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1.
Arachidonic acid causes dose-dependent increases in pulmonary vascular resistance in perinatal lambs. The specific metabolites that produce this effect are not known; however, a role for thromboxanes (TX's), potent constrictors of vascular smooth muscle, has been proposed. The effects of a specific inhibitor of TX synthase, OKY-1581, were tested in newborn and ventilated fetal lambs using an in situ pump-perfused lower left lobe preparation. Pulmonary and systemic responses of newborns and ventilated fetuses to infusions of arachidonic acid were evaluated in the presence and absence of OKY-1581. Increases in pulmonary vascular resistance caused by arachidonic acid were diminished by TX synthase inhibition. The degree of systemic hypotension observed with arachidonic acid infusions was significantly greater in animals receiving OKY-1581 than in animals without the inhibitor. The effect of OKY-1581 on periods of hypoxia was also evaluated in newborn lambs. There were no significant differences in the hypoxic pressor response in lambs with and without TX synthase inhibition. These results suggest that OKY-1581 can reduce most of the pulmonary vasoconstriction produced by arachidonic acid in perinatal lambs.  相似文献   

2.
Oleic acid injection produces acute lung injury and pulmonary hypertension in adult animals. In other types of acute lung injury, such as that caused by E. coli endotoxin, metabolites of arachidonic acid are important mediators of pulmonary hypertension. In order to understand the hemodynamic response of newborn animals to oleic acid injection and the contribution of arachidonic acid metabolites to that response, we injected oleic acid into awake, chronically instrumented newborn lambs. The hemodynamic response of lambs to injections of oleic acid alone was compared to their response after pretreatment with either FPL57231, a putative leukotriene receptor antagonist, or indomethacin, a cyclooxygenase synthesis inhibitor. Oleic acid caused acute pulmonary hypertension associated with an increase in protein-rich lung lymph fluid. Systemic hemodynamic effects were variable. FPL57231 completely blocked the oleic acid-induced pulmonary hypertension while indomethacin significantly attenuated the response. Therefore, metabolites of arachidonic acid metabolism appear to be important mediators of oleic acid-induced pulmonary hypertension in newborn lambs.  相似文献   

3.
Elevation in intracellular cyclic GMP levels is the proposed proximal mechanism for the vasodilatory and platelet inhibitory action of nitrovasodilators and of nitric oxide, the putative endothelium-derived relaxing factor. In this study, the stable cyclic GMP analogs, 8-bromo-cGMP and N2, 2'-O-dibutyryl-cGMP were found to inhibit the release of [3H]-arachidonic acid from gamma thrombin-stimulated human platelets in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Inhibition of the formation of arachidonic acid metabolites, 12-HETE and thromboxane B2, paralleled that of arachidonic acid release and was accompanied by a dose-dependent inhibition of platelet aggregation. The formation of phosphatidic acid, a metabolite of phospholipase C, however, was relatively preserved. At a concentration of 8-bromo-cGMP (2 mM) that produced near-total inhibition of arachidonic acid release, phosphatidic acid formation remained at 60% of control levels. Thus, cGMP analogs have a preferential inhibitory effect on the release and subsequent metabolism of arachidonic acid. The phospholipase A2/arachidonic acid pathway appears to be an important target for the physiologic action of cGMP, and EDRF, and for the pharmacologic action of nitrovasodilators.  相似文献   

4.
We examined platelet aggregation and serotonin release, induced by less than 60 μM arachidonic acid, using washed platelet suspensions in the absense of albumin. The concentration of arachidonic acid use did not cause platelet lysis. Platelet responses induced by less than 20 μM arachidonic acid were inhibited by aspirin, whereas those induced by above 30 μM arachidonic acid were not inhibited, even by both aspirin and 5,8,11,14-eicosatetraynoic acid. Although phosphatidic acid and 1,2-diacylglcerol increased after the addition of arachidonic acid in aspirin-treated platelets, the amounts were not parallel to platelet aggregation. Oleic, linoleic and linolenic acids also induced platelet responses, while palmitic, stearic and arachidic acids did not. EDTA, dibutyryl cyclic AMP, apyrase and creatine phosphate / creatin phosphokinase brought about almost the same effects in platelet responses induced by the unsaturated fatty acids, other than arachodinic acid, as those induced by 40 μM arachodonic acid. These results suggest that the mechanism of the actions of more than 30 μM arachodinic acid on platelets is the same as that of the other unsaturated fatty acids and is independent of prostaglandin endoperoxides, thromboxane A2 and, perhaps, phosphatidic acid and 1,2-diacylglycerol.  相似文献   

5.
Several cannabinoids elicit systemic vasodilation, mainly via CB1 cannabinoid and vanilloid receptors. However, effects in the pulmonary circulation are unknown. Using the isolated, ventilated, buffer-perfused rabbit lung, we have shown that the endocannabinoids arachidonyl ethanolamide (anandamide) and 2-arachidonyl glycerol (2-AG) dose-dependently increase pulmonary arterial pressure (+19.9 +/- 3.4 mmHg, 5 microM, and +39.5 +/- 10.8 mmHg, 0.4 microM, respectively). 2-AG induced lung edema. The CB1 receptor antagonist AM-251 (0.1 and 5 microM) and the VR1 vanilloid receptor antagonist capsazepine (10 microM) failed to reduce anandamide's effects. The metabolically stable anandamide and 2-AG analogs R-methanandamide and noladin ether, Delta9-tetrahydrocannabinol, and the synthetic cannabinoid HU-210, which is no arachidonic acid product, were without effect. The unspecific cyclooxygenase (COX) inhibitor aspirin (100 microM, P < 0.001) and the specific COX-2 inhibitor nimesulide (10 microM, P < 0.01) completely prevented pulmonary hypertension after 5 microM anandamide. COX-2 RNA was detected in rabbit lungs. The synthetic thromboxane receptor antagonist SQ 29,548 was without effect, but the specific EP1 prostanoid receptor antagonist SC-19220 (100 microM) inhibited the pressure increase after anandamide (P < 0.05). PCR analysis detected fatty acid amidohydrolase (FAAH), an enzyme that degrades endocannabinoids, in rabbit lung tissue. Furthermore, the specific FAAH inhibitor methyl arachidonyl fluorophosphonate (0.1 microM) blocked pressure effects of anandamide (P < 0.01). Finally, anandamide (99 +/- 55 pmol/g) and 2-AG (19.6 +/- 8.4 nmol/g) were found in native lungs. We conclude that anandamide increases pulmonary arterial pressure via COX-2 metabolites following enzymatic degradation by FAAH into arachidonic acid products.  相似文献   

6.
Arachidonic acid is released from specific glycerophospholipids in human amnion and is used to synthesize prostaglandins that are involved in parturition. In an investigation of the regulation of prostaglandin production in amnion, the effects of isoproterenol on discs of amnion tissue maintained in vitro were examined. Isoproterenol caused a large but transitory increase in the amount of cyclic AMP in amnion discs and this was accompanied by a sustained stimulation of the release of arachidonic acid (but not palmitic acid or stearic acid) and prostaglandin E2. The dependencies of cyclic AMP accumulation, arachidonic acid mobilization and prostaglandin E2 release on the concentration of isoproterenol were similar, each response was maximal at 10(-6) M isoproterenol and was inhibited by propranolol. Dibutyryl cyclic AMP stimulated the release of prostaglandin E2 from amnion discs. Although prostaglandin E2, when added to amnion discs caused an accumulation of cyclic AMP, it did not appear to mediate isoproterenol-induced accumulation of cyclic AMP since the latter effect was insensitive to indomethacin in concentrations at which prostaglandin production was inhibited greatly. These data support the proposition that catecholamines, found in increasing amounts in amniotic fluid during late gestation, may be regulators of prostaglandin production by the amnion.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of alterations in the membrane lipid environment on vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) binding and VIP-stimulated cyclic AMP accumulation have been analyzed by arachidonic acid treatment of prostatic epithelial cells from rats at puberty and maturity, two critical developmental periods with characteristic lipidic and androgenic statuses. Treating cells with 0.1 mM arachidonic acid for 15 min at 37°C increased the affinity of VIP receptors and the potency of the neuropeptide (up to five times) in the formation of cyclic AMP at maturity, but not at puberty. The average plasma membrane fluidity (as measured by fluorescence polarization of diphenylhexatriene) remained unmodified after arachidonic acid treatment of cells. The modifications observed in mature rats were specific for the VIP receptor/effector system, since cyclic AMP stimulation by isoproterenol or forskolin was not affected by cell treatment with arachidonic acid. These results are compatible with the existence of a particular lipidic microdomain surrounding the VIP receptor in the cell membrane that would be altered by exposure to arachidonic acid (either directly or through conversion of arachidonic acid to its metabolites, as suggested by experiments on inhibition of the arachidonic acid cascade). This would make it possible for the activation of protein kinase C to phosphorylate VIP receptors in cells from mature rats, but not in those from pubertal animals with a very different membrane lipid composition (as suggested by the corresponding values of membrane fluidity and transition temperature).  相似文献   

8.
We investigated the effects of prostacyclin analogs and isoform-selective phosphodiesterase (PDE) inhibitors, alone and in combination, on pulmonary vascular remodeling in vitro and in vivo. Vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC) isolated from pulmonary (proximal and distal) and systemic circulations demonstrated subtle variations in expression of PDE isoform mRNA. However, using biochemical assays, we found PDE3 and PDE4 isoforms to be responsible for the majority of cAMP hydrolysis in all VSMC. In growth assays, the prostacyclin analogs cicaprost and iloprost inhibited mitogen-induced proliferation of VSMC in a cAMP-dependent manner. In addition, isoform-selective antagonists of PDEs 1, 3, or 4 inhibited VSMC proliferation, an effect that synergized with the effect of prostacyclin analogs. The inhibitory effects were greater in cells isolated from pulmonary circulation. In an in situ perfused rat lung preparation, administration of prostacyclin analogs or the PDE inhibitors vinpocetine (PDE1), cilostamide (PDE3), or rolipram (PDE4), but not EHNA (PDE2), attenuated acute hypoxic vasoconstriction (HPV). Combinations of agents led to a greater reduction in HPV. Furthermore, during exposure to hypoxia for 13 days, Wistar rats were treated with iloprost, rolipram, cilostamide, or combinations of these agents. Compared with normoxic controls, hypoxic animals developed pulmonary hypertension and distal pulmonary artery muscularization. These parameters were attenuated by iloprost+cilostamide, iloprost+rolipram, and cilostamide+rolipram but were not significantly affected by single agents. Together, these findings provide a greater understanding of the role of cAMP PDEs in VSMC proliferation and provide rationale for combined use of prostacylcin analogs plus PDE3/4 inhibitors in treatment of pulmonary vascular remodeling.  相似文献   

9.
Leualacin (1), a cyclic depsi-pentapeptide, and its backbone/amide-modified analogs 2-4 were synthesized. Amide analogue 3 exhibited stronger vasodilatory effects. It also strongly inhibited collagen- and arachidonic acid (AA)-induced platelet aggregations with IC50s of 0.6 microM and 2.0 microM, respectively.  相似文献   

10.
Quin2 and its analogs BAPTA, 5,5'-dimethyl BAPTA, 5,5'-difluoro BAPTA, fura-2, and indo-1 were developed to measure intracellular calcium concentrations. In this study we investigated whether quin2 and its analogs are susceptible to peroxidase-catalyzed oxidation. The hydroperoxidase activity of prostaglandin H synthase, like other peroxidases, is capable of oxidizing a wide variety of substrates. It was found that quin2 and its analogs served as reducing cofactors for the hydroperoxidase activity of prostaglandin H synthase, undergoing oxidation in the process. Furthermore, arachidonic acid metabolism was stimulated. Oxidation of quin2 and its analogs resulted in the formation of a carbon-centered radical, as could be detected by ESR, and in the formation of formaldehyde. Quin2 fluorescence decreased upon addition of arachidonic acid and prostaglandin H synthase. Furthermore, addition of calcium no longer resulted in an increase in quin2 fluorescence, as was observed prior to the addition of arachidonic acid and the enzyme. This indicates that one or more of the -N-CH2-COOH groups, which are responsible for the binding of calcium, were oxidized by the hydroperoxidase. Since prostaglandin H synthase is present in many cellular systems in which calcium concentrations are modulated, oxidation of the calcium probe might not only affect the measurement of intracellular calcium but could activate arachidonic acid metabolism as well.  相似文献   

11.
Thromboxane-induced pulmonary vasoconstriction: involvement of calcium   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Infusion of tert-butyl hydroperoxide (t-bu-OOH) or arachidonic acid into rabbit pulmonary arteries stimulated thromboxane B2 (TxB2) production and caused pulmonary vasoconstriction. Both phenomena were blocked by cyclooxygenase inhibitors or a thromboxane synthase inhibitor. The increase in pulmonary arterial pressure caused by either t-bu-OOH or arachidonic acid infusion correlated with the concentration of TxB2 in the effluent perfusate. The concentration of TxB2 in the effluent perfusate, however, was always 10-fold greater after arachidonic acid infusion. In the rabbit pulmonary vascular bed lipoxygenase products did not appear involved in the vasoactive response to t-bu-OOH or exogenous arachidonic acid infusion. Calcium entry blockers or a calcium-free perfusate prevented the thromboxane-induced pulmonary vasoconstriction. Calmodulin inhibitors also blocked the pulmonary vasoconstriction induced by t-bu-OOH without affecting the production of TxB2 or prostacyclin. These results suggest that thromboxane causes pulmonary vasoconstriction by increasing cytosol calcium concentration.  相似文献   

12.
Arachidonic acid is released from specific glycerophospholipids in human amnion and is used to synthesize prostaglandins that are involved in parturition. In an investigation of the regulation of prostaglandin production in amnion, the effects of isoproterenol on discs of amnion tissue maintained were examined. Isoproterenol caused a large but transitory increase in the amount of cyclic AMP in amnion discs and this was accompanied by a sustained stimulation of the release of arachidonic acid (but not palmitic acid or stearic acid) and prostaglandin E2. The dependencies of cyclic AMP accumulation, arachidonic acid mobilization and prostaglandin E2 release on the concentration of isoproterenol were similar, each response was maximal at 10−6 M isoproterenol and was inhibited by propranolol. Dibutyryl cyclic AMP stimulated the release of prostaglandin E2 from amnion discs. Although prostaglandin E2, when added to amnion discs caused an accumulation of cyclic AMP, it did not appear to mediate isoproterenol-induced accumulation of cyclic AMP since the latter effect was insensitive to indomethacin in concentrations at which prostaglandin production was inhibited greatly. These data support the proposition that catecholamines, found in increasing amounts in amniotic fluid during late gestation, my be regulators of prostaglandin production by the amnion.  相似文献   

13.
Generation of vasoactive prostanoids from arachidonic acid by cyclooxygenase (COX)-1 and COX-2 was investigated in anesthetized mice. Intravenous injections of the prostanoid precursor arachidonic acid increased pulmonary arterial pressure and decreased systemic arterial pressure. Pulmonary pressor and systemic depressor responses were attenuated by SC-560 and nimesulide, inhibitors of COX-1 and COX-2, in doses that did not alter responses to injected prostanoids. Pulmonary pressor responses to arachidonic acid were blocked and a depressor response was unmasked, whereas systemic depressor responses were not altered, by a thromboxane receptor antagonist. Pulmonary and systemic pressor responses to angiotensin II injections and systemic pressor responses to angiotensin II infusion were not modified by COX-1 or COX-2 inhibitors but were attenuated by losartan. Systemic depressor responses to arachidonic acid were smaller in COX-1 and COX-2 knockout mice, whereas responses to angiotensin II, norepinephrine, U-46619, endothelin-1, and PGE(1) were not different in COX-1 and COX-2 knockout and wild-type control mice. These results suggest that vasoactive prostanoids with pulmonary pressor and systemic vasodepressor activity are formed by COX-1 and COX-2 and are consistent with Western blot analysis and immunostaining showing the presence of COX-1 and COX-2. These data suggest that thromboxane A(2) (TxA(2)) is formed from the precursor by COX-1 and COX-2 in the lung and are in agreement with immunofluorescence studies showing thromboxane synthase. The present data suggest that COX-1- or COX-2-derived prostanoids do not modulate responses to angiotensin II or other vasoactive agents and that prostanoid responses are similar in CD-1 and C57BL/6 and in male and female mice.  相似文献   

14.
To further elucidate the role of bis(monoacylglycero)phosphate in lysosomes, its metabolism was assessed by incubation of intact and disrupted macrophages in the presence of labeled lipid precursors. In rabbit pulmonary macrophages bis(monoacylglycero)P accounted for 17.9% and acylphosphatidylglycerol for 2.6% of phospholipid phosphorus. Major fatty acids in bis(monoacylglycero)P were oleic (47%), linoleic (29%), and arachidonic (6.4%); those in acylphosphatidylglycerol were of similar distribution except for a high content of palmitic acid (20%). When homogenates of rabbit pulmonary and peritoneal macrophages, rat pulmonary macrophages, and human blood leukocytes were incubated with sn[(14)C]glycerol-3-phosphate and CDP-diacylglycerol at pH 7.4, there was labeling of bis(monoacylglycero)P and acylphosphatidylglycerol that correlated with content of bis(monoacylglycero)P. When intact rabbit pulmonary macrophages were incubated for 60 min with [(3)H]glucose and [(32)P]orthophosphate, small amounts of label appeared in bis(monoacylglycero)P and only traces in acylphosphatidylglycerol. In contrast, incubation of intact cells with the (14)C-labeled fatty acid precursors palmitic, oleic, and arachidonic acids resulted in much greater labeling of the two lipids. Labeling of phospholipids was greatest with arachidonate as precursor and least with palmitate; after 60 min, labeling of bis(monoacylglycero)P with arachidonate was 10- and 50-fold greater than with oleate and palmitate, respectively, and was exceeded only by that of phosphatidylcholine. Calculated ratios of labeling of fatty acid to P, particularly those for arachidonate, were much greater for bis(monoacylglycero)P and for acylphosphatidylglycerol than for other phospholipids. This suggests a uniquely high turnover of fatty acids in bis(monoacylglycero)P and acylphosphatidylglycerol and thus a more specific role for these compounds in metabolism of complex lipids in the lysosome.-Huterer, S., and J. Wherrett. Metabolism of bis(monoacylglycero)phosphate in macrophages.  相似文献   

15.
This study examined the hemodynamic effects of leukotriene B4 (LTB4) in chronically instrumented awake sheep, and the role of cyclooxygenase products in the sheep's response to LTB4. LTB4 (25 micrograms) was given as a bolus into the pulmonary artery. Six sheep were studied with LTB4, both before and after pretreatment with meclofenamate (5 mg/kg load, 3 mg/kg/hr maintenance infusion). LTB4 alone caused a rapid rise in pulmonary arterial pressure from 15 +/- 1 to 42 +/- 11 cm H2O. LTB4 had no effect on pulmonary arterial pressure following pretreatment with meclofenamate. LTB4 alone caused an increase in serum thromboxane B2 (TxB2) from 130 +/- 35 to 320 +/- 17 pg/ml 3 minutes after dosing but did not increase TxB2 following pre-treatment with meclofenamate. LTB4 caused a slight decrease in mean systemic arterial pressure and a transient fall in circulating white blood cells, both of which were unaffected by meclofenamate pre-treatment. The vasoactive effects of LTB4 in the pulmonary circulation appear to be mediated indirectly through the production of cyclooxygenase metabolites of arachidonic acid.  相似文献   

16.
In the rat pineal gland, alpha 1-adrenergic agonists, which stimulate arachidonic acid release, also potentiate vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP)- or beta-adrenergic-stimulated cyclic AMP (cAMP) and cyclic GMP (cGMP) accumulation. In this study, the possible involvement of the arachidonic acid pathway in the potentiation mechanism was examined in dispersed rat pinealocytes using two inhibitors of the arachidonic acid cascade, indomethacin and nordihydroguaiaretic acid. These two inhibitors appeared to have differential effects on the alpha 1-adrenergic potentiation of VIP- or beta-adrenergic-stimulated cAMP and cGMP responses. Whereas nordihydroguaiaretic acid was effective in suppressing both the alpha 1-adrenergic potentiation of VIP- or beta-adrenergic-stimulated cAMP and cGMP responses, indomethacin inhibited selectively the VIP-mediated cAMP and cGMP responses. The role of arachidonic acid metabolites was further determined using several prostaglandins--A2, I2, E2, and F2 alpha--and leukotrienes--B4, C4, and D4. Of the seven compounds tested, prostaglandins E2 and F2 alpha stimulated basal cAMP but not cGMP accumulation. The prostaglandin E2- and F2 alpha-stimulated cAMP responses were additive to those stimulated by VIP or beta-adrenergic receptors. The other five compounds had no effects on basal or VIP- or beta-adrenergic-stimulated cAMP or cGMP accumulation. Taken together, these findings indicate that the arachidonic acid cascade is likely involved in the alpha 1-adrenergic potentiation of VIP- or beta-adrenergic-stimulated cAMP and cGMP accumulation. However, the specific arachidonic acid metabolite involved in the potentiation mechanisms of VIP- versus beta-adrenergic-stimulated cyclic nucleotide responses may be different.  相似文献   

17.
Mechanisms that maintain high pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) and oppose vasodilation in the fetal lung are poorly understood. In fetal lambs, increased pulmonary artery pressure evokes a potent vasoconstriction, suggesting that a myogenic response contributes to high PVR in the fetus. In adult systemic circulations, the arachidonic acid metabolite 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (20-HETE) has been shown to modulate the myogenic response, but its role in the fetal lung is unknown. We hypothesized that acute increases in pulmonary artery pressure release 20-HETE, which causes vasoconstriction, or a myogenic response, in the fetal lung. To address this hypothesis, we studied the hemodynamic effects of N-methylsufonyl-12,12-dibromododec-11-enamide (DDMS), a specific inhibitor of 20-HETE production, on the pulmonary vasoconstriction caused by acute compression of the ductus arteriosus (DA) in chronically prepared fetal sheep. An inflatable vascular occluder around the DA was used to increase pulmonary artery pressure under three study conditions: control, after pretreatment with nitro-L-arginine (L-NA; to inhibit shear-stress vasodilation), and after combined treatment with both L-NA and a specific 20-HETE inhibitor, DDMS. We found that DA compression after L-NA treatment increased PVR by 44 +/- 12%. Although intrapulmonary DDMS infusion did not affect basal PVR, DDMS completely abolished the vasoconstrictor response to DA compression in the presence of L-NA (44 +/- 12% vs. 2 +/- 4% change in PVR, L-NA vs. L-NA + DDMS, P < 0.05). We conclude that 20-HETE mediates the myogenic response in the fetal pulmonary circulation and speculate that pharmacological inhibition of 20-HETE might have a therapeutic role in neonatal conditions characterized by pulmonary hypertension.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of alcohols on the formation of leukotrienes, 5-HETE and prostaglandin D2 in mastocytoma cells and human neutrophils were studied. In murine mastocytoma cells, alcohols appear to have at least two different effects on the production of these arachidonic acid metabolites. At low levels of cellular arachidonic acid achieved after stimulation with calcium ionophore A23187 or addition of low levels of exogenous arachidonic acid, alcohols appear to have a general inhibitory effect on the production of lipoxygenase metabolites. In the presence of higher concentrations of cellular arachidonic acid, ethanol and methanol stimulated the production of lipoxygenase metabolites, but had no large stimulatory effect on the cyclo-oxygenase metabolite, prostaglandin D2. Under these conditions, n-propanol and t-butanol have inhibitory effects on leukotriene production. Human neutrophils are less sensitive to ethanol than mastocytoma cells, but stimulatory effects were still found at high ethanol concentrations (220-430 mM).  相似文献   

19.
The haemodynamic and respiratory responses caused by i.v. administration of endothelin-1 (ET-1) (20-100 pmol/kg) were studied in anaesthetized spontaneously breathing pigs. Intravenous bolus administration of synthetic ET-1 (40-100 pmol/kg) caused a transient decrease followed by a long-lasting increase in mean pulmonary arterial pressure and dose dependent vasoconstriction both in the systemic and pulmonary circulations. The effect on pulmonary arterial pressure was biphasic, with an initial transient fall followed by a long-lasting dose dependent increase. A biphasic response of the systemic mean arterial pressure was demonstrated only at a high dose of ET-1 (100 pmol/kg). ET-1 administration did not significantly change breathing pattern or phasic vagal input, but caused a significant decrease in passive compliance. Passive resistances or active compliance and resistances of the respiratory system were not modified. These results suggest that in the pig ET-1 is a more potent constrictor of vascular than of bronchial smooth muscle. The vasoconstrictor activity was greater in the pulmonary than the systemic circulations.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of peroxynitrite (ONOO-) on vascular responses were investigated in the systemic and hindquarters vascular bed and in the isolated perfused rat lung. Intravenous injections of ONOO- decreased systemic arterial pressure, and injections of ONOO- into the hindquarters decreased perfusion pressure in a dose-related manner. Injections of ONOO- into the lung perfusion circuit increased pulmonary arterial perfusion pressure. Responses to ONOO- were rapid in onset, short in duration, and repeatable without exhibiting tachyphylaxis. Repeated injections of ONOO- did not alter systemic, hindquarters, or pulmonary responses to endothelium-dependent vasodilators or other vasoactive agonists and did not alter the hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstrictor response. Injections of sodium nitrate or nitrite or decomposed ONOO- had little effect on vascular pressures. Pulmonary and hindquarters responses to ONOO- were not altered by a cyclooxygenase inhibitor in a dose that attenuated responses to arachidonic acid. These results demonstrate that ONOO- has significant pulmonary vasoconstrictor, systemic vasodepressor, and vasodilator activity; that short-term repeated exposure does impair vascular responsiveness; and that responses to ONOO- are not dependent on cyclooxygenase product release.  相似文献   

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