to EFS were not affected by captopril treatment, although they were smaller in the hypertensive group. Acetylcholine (10 ng) induced similar decreases in perfusion pressure of normotensive and 1K1C groups; captopril did not influence these responses. These results indicate that captopril treatment does not affect the reduced neurogenic vasodilation but normalizes the augmented sympathetic-mediated vasoconstrictor responses of mesenteric resistance vessels of chronic 1K1C hypertensive rats.  相似文献   

11.
The perivascular sensory nerve (PvN) Ca(2+)-sensing receptor (CaR) is implicated in Ca(2+)-induced relaxation of isolated, phenylephrine (PE)-contracted mesenteric arteries, which involves the vascular endogenous cannabinoid system. We determined the effect of inhibition of diacylglycerol (DAG) lipase (DAGL), phospholipase A(2) (PLA(2)), and cytochrome P-450 (CYP) on Ca(2+)-induced relaxation of PE-contracted rat mesenteric arteries. Our findings indicate that Ca(2+)-induced vasorelaxation is not dependent on the endothelium. The DAGL inhibitor RHC 802675 (1 microM) and the CYP and PLA(2) inhibitors quinacrine (5 microM) (EC(50): RHC 802675 2.8 +/- 0.4 mM vs. control 1.4 +/- 0.3 mM; quinacrine 4.8 +/- 0.4 mM vs. control 2.0 +/- 0.3 mM; n = 5) and arachidonyltrifluoromethyl ketone (AACOCF(3), 1 microM) reduced Ca(2+)-induced relaxation of mesenteric arteries. Synthetic 2-arachidonoylglycerol (2-AG) and glycerated epoxyeicosatrienoic acids (GEETs) induced concentration-dependent relaxation of isolated arteries. 2-AG relaxations were blocked by iberiotoxin (IBTX) (EC(50): control 0.96 +/- 0.14 nM, IBTX 1.3 +/- 0.5 microM) and miconazole (48 +/- 3%), and 11,12-GEET responses were blocked by IBTX (EC(50): control 55 +/- 9 nM, IBTX 690 +/- 96 nM) and SR-141716A. The data suggest that activation of the CaR in the PvN network by Ca(2+) leads to synthesis and/or release of metabolites of the CYP epoxygenase pathway and metabolism of DAG to 2-AG and subsequently to GEETs. The findings indicate a role for 2-AG and its metabolites in Ca(2+)-induced relaxation of resistance arteries; therefore this receptor may be a potential target for the development of new vasodilator compounds for antihypertensive therapy.  相似文献   

12.
Chronic hypoxia (CH) is associated with both blunted agonist-induced and myogenic vascular reactivity, possibly due to an enhanced production of heme oxygenase (HO)-derived carbon monoxide (CO). However, the cellular location of the HO responsible for these effects has not been clearly established. Therefore, we examined the response to administration of the substrate for HO, heme-l-lysinate (HLL), in endothelium-intact and endothelium-denuded small mesenteric arteries from CH male Sprague-Dawley rats. Mesenteric arteries were isolated and mounted on glass cannulas, pressurized to 60 mmHg, and superfused with physiological saline solution. All experiments were performed in the presence of 100 microM N(omega)-nitro-l-arginine. The vasodilator response to HLL or exogenous CO was examined. HLL experiments were performed in the presence and absence of the HO inhibitor zinc protoporphyrin IX (ZnPPIX). HLL administration resulted in a dose-dependent vasodilator response that was abolished in the presence of ZnPPIX or by endothelial removal. Exogenous CO produced a vasodilator response that was independent of an intact endothelium. Cellular localization of HO was verified through immunohistochemistry in sections of the gut and aorta from CH and control animals. Staining for HO-1, HO-2, and endothelial nitric oxide synthase was confined to the endothelium. Thus we conclude that CO is a product of HO located within the endothelium.  相似文献   

13.
Synthetic peptides homologous to the extracellular loops of the major vascular connexins represent a novel class of gap junction blockers that have been used to assess the role of direct cellular communication in arteries and veins. However, the specificity of action of such peptides on the coupling between smooth muscle cells (SMCs) has not yet been fully characterized. Isolated third-order rat mesenteric arteries were therefore studied with respect to isometric tension (myography), intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) (Ca2+ -sensitive dyes), membrane potential, and input resistance (sharp intracellular glass electrodes). Confocal imaging was used for visualization of [Ca2+]i events in individual SMCs in the arterial wall and membrane currents (patch clamp) measured in individual SMCs isolated from the same arteries. A triple peptide combination (37,43Gap 27 + 40Gap 27 + 43Gap 26) increased intercellular resistance (measured as input resistance) in intact arterial segments without affecting the membrane conductance of individual cells and also interrupted electrical coupling between pairs of rat aortic A7r5 myocytes. In intact arterial segments, the peptides desynchronized [Ca2+]i transients in individual SMCs and abolished vasomotion without suppressing Ca2+ transients in individual cells. They also depolarized SMCs, increased [Ca2+]i, and attenuated acetylcholine-induced, endothelium-dependent smooth muscle hyperpolarization. Experiments with endothelium-denuded arteries suggested that the depolarization produced by the peptides under basal conditions was in part secondary to electrical uncoupling of the endothelium from SMCs with loss of a tonic hyperpolarizing effect of the endothelium. Taken together, the results indicate that connexin-mimetic peptides block electrical signaling in rat mesenteric small arteries without exerting major nonjunctional effects.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Responses to human CGRP, adrenomedullin (ADM), and proadrenomedullin NH2-terminal 20 peptide (PAMP) were studied in small human thymic arteries. CGRP, ADM, and PAMP produced concentration-dependent vasodilator responses in arteries preconstricted with the thromboxane mimic U-46619. Responses to ADM and PAMP were attenuated, whereas responses to CGRP were not altered by endothelial denudation. Inhibitors of nitric oxide synthase and guanylyl cyclase attenuated responses to ADM and PAMP but not to CGRP. The CGRP1 receptor antagonist CGRP(8-37) attenuated responses to CGRP and ADM but not to PAMP. Responses to CGRP were reduced by SQ-22536 and Rp-cAMPS, inhibitors of adenylyl cyclase and PKA. These data suggest that responses to CGRP and ADM are mediated by CGRP(8-37)-sensitive receptors and that the endothelial ADM receptor induces vasodilation by a nitric oxide-guanylyl cyclase mechanism, whereas a smooth muscle CGRP receptor signals by a cAMP-dependent mechanism. A different endothelial receptor recognizes PAMP and signals by a nitric oxide-dependent mechanism.  相似文献   

16.
Intermedin/adrenomedullin-2 (IMD/AM2) is a 47 amino acid peptide formed by enzymatic degradation of preprointermedin. The present study was undertaken to investigate the effects of rat IMD (rIMD) in the isolated buffer perfused rat lung (IBPR) under resting conditions and under conditions of elevated pulmonary vasoconstrictor tone (PVT). Under resting conditions in the IBPR, rIMD had little or no activity. When PVT was actively increased by infusion of U46619, bolus injection of IMD decreased pulmonary arterial pressure (PAP) in a dose-dependent manner. Since the pulmonary perfusion rate and left atrial pressure were constant, these reductions in PAP directly reflect reductions in pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR). The pulmonary vasodilator response to rIMD, when compared to calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) on a molar basis, was greater at the lowest and midrange doses. The degree of inhibition by CGRP8-37 on pulmonary vasodilator response to rIMD was significantly less when compared to CGRP. Pretreatment with L-nitro-arginine-methyl ester (L-NAME), unlike meclofenamate and glybenclamide, significantly reduced the pulmonary vasodilator responses to rIMD. rIMD administration induced cross-tachyphylaxis to the pulmonary vasodilator response to CGRP whereas CGRP administration did not alter the ability of rIMD to dilate the IBPR. Pulmonary vasodilator responses to repeated injections of rIMD did not undergo tachyphylaxis. The present data demonstrate rIMD possesses direct vasodilator activity in the rat pulmonary vascular bed. The present data suggest activation of CGRP1 receptors and release of nitric oxide (NO*) mediate the pulmonary vasodilator response to rIMD whereas cyclooxygenase products and KATP channels do not contribute to the pulmonary vasodilator response to rIMD. The ability of rIMD to induce heterologous desensitization of CGRP1 receptor activation, to retain much of its pulmonary vasodilator activity after inhibition of CGRP1 receptors, and to lack homologous desensitization together suggests the pulmonary, unlike the systemic, vasodilator response to rIMD may depend on other vasodilator mechanisms including receptors in the calcitonin-receptor-like-receptor (CRLR) family.  相似文献   

17.
Vasodilator responses were assessed in resistance arteries (100-200 microm) isolated from the gracilis muscle of normotensive rats after changes in dietary salt intake. Sprague-Dawley rats were maintained on either a high-salt (HS) diet (4.0% NaCl) or a low-salt (LS) diet (0.4% NaCl) for 4-8 wk (chronic) or 3 days (short-term) with water ad libitum. One group of short-term HS rats received a continuous intravenous infusion of a low dose (5 ng x kg(-1) x min(-1)) of ANG II to prevent the ANG II suppression that occurs with HS diet. Short-term and chronic HS diet eliminated arterial dilation in response to ACh and reduced PO(2) (30-40 mmHg) and the stable prostacyclin analog iloprost. ANG II infusion preserved the response to these vasodilator stimuli in short-term HS animals. Dilator responses to sodium nitroprusside and forskolin were unaffected by HS diet. These findings suggest that ANG II suppression during HS diet impairs vascular relaxation mechanisms upstream from the cAMP and cGMP second messenger systems.  相似文献   

18.
Relaxin mediates renal and mesenteric vascular adaptations to pregnancy by increasing endothelium-dependent vasodilation and compliance and decreasing myogenic reactivity. Diet-induced overweight and obesity are associated with impaired endothelial dysfunction and vascular remodeling leading to a reduction in arterial diameter. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that local vascular responses to relaxin are impaired in diet-induced overweight female rats on a high-fat cafeteria-style diet for 9 wk. Rats were chronically infused with either relaxin or placebo for 5 days, and vascular responses were measured in isolated mesenteric arteries and the perfused kidney. Diet-induced overweight significantly increased sensitivity to phenylephrine (by 17%) and vessel wall thickness, and reduced renal perfusion flow (RPFF; by 16%), but did not affect flow-mediated vasodilation, myogenic reactivity, and vascular compliance. In the normal weight rats, relaxin treatment significantly enhanced flow-mediated vasodilation (2.67-fold), decreased myogenic reactivity, and reduced sensitivity to phenylephrine (by 28%), but had no effect on compliance or RPFF. NO blockade by l-NAME diminished most relaxin-mediated effects. In diet-induced overweight rats, the vasodilator effects of relaxin were markedly reduced for flow-mediated vasodilation, sensitivity to phenylephrine, and myogenic response compared with the normal diet rats, mostly persistent under l-NAME. Our data demonstrate that some of the vasodilator responses to in vivo relaxin administration are impaired in isolated mesenteric arteries and the perfused kidney in diet-induced overweight female rats. This does not result from a decrease in Rxfp1 (relaxin family peptide receptor) expression but is likely to result from downstream disruption to endothelial-dependent mechanisms in diet-induced overweight animals.  相似文献   

19.
Relaxin, an insulin-like growth factor peptide, increases endothelium-dependent vasodilation and vascular compliance and decreases myogenic reactivity. These vascular effects significantly contribute to the physiological circulatory adaptations in pregnancy, particularly in the mesentery and kidney. Aging predisposes to vascular maladaptation and gestational hypertensive disease. We hypothesized that mild aging reduces the vascular responses to relaxin. In 20 young (10-12 wk) and 20 middle-aged (40-46 wk) female Wistar Hannover rats, vascular responses to chronic exposure of relaxin vs. placebo (5 days) were quantified in isolated mesenteric arteries and kidney. Vascular responses were evaluated using pressure-perfusion myograph, wire myograph, and an isolated perfused rat kidney model. Rxfp1 (relaxin family peptide) gene expression was determined by quantitative polymerase chain reaction. In young rats, relaxin stimulated nitric oxide (NO)-dependent flow-mediated vasodilation (2.67-fold, from 48 ± 9 to 18 ± 4 μl/min), reduced myogenic reactivity (from -1 ± 2 to 7 ± 3 μm/10 mmHg), and decreased mesenteric sensitivity to (28%, from 1.39 ± 0.08 to 1.78 ± 0.10 μM) but did not change compliance and renal perfusion flow (RPFF). In aged rats, relaxin did not affect any of the analyzed mesenteric or renal parameters. In aged compared with young placebo-treated rats, all mesenteric characteristics were comparable, while RPFF was lower (17%, from 6.9 ± 0.2 to 5.7 ± 0.1 ml·min?1·100 g?1) even though NO availability was comparable. Rxfp1 expression was not different among young and aged rats. Our findings suggest that moderate aging involves normal endothelial function but blunts the physiological endothelium-dependent and -independent vasodilator response to relaxin.  相似文献   

20.
Chan HY  Yao X  Tsang SY  Chan FL  Lau CW  Huang Y 《Life sciences》2001,69(14):1609-1617
The present study was aimed to examine the different role of endothelium/nitric oxide in relaxation induced by two female sex hormones, 17beta-estradiol and progesterone in rat isolated aortas and mesenteric arteries. The isometric force of each ring was measured with Grass force-displacement transducers in the organ bathes. 17beta-Estradiol induced both endothelium-dependent and -independent relaxation in the rat aortas but only the endothelium-independent relaxation in the rat mesenteric arteries. In contrast. progesterone induced both endothelium-dependent and -independent relaxation in the rat mesenteric arteries but only endothelium-independent relaxation in rat aortas. N(G)-Nitro-L-arginine methyl ester and methylene blue attenuated the relaxant response to 17beta-estradiol in the aortic rings or to progesterone in the mesenteric arteries. Pretreatment with L-arginine antagonized the effect of N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester on sex hormone-induced relaxation. The endothelium contribution to relaxation seems to only relate to lower concentrations of 17beta-estradiol and progesterone. In summary, the present results clearly demonstrate a different role of the functional endothelium in the relaxant response to 17beta-estradiol or progesterone in the conduit vessel (aorta) and the resistance vessels (mesenteric artery). Nitric oxide contributes largely to the endothelium-dependent relaxation induced by 17beta-estradiol in the isolated aortas or by progesterone in the mesenteric arteries.  相似文献   

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