首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The sympathetic nervous system has greater influence on vascular resistance in low-oxidative, fast-twitch skeletal muscle than in high-oxidative skeletal muscle (17). The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that arterioles isolated from low-oxidative, fast-twitch skeletal muscle [the white portion of gastrocnemius (WG)] possess greater responsiveness to adrenergic constriction than arterioles isolated from high-oxidative skeletal muscle [red portion of the gastrocnemius muscle (RG) and diaphragm (Dia)]. Second-order arterioles (2As) were isolated from WG, RG, and Dia of rats and reactivity examined in vitro. Results reveal that Dia 2As constrict less to norepinephrine (NE) (10(-9) to 10 (-4) M) than 2As from RG and WG, which exhibited similar NE-induced constrictions. This difference was not endothelium dependent, because responses of denuded 2As were similar to those of intact arterioles. The blunted NE-induced constrictor response of Dia 2As appears to be the result of differences in alpha1-receptor effects because 1) arterioles from Dia also responded less to selective alpha1-receptor stimulation with phenylephrine than RG and WG arterioles; 2) arterioles from Dia, RG, and WG dilated similarly to isoproterenol (10(-9) to 10(-4) M) and did not respond to selective alpha2-receptor stimulation with UK-14304; and 3) endothelin-1 produced similar constriction in 2As from Dia, RG, and WG. We conclude that differences in oxidative capacity and/or fiber type composition of muscle tissue do not explain different NE responsiveness of Dia 2As compared with 2As from gastrocnemius muscle. Differences in alpha1-adrenergic constrictor responsiveness among arterioles in skeletal muscle may contribute to nonuniform muscle blood flow responses observed during exercise and serve to maintain blood flow to Dia during exercise-induced increases in sympathetic nerve activity.  相似文献   

2.
Regional differences in responses of isolated monkey arteries and veins to atrial natriuretic peptide were investigated by recording isometric tension. Addition of atrial natriuretic peptide (4 X 10(-12) to 4 X 10(-8) M) produced a concentration-dependent relaxation in isolated monkey arteries and veins. No significant difference was observed between the responses to rat and human atrial natriuretic peptides. A marked heterogeneity in responses to rat atrial natriuretic peptide, however, was observed in arterial preparations. The decreasing order of the response was as follows: renal greater than pulmonary greater than femoral = mesenteric greater than coronary greater than middle cerebral greater than basilar arteries. A heterogeneity in the relaxation produced by atrial natriuretic peptide was also observed in monkey veins. The decreasing order of the response was as follows: pulmonary greater than mesenteric = portal greater than femoral greater than renal = inferior caval veins. On the other hand, 10(-5) M sodium nitroprusside caused a maximal relaxation in all monkey arteries and veins used. In the middle cerebral, basilar, and coronary arteries, the relaxant effects of rat atrial natriuretic peptide on KCl-induced contraction were significantly smaller than those on the preparations contracted by an agonist such as prostaglandin F2 alpha. These results suggest that there exist profound regional vasorelaxant selectivities of atrial natriuretic peptide in isolated monkey arteries and veins.  相似文献   

3.
Previous work has shown that orthostatic hypotension associated with cardiovascular deconditioning results from inadequate peripheral vasoconstriction. We used the hindlimb-unloaded (HU) rat in this study as a model to induce cardiovascular deconditioning. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that 14 days of HU diminishes vasoconstrictor responsiveness of mesenteric resistance arteries. Mesenteric resistance arteries from control (n = 43) and HU (n = 44) rats were isolated, cannulated, and pressurized to 108 cm H(2)O for in vitro experimentation. Myogenic (intralumenal pressure ranging from 30 to 180 cm H(2)O), KCl (2-100 mM), norepinephrine (NE, 10(-9)-10(-4) M) and caffeine (1-20 mM) induced vasoconstriction, as well as the temporal dynamics of vasoconstriction to NE, were determined. The active myogenic and passive pressure responses were unaltered by HU when pressures remained within physiological range. However, vasoconstrictor responses to KCl, NE, and caffeine were diminished by HU, as well as the rate of constriction to NE (C, 14.8 +/- 3.6 microm/s vs. HU 7.6 +/- 1.8 microm/s). Expression of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)ATPase 2 and ryanodine 3 receptor mRNA was unaffected by HU, while ryanodine 2 receptor mRNA and protein expression were diminished in mesenteric arteries from HU rats. These data suggest that HU-induced and microgravity-associated orthostatic intolerance may be due, in part, to an attenuated vasoconstrictor responsiveness of mesenteric resistance arteries resulting from a diminished ryanodine 2 receptor Ca(2+) release mechanism.  相似文献   

4.
We measured renal functions and hormones associated with fluid regulation after a bolus injection of aldosterone (Ald) during head-down tilt (HDT) bed rest to test the hypothesis that exposure to simulated microgravity altered renal responsiveness to Ald. Six male rhesus monkeys underwent two experimental conditions (HDT and control, 72 h each) with each condition separated by 9 days of ambulatory activities to produce a crossover counterbalance design. One test condition was continuous exposure to 10 degrees HDT; the second was a control, defined as 16 h per day of 80 degrees head-up tilt and 8 h prone. After 72 h of exposure to either test condition, monkeys were moved to the prone position, and we measured the following parameters for 4 h after injection of 1-mg dose of Ald: urine volume rate (UVR); renal Na(+)/K(+) excretion ratio; renal clearances of creatinine, Na(+), osmolality, and free water; and circulating hormones [Ald, renin activity (PRA), vasopressin (AVP), and atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP)]. HDT increased Na(+) clearance, total renal Na(+) excretion, urine Na(+) concentration, and fractional Na(+) excretion, compared with the control condition, but did not alter plasma concentrations of Ald, PRA, and AVP. Administration of Ald did not alter UVR, creatinine clearance, Ald, PRA, AVP, or ANP but reduced Na(+) clearance, total renal Na(+) excretion, urinary Na(+)/K(+) ratio, and osmotic clearance. Although reductions in Na(+) clearance and excretion due to Ald were greater during HDT than during control, the differential (i.e., interaction) effect was minimal between experimental conditions. Our data suggest that exposure to microgravity increases renal excretion of Na(+) by a natriuretic mechanism other than a change in renal responsiveness to Ald.  相似文献   

5.
We have previously shown that ANP causes differential constriction of the splenic vasculature of the rat (veins greater than arteries), which may be inhibited by blocking the production of cGMP with A7195. In this paper, we report experiments done on vessels derived from guanylyl cyclase (GC)-A knockout mice. Small splenic arteries ( approximately 150-microm diameter) and veins ( approximately 250-microm diameter) were dissected from male GC-A-deficient 129sv mice or age-matched wild-type controls and mounted in a wire myograph. In the wild-type mice, ANP exhibited higher potency in the veins than in the arteries (EC(50) values wild-type mice: artery, 8 +/- 3 x 10(-9) M, n = 5 vs. vein, 6 +/- 4 x 10(-10) M, n = 5; P < 0.05). The concentration-response curve for ANP-induced vasoconstriction was also shifted leftward in denuded compared with intact arteries (EC(50) values: denuded artery: 5 +/- 3 x 10(-10) M, n = 5 vs. intact artery, 8 +/- 3 x 10(-9) M, n = 5; P < 0.05), i.e., the denuded vessels were more reactive. By contrast, ANP caused no significant change in tension from baseline in intact splenic arteries, intact splenic veins, or denuded splenic arteries derived from the GC-A-deficient mice, although these vessels did show normal concentration-dependent increases in tension to phenylephrine. We conclude that ANP causes vasoconstriction in the splenic vasculature by an endothelium-independent mechanism, mediated via guanylyl cyclase.  相似文献   

6.
Peripheral and splanchnic vasodilatation in cirrhotic patients has been related to hyporesponsiveness to vasoconstrictors, but studies to examine the vascular adrenergic response provide contradictory results. Hepatic arteries from cirrhotic patients undergoing liver transplantation and mesenteric arteries from liver donors were obtained. Segments 3 mm long from these arteries were mounted in organ baths for testing isometric adrenergic response. The concentration-dependent contraction to noradrenaline (10(-8) to 10(-4) M) was similar in hepatic and mesenteric arteries, and prazosin (alpha 1-adrenergic antagonist, 10(-6) M), but not yohimbine (alpha 2-adrenergic antagonist, 10(-6) M), produced a rightward parallel displacement of this contraction in both types of arteries. Phenylephrine (alpha 1-adrenergic agonist, 10(-8) to 10(-4) M) and clonidine (alpha 2-adrenergic agonist, 10(-8) to 10(-4) M) also produced concentration-dependent contractions that were comparable in hepatic and mesenteric arteries. The inhibitor of cyclooxygenase meclofenamate (10(-5) M), but not the inhibitor of nitric oxide synthesis N(w)-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester (l-NAME, 10(-4) M), potentiated the response to noradrenaline in hepatic arteries; neither inhibitor affected the response to noradrenaline in mesenteric arteries. Diphenyleneiodonium (DPI; 5 x 10(-6) M), but neither catalase (1000 U/ml) nor tiron (10(-4) M), decreased the maximal contraction for noradrenaline similarly in hepatic and mesenteric arteries. Therefore, it is suggested that, in splanchnic arteries from cirrhotic patients, the adrenergic response and the relative contribution of alpha 1- and alpha 2-adrenoceptors in this response is preserved, and prostanoids, but not nitric oxide, may blunt that response. Products dependent on NAD(P)H oxidase might contribute to the adrenergic response in splanchnic arteries from control and cirrhotic patients.  相似文献   

7.
Vasorelaxant effects of different atrial natriuretic peptides (ANP) were measured on rat aortic strips and mesenteric artery rings. These results were compared with the potency of the same peptides to displace 125I-labelled ANP (101-126) on membrane preparations of aorta and of mesenteric vascular bed. In aortic strips and mesenteric artery rings precontracted with phenylephrine (3 X 10(-8) and 10(-6) M, respectively), the order of potency of ANP was as follows: ANP (99-126) greater than ANP (101-126) greater than ANP (103-126) = ANP (103-125) much greater than ANP (103-123). In the displacement binding assays, the order of potency of ANP peptides was similar to that of the relaxation experiments: ANP (99-126) = ANP (101-126) greater than ANP (103-126) = ANP (103-125) much greater than ANP (103-123). When the vessels were precontracted by a smaller concentration of phenylephrine (10(-7) M in mesenteric artery and 10(-8) M in aorta), the IC50 of ANP (101-126) was significantly lower than when the higher concentration of phenylephrine was used. These results show that ANP receptors in the mesenteric artery and in the aorta have similar structural requirements, according to the order of potency of different length ANP, both for binding and myotropic responses.  相似文献   

8.
Microgravity is associated with an impaired cardiac output response to orthostatic stress. Mesenteric veins are critical in modulating cardiac filling through venoconstriction. The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of simulated microgravity on the capacitance of rat mesenteric small veins. We constructed pressure-diameter relationships from vessels of 21-day hindlimb-unweighted (HLU) rats and control rats by changing the internal pressure and measuring the external diameter. Pressure-diameter relationships were obtained both before and after stimulation with norepinephrine (NE). The pressure-diameter curves of HLU vessels were shifted to larger diameters than control vessels. NE (10(-4) M) constricted veins from control animals such that the pressure-diameter relationship was significantly shifted downward (i.e., to smaller diameters at equal pressure). NE had no effect on vessels from HLU animals. These results indicate that, after HLU, unstressed vascular volume may be increased and can no longer decrease in response to sympathetic stimulation. This may partially underlie the mechanism leading to the exaggerated fall in cardiac output and stroke volume seen in astronauts during an orthostatic stress after exposure to microgravity.  相似文献   

9.
Changes in mesenteric arterial diameters were studied using intravital microscopy in chick fetuses at days 13 and 17 of incubation, corresponding to 0.6 and 0.8 fetal incubation time, both during 5 min of hypoxia followed by 5 min of reoxygenation and after topical administration of increasing concentrations (10(-6)-10(-2) M) of norepinephrine (NE) and acetylcholine (ACh). Baseline diameters of second-order mesenteric arteries increased from 56 microm at 0.6 incubation to 75 microm at 0.8 incubation. Acute hypoxia induced a reduction in arterial diameter to 87 +/- 4.4% of baseline at 0.6 incubation and to 44 +/- 6.7% at 0.8 incubation (P < 0.01). During reoxygenation, mesenteric arteries dilated to 118 +/- 6.5% and 121 +/- 7.5% of baseline at 0.6 and 0.8 fetal incubation time, respectively. Phentolamine did not affect the vasoconstriction during hypoxia at 0.6 incubation, whereas this alpha-adrenergic antagonist significantly attenuated the vasoconstrictor response at 0.8 incubation (to 93 +/- 2.7% of baseline, P < 0.01). Topical NE induced maximal vasoconstriction to 71 +/- 3% of baseline at 0.6 incubation and to 35 +/- 3.8% at 0.8 incubation (P < 0.01). Maximal vasodilation to topical ACh was 113 +/- 4.4% and 122 +/- 4.8% of baseline at 0.6 and 0.8 incubation, respectively. These in vivo findings show that fetal mesenteric arteries constrict in response to acute hypoxia and that the increase in magnitude of this vasoconstrictor response from 0.6 to 0.8 of fetal development results from an increase in adrenergic constrictor capacity.  相似文献   

10.
Cephalic elevations in arterial pressure associated with microgravity and prolonged bed rest alter cerebrovascular autoregulation in humans. Using the head-down tail-suspended (HDT) rat to chronically induce headward fluid shifts and elevate cerebral artery pressure, previous work has likewise shown cerebral perfusion to be diminished. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that 2 wk of HDT reduces cerebral artery vasodilation. To test this hypothesis, dose-response relations for endothelium-dependent (2-methylthioadenosine triphosphate and bradykinin) and endothelium-independent (nitroprusside) vasodilation were determined in vitro in middle cerebral arteries (MCAs) from HDT and control rats. All in vitro measurements were done in the presence and absence of the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (10(-5) M) and cyclooxygenase inhibitor indomethacin (10(-5) M). MCA caveolin-1 protein content was measured by immunoblot analysis. Endothelium-dependent vasodilation to 2-methylthioadenosine triphosphate and bradykinin were both lower in MCAs from HDT rats. These lower vasodilator responses were abolished with N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester but were unaffected by indomethacin. In addition, HDT was associated with lower levels of MCA caveolin-1 protein. Endothelium-independent vasodilation was not altered by HDT. These results indicate that chronic cephalic fluid shifts diminish endothelium-dependent vasodilation through alterations in the endothelial nitric oxide synthase signaling mechanism. Such decrements in endothelium-dependent vasodilation of cerebral arteries could contribute to the elevations in cerebral vascular resistance and reductions in cerebral perfusion that occur after conditions of simulated microgravity in HDT rats.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of naloxone on canine splanchnic arterial smooth muscle   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The pharmacological properties of naloxone on vascular smooth muscle in vitro were examined using canine mesenteric arterial segments. Naloxone exerted two different effects on the artery: (A) naloxone at a high concentration (3 X 10(-4) M) produced a nonspecific vasodilation; and (B) naloxone at lower concentrations (3 X 10(-7), 3 X 10(-6), and 3 X 10(-5) M) augmented the vasoconstrictor effects of epinephrine and norepinephrine without altering KCl- or serotonin-induced constriction. Naloxone's augmenting effect on epinephrine-induced constriction was dose dependent. Even when the arterial strips were incubated in low calcium (0.8 mM) or calcium free Kreb's solution, naloxone (3 X 10(-5) M) still augmented epinephrine-induced constriction. With respect to naloxone's effect on another alpha-adrenoreceptor agonist, naloxone (3 X 10(-5) M) failed to alter phenylephrine-induced constriction. Naloxone's augmenting effect on norepinephrine-induced constriction was abolished when the specimens were incubated with 10(-5) M normetanephrine, while naloxone (3 X 10(-5) M) still augmented the constriction even when the specimens were incubated with 10(-5) M cocaine. These results suggest that naloxone at lower concentrations may augment the constrictor responses to catecholamines, at least in part, by inhibiting the extraneuronal uptake of those catecholamines.  相似文献   

12.
Synthetic atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) exhibited a marked selectivity in its ability to relax isolated rabbit arteries and veins. The aorta, renal and mesenteric arteries and the facial vein were the most sensitive vessels with the more distal arteries and most veins being relatively unresponsive to ANF. All preparations were effectively relaxed by sodium nitroprusside. ANF (up to 10(-7) M) failed to elicit any effect on isolated rabbit right atria or papillary muscles. The profound regional vasorelaxant selectivity of ANF may help to explain the hemodynamic effects of this substance in vivo.  相似文献   

13.
Mechanisms of mechanically induced venous tone and its interaction with the endothelium and key vasoactive neurohormones are not well established. We investigated the contribution of the endothelium, l-type voltage-operated calcium channels (L-VOCCs), and PKC and Rho kinase to myogenic reactivity in mesenteric vessels exposed to increasing transmural pressure. The interaction of myogenic reactivity with norepinephrine (NE) and endothelin-1 (ET-1) was also investigated. Pressure myography was used to study isolated, cannulated, third-order rat mesenteric small veins and arteries. NE and ET-1 concentration response curves were constructed at low, intermediate, and high transmural pressures. Myogenic reactivity was not altered by nitric oxide synthase inhibition with N(ω)-nitro-L-arginine (L-NNA; 100 μM) or endothelium removal in both vessels. L-VOCCs blockade (nifedipine, 1 μM) completely abolished arterial tone, while only partially reducing venous tone. PKC (chelerythrine, 2.5 μM) and Rho kinase (Y27632, 3 μM) inhibitors largely abolished venous and arterial myogenic reactivity. There was no significant difference in the sensitivity of NE or ET-1-induced contractions within vessels. However, veins were more sensitive to NE and ET-1 when compared with corresponding arteries at low, intermediate, and high transmural pressures, respectively. These results suggest that 1) myogenic factors are important contributors to net venous tone in mesenteric veins; 2) PKC and Rho activation are important in myogenic reactivity in both vessels, while l-VOCCs play a limited role in the veins vs. the arteries, and the endothelium does not appear to modulate myogenic reactivity in either vessel type; and 3) mesenteric veins maintain an enhanced sensitivity to NE and ET-1 compared with the arteries when studied under conditions of changing transmural distending pressure.  相似文献   

14.
The present study tested the hypothesis that there is impaired function of alpha(2)-adrenergic autoreceptors and increased transmitter release from sympathetic nerves associated with mesenteric arteries and veins from DOCA-salt rats. High-performance liquid chromatography was used to measure the overflow of ATP and norepinephrine (NE) from electrically stimulated mesenteric artery and vein preparations in vitro. In sham arteries, nerve stimulation evoked a 1.5-fold increase in NE release, whereas in DOCA-salt arteries there was a 3.9-fold increase in NE release over basal levels (P < 0.05). In contrast, stimulated ATP release was not different in DOCA-salt arteries compared with sham arteries. In sham veins, nerve stimulation evoked a 2.9-fold increase in NE release, whereas in DOCA-salt veins there was a 8.4-fold increase in NE release over basal levels (P < 0.05). In sham rats NE release, normalized to basal levels, was greater in veins than in arteries (P < 0.05). The alpha(2)-adrenergic receptor antagonist yohimbine (1 microM) increased ATP and NE release in sham but not DOCA-salt arteries. The alpha(2)-adrenergic receptor agonist UK-14304 (10 microM) decreased ATP release in sham but not DOCA-salt arteries. In sham veins, UK-14304 decreased, but yohimbine increased, NE release; effects that were not observed in DOCA-salt veins. These data show that nerve stimulation causes a greater increase in NE release from nerves associated with veins compared with arteries. In addition, impairment of alpha(2)-adrenergic autoreceptor function in sympathetic nerves associated with arteries and veins from DOCA-salt rats results in increased NE release.  相似文献   

15.
The transmembrane receptor-like protein tyrosine phosphatase-mu (RPTPmu) is thought to play an important role in cell-cell adhesion-mediated processes. We recently showed that RPTPmu is predominantly expressed in the endothelium of arteries and not in veins. Its involvement in the regulation of endothelial adherens junctions and its specific arterial expression suggest that RPTPmu plays a role in controlling arterial endothelial cell function and vascular tone. To test this hypothesis, we analyzed myogenic responsiveness, flow-induced dilation, and functional integrity of mesenteric resistance arteries from RPTPmu-deficient (RPTPmu(-/-)) mice and from wild-type littermates. Here, we show that cannulated mesenteric arteries from RPTPmu(-/-) mice display significantly decreased flow-induced dilation. In contrast, mechanical properties, myogenic responsiveness, responsiveness to the vasoconstrictors phenylephrine or U-46619, and responsiveness to the endothelium-dependent vasodilators methacholine or bradykinin were similar in both groups. Our results imply that RPTPmu is involved in the mechanotransduction or accessory signaling pathways that control shear stress responses in mesenteric resistance arteries.  相似文献   

16.
This study aimed to characterize the vasorelaxing effects of ANP, BNP and CNP in isolated renal resistance arteries (RRA) from wild-type mice and mice with either systemic (GC-A -/-) or smooth muscle-restricted deletion of GC-A (SMC GC-A KO). In RRA from wild-type (GC-A +/+) mice natriuretic peptides (NP) induced concentration-dependent vasorelaxations with the rank order of potency ANP>BNP>CNP. In RAA obtained from mice with systemic or smooth muscle-restricted deletion of GC-A, the effects of ANP and BNP were abolished. In contrast, CNP induced concentration-dependent vasorelaxations of GC-A -/- and SMC GC-A KO RRA. However, the efficacy of CNP for vasorelaxation was markedly diminished compared with wild-type RRA. Such changes in CNP responsiveness did not affect large arteries as the aorta and they were not due to vascular changes secondary to chronic arterial hypertension in GC-A -/- mice. Unaltered vasorelaxing effects of acetylcholine and sodium nitroprusside demonstrated unaltered function of downstream targets regulated by cGMP in vascular smooth muscle. An increased expression of the clearance receptor (NPR-C) or diminished expression of GC-B were not found to account for the differences in CNP responsiveness. In conclusion, observations in isolated aortic rings do not necessarily allow conclusions concerning the physiology of natriuretic peptides in the smaller resistance size arteries. Changes at the GC-B receptor level are likely to explain the diminished responsiveness of GC-A-deficient RRA to CNP.  相似文献   

17.
Angiotensin II (ANG II) and vasopressin (AVP) are two powerful vasoconstrictors, and atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) is a potent vasorelaxant. The changes in the density or affinity of binding sites for these agents that may alter target organ responsiveness in hypertension are reviewed. ANG II binding in mesenteric arteries was unaltered in one-kidney, one-clip (1-K, 1-C) and in 2-K, 1-C hypertensive rats, while in deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA)-salt hypertensive rats ANG II binding to blood vessels was significantly increased. A role of mineralocorticoids to increase the number of vascular ANG II sites in some hypertensive models is suggested. In spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) ANG II receptors were increased in young rats in the prehypertensive stage with respect to Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) control rats, but normal in older rats. AVP binding in the vasculature of hypertensive rats was uniformly decreased in inverse correlation to plasma AVP levels, but vascular responsiveness to AVP was exaggerated. Inositol trisphosphate production by blood vessels of SHR in response to AVP showed that increased AVP receptor-coupled phospholipase C activity may mediate in part the exaggerated pressor response in spite of reduced or normal density of receptors for vasoconstrictor peptides. Vascular ANP sites in 2-K, 1-C, 1-K,1-C, and DOCA-salt hypertensive rats varied inversely with plasma concentrations of ANP. Normal densities of ANP receptors in saralasin-sensitive 2-K, 1-C hypertensive rats correlated with ANP sensitivity, while saralasin-insensitive 2-K, 1-C hypertensive rats, which did not respond to ANP, had significantly decreased density of ANP vascular receptors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Vascular alpha(2B)-adrenoceptors (alpha(2B)-AR) may mediate vasoconstriction and contribute to the development of hypertension. Therefore, we hypothesized that blood pressure would not increase as much in mice with mutated alpha(2B)-AR as in wild-type (WT) mice following nitric oxide (NO) synthase (NOS) inhibition with N(omega)-nitro-l-arginine (l-NNA, 250 mg/l in drinking water). Mean arterial pressure (MAP) was recorded in heterozygous (HET) alpha(2B)-AR knockout mice and WT littermates using telemetry devices for 7 control and 14 l-NNA treatment days. MAP in HET mice was increased significantly on treatment days 1 and 4 to 14, whereas MAP did not change in WT mice (days 0 and 14 = 113 +/- 3 and 114 +/- 4 mmHg in WT, 108 +/- 0.3 and 135 +/- 13 mmHg in HET, P < 0.05). MAP was significantly higher in HET than in WT mice days 10 through 14 (P < 0.05). Thus blood pressure increased more rather than less in mice with decreased alpha(2B)-AR expression. We therefore examined constrictor responses to phenylephrine (PE, 10(-9) to 10(-4) M) with and without NOS inhibition to determine basal NO contributions to arterial tone. In small pressurized mesenteric arteries (inner diameter = 177 +/- 5 microm), PE constriction was decreased in untreated HET arteries compared with WT (P < 0.05). l-NNA (100 microM) augmented PE constriction more in HET arteries than in WT arteries, and responses were not different between groups in the presence of l-NNA. Acetylcholine dilated preconstricted arteries from HET mice more than arteries from WT mice. Endothelial NOS expression was increased in HET compared with WT mesenteric arteries by Western analysis. Griess assay showed increased NO(x) concentrations in HET plasma compared with those in WT plasma. These data demonstrate that diminished alpha(2B)-AR expression increases the dependence of arterial pressure and vascular tone on NO production and that vascular alpha(2B)-AR either directly or indirectly regulates vascular endothelial NOS function.  相似文献   

19.
Superfused helical strips of canine anterior mesenteric arteries and veins and canine dorsal metatarsal veins contract in response to prostaglandin B2 (PGB2). Reserpine pretreatment and phentolamine reduce the constrictor response to PGB2. PGB2 enhances the contractile responses of these preparations to potassium, barium and norepinephrine. PGB2 also produced a shift to the left in the duration of the barium response curve. The data presented demonstrate that PGB2 is not an inactive metabolite of PGA2 metabolism but possesses potent constrictor activity probably dependent on release of norepinephrine from adrenergic nerves. Furthermore, PGB2 enhances the responses of vascular smooth muscle to vasoactive stimuli.  相似文献   

20.
Rats were tail-suspended to simulate microgravity and then studied for changes in arterial vasculature. Parameters investigated included vascular responsiveness at different areas of the body, morphological changes in arteries and vascular endothelium tissue, and the distribution of adrenergic nerve fibers supplying cerebral arteries and arterial vessels. The significance of the results and future research directions are discussed.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号