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1.
No studies have specifically addressed whether cAMP can influence nitric oxide (NO)/cGMP-induced cerebral vasodilation. In this study, we examined whether cAMP can enhance or reduce NO-induced cerebral vasodilation in vivo via interfering with cGMP efflux or through potentiating phosphodiesterase 5 (PDE5)-mediated cGMP breakdown, respectively, in cerebral vascular smooth muscle cells (CVSMCs). To that end, we evaluated, in male rats, the effects of knockdown [via antisense oligodeoxynucleotide (ODN) applications] of the cGMP efflux protein multidrug resistance protein 5 (MRP5) and PDE5 inhibition on pial arteriolar NO donor [S-nitroso-N-acetyl penicillamine (SNAP)]-induced dilations in the absence and presence of cAMP elevations via forskolin. Pial arteriolar diameter changes were measured using well-established protocols in anesthetized rats. In control (missense ODN treated) rats, forskolin elicited a leftward shift in the SNAP dose-response curves (approximately 50% reduction in SNAP EC50). However, in MRP5 knockdown rats, cAMP increases were associated with a substantial reduction in SNAP-induced vasodilations (reflected as a significant 35-50% lower maximal response). In the presence of the PDE5 inhibitor MY-5445, the repression of the NO donor response accompanying forskolin was prevented. These findings suggest that cAMP has opposing effects on NO-stimulated cGMP increases. On the one hand, cAMP limits CVSMC cGMP loss by restricting cGMP efflux. On the other, cAMP appears to enhance PDE5-mediated cGMP breakdown. However, because increased endogenous cAMP seems to potentiate NO/cGMP-induced arteriolar relaxation when MRP5 expression is normal, the effect of cAMP to reduce cGMP efflux appears to predominate over cAMP stimulation of cGMP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

2.
We examined whether damage to the glia limitans (GL), via exposure to the gliotoxin l-alpha-aminoadipic acid (l-alphaAAA), alters hypercapnia-induced pial arteriolar dilation in vivo. Anesthetized female rats were prepared with closed cranial windows. Pial arteriolar diameters were measured using intravital microscopy. l-alphaAAA (2 mM) was injected into the space under the cranial windows 24 h before the study, and injury to the GL was confirmed by light microscopy. l-alphaAAA was associated with a reduction in pial arteriolar CO(2) reactivity to 40-50% of the level seen in vehicle-treated controls, with no further reduction in the CO(2) response after nitric oxide (NO) synthase (NOS) inhibition via N(omega)-nitro-l-arginine (l-NNA). Subsequent blockade of prostanoid synthesis, via indomethacin (Indo), reduced CO(2) reactivity to 10-15% of normal. In vehicle-treated controls, l-NNA, followed by Indo, reduced the response to approximately 50% and then to 15-20% of the normocapnic value, respectively. On the other hand, l-alphaAAA had no effect on vascular responses to the endothelium-dependent vasodilator acetylcholine or the NO donor SNAP and did not alter cortical somatosensory evoked responses. This indicates an absence of any direct l-alphaAAA actions on pial arterioles or influence on neuronal transmission. Furthermore, l-alphaAAA did not alter the vasodilation elicited by topical application of an acidic artificial cerebrospinal fluid solution, suggesting that the GL influences the pial arteriolar relaxation elicited by hypercapnic, but not local extracellular (EC), acidosis. That differences exist in the mechanisms mediating hypercapnia- versus EC acidosis-induced pial arteriolar dilations was further exemplified by the finding that topical application of a neuronal NOS (nNOS)-selective blocker (ARR-17477) reduced the response to hypercapnia (by approximately 65%) but not the response to EC acidosis. Disruption of GL gap junctional communication, using an antisense oligodeoxynucleotide (ODN) connexin43 knockdown approach, was accompanied by a 33% lower CO(2) reactivity versus missense ODN-treated controls. These results suggest that the GL contribution to the hypercapnic vascular response appears to involve the NO-dependent component rather than the prostanoid-dependent component and may involve gap junctional communication. We speculate that the GL may act to facilitate the spread, to pial vessels, of hypercapnia-induced vasodilating signals arising in the comparatively few scattered nNOS neurons that lie well beneath the GL.  相似文献   

3.
The cytochrome P-450 4A (CYP4A)-derived arachidonic acid metabolite 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (20-HETE) affects renal tubular and vascular functions and has been implicated in the control of arterial pressure. We examined the effect of antisense oligonucleotide (ODN) to CYP4A1, the low K(m) arachidonic acid omega-hydroxylating isoform, on vascular 20-HETE synthesis, vascular reactivity, and blood pressure in the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR). Administration of CYP4A1 antisense ODN decreased mean arterial blood pressure from 137 +/- 3 to 121 +/- 4 mmHg (P < 0.05) after 5 days of treatment, whereas treatment with scrambled antisense ODN had no effect. Treatment with CYP4A1 antisense ODN reduced the level of CYP4A-immunoreactive proteins along with 20-HETE synthesis in mesenteric arterial vessels. Mesenteric arteries from rats treated with antisense ODN exhibited decreased sensitivity to the constrictor action of phenylephrine (EC(50) 0.69 +/- 0.17 vs. 1.77 +/- 0.40 microM). Likewise, mesenteric arterioles from antisense ODN-treated rats revealed attenuation of myogenic constrictor responses to increases of transmural pressure. The decreased vascular reactivity and myogenic responses were reversible with the addition of 20-HETE. These data suggest that CYP4A1-derived 20-HETE facilitates myogenic constrictor responses in the mesenteric microcirculation and contributes to pressor mechanisms in SHR.  相似文献   

4.
In this study, we compared endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS)-mediated cerebral vasodilating responses in intact female rats, chronically ovariectomized (OVX) rats, and OVX rats treated for 2 weeks with 17beta-estradiol (E(2)). Under anesthesia, using intravital microscopy and a closed cranial window system, pial arteriolar diameter changes were monitored during sequential cortical suffusions of an eNOS-dependent dilator [acetylcholine (ACh)] and a direct NO donor [S-nitrosoacetylpenicillamine (SNAP)]. In separate rats from the same groups, we compared eNOS and caveolin-1 (CAV-1) protein abundance in pial arterioles (via immunofluorescence analyses). In untreated and low-dose E(2)-treated (1.0 microg x kg(-1) x day(-1)) OVX rats, ACh-induced vasodilations were virtually absent. High-dose E(2) treatment (100 microg x kg(-1) x day(-1)) restored ACh-induced pial arteriolar dilations to levels seen in intact females. The vasodilations elicited by SNAP and ADO were unaffected by chronic estrogen changes, indicating no direct estrogen influence on vascular smooth muscle (VSM) reactivity. Pial arteriolar eNOS protein abundance was diminished by ovariectomy and restored by high-dose E(2) treatment. Pial arteriolar CAV-1 expression was higher in OVX versus intact and E(2)-treated OVX females. These results suggest that long-term changes in estrogen directly influence brain eNOS functional activity. The estrogen-related changes in eNOS-dependent vasodilating function appear to be related, in part, to a capacity for E(2) to increase eNOS protein expression and, in part, to an E(2)-associated diminution in endothelial CAV-1 expression.  相似文献   

5.
Nitric oxide (NO) is an important regulator of vasomotor tone in the pulmonary circulation. We tested the hypothesis that the role NO plays in regulating vascular tone changes during early postnatal development. Isolated, perfused lungs from 7- and 14-day-old Sprague-Dawley rats were studied. Baseline total pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) was not different between age groups. The addition of KCl to the perfusate caused a concentration-dependent increase in PVR that did not differ between age groups. However, the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) inhibitor N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine augmented the K(+)-induced increase in PVR in both groups, and the effect was greater in lungs from 14-day-old rats vs. 7-day-old rats. Lung levels of total endothelial, inducible, and neuronal NOS proteins were not different between groups; however, the production rate of exhaled NO was greater in lungs from 14-day-old rats compared with those of 7-day-old rats. Vasodilation to 0.1 microM of the NO donor spermine NONOate was greater in 14-day lungs than in 7-day lungs, and lung levels of both soluble guanylyl cyclase and cGMP were greater at 14 days than at 7 days. Vasodilation to 100 microM of the cGMP analog 8-(4-chlorophenylthio)guanosine-3',5'-cyclic monophosphate was greater in 7-day lungs than in 14-day lungs. Our results demonstrate that the pulmonary vascular bed depends more on NO production to modulate vascular tone at 14 days than at 7 days of age. The observed differences in NO sensitivity may be due to maturational increases in soluble guanylyl cyclase protein levels.  相似文献   

6.
Insulin acutely stimulates cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) production in primary confluent cultured vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC) from canine femoral artery, but the mechanism is not known. These cells contain the inducible isoform of nitric oxide (NO) synthase (iNOS), and insulin-stimulated cGMP production in confluent cultured cells is blocked by the NOS inhibitor, N(G)-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA). In the present study, it is shown that iNOS is also present in freshly dispersed VSMC from this artery, indicating that iNOS expression in cultured VSMC is not an artifact of the culture process. Insulin did not stimulate NOS activity in primary confluent cultured cells because it did not affect citrulline or combined NO(-)(3)/NO(-)(2) production. To see whether insulin required the permissive presence of NO to stimulate cGMP production, iNOS and basal cGMP production were inhibited with L-NMMA, and the cells were incubated with or without 1 nM insulin and/or the NO donor, S-nitroso-N-acetyl-D,L-penicillamine (SNAP) at a concentration (0.1 microM) that restored cGMP production to the basal value. In the presence of L-NMMA, insulin no longer affected cGMP production but when insulin was added to L-NMMA plus SNAP, cGMP production was increased by 69% (P < 0.05 vs. L-NMMA plus SNAP). Insulin, which increases glucose uptake by these cells, increased the cell lactate content and the lactate-to-pyruvate ratio (LPR) by 81 and 97%, respectively (both P < 0.05), indicating that the hormone increased aerobic glycolysis and the redox potential. The effects of insulin on LPR and cGMP production were blocked by removing glucose or by adding 2-deoxyglucose to the incubation media and were duplicated by the reducing substrate, beta-hydroxybutyrate. We conclude that insulin does not acutely affect iNOS activity in these VSMC but it does augment cGMP production induced by the NO already present in the cell while increasing aerobic glycolysis and the cell redox potential.  相似文献   

7.
We hypothesized that administration of an antisense oligodeoxynucleotide (ODN) to estrogen receptor (ER)-alpha mRNA decreases the ER protein in the neonatal rat brain, alters the sex-specific ventilatory responses to aspartic acid in rats, and counteracts the effects of testosterone proportionate (TP) in females. One-day-old rat pups were injected intraventricularly with vehicle, antisense ER ODN, or scrambled ODN control. Additional groups of females received TP or vehicle and one of the three treatments. Brain ER protein levels were decreased by 65% at 6 h and 35% at 24 h after antisense ODN. Aspartic acid decreased ventilation in all groups of weanling males and females except ER ODN-treated females and TP-vehicle-treated females. Aspartic acid decreased ventilation in all groups of adult females except those given TP and in males. Weanling ER ODN-treated rats were shorter and weighed less than controls. Only adult ER ODN-treated males exhibited these traits. Thus neonatal ER affects aspartic acid modulation of breathing and body growth in a sex-specific and developmental manner.  相似文献   

8.
The hypothesis was addressed that CO-induced cerebral vasodilation requires a permissive cGMP signal that can be produced by nitric oxide (NO). Anesthetized piglets were implanted with cranial windows for measurement of pial arteriolar responses to stimuli. Pial arterioles dilated in response to isoproterenol (Iso), sodium nitroprusside (SNP), and CO or the CO-releasing molecule Mn2(CO)10 [dimanganese decacarbonyl (DMDC)]. 1H-[1,2,4]oxadiazolo[4,3-a]quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ), a soluble guanylyl cyclase inhibitor, decreased cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) cGMP and selectively inhibited dilations to SNP and DMDC without affecting the dilation to Iso. However, DMDC did not cause an increase in cortical periarachnoid CSF cGMP concentration. cGMP clamp with a threshold dilator level of 8-bromo-cGMP (10(-4) M) and ODQ restored the dilation to DMDC that had been blocked by ODQ alone. Under these conditions, cGMP was present but could not increase. Inhibition of the pial arteriolar dilation to glutamate by N-nitro-l-arginine, which blocks NO synthase, was similar to that by heme oxygenase inhibitors, which block endogenous CO production. The dilation to glutamate, similar to dilation to DMDC, was partially restored by 8-bromo-cGMP and completely restored by SNP (5 x 10(-7) M). These data suggest that the permissive role of NO in CO- and glutamate-induced vasodilation involves maintaining the minimum necessary cellular level of cGMP to allow CO to cause dilation independently of increasing cGMP.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Cerebrovascular dysfunction plays a key role in the pathogenesis of cerebral malaria. In experimental cerebral malaria (ECM) induced by Plasmodium berghei ANKA, cerebrovascular dysfunction characterized by vascular constriction, occlusion and damage results in impaired perfusion and reduced cerebral blood flow and oxygenation, and has been linked to low nitric oxide (NO) bioavailability. Here, we directly assessed cerebrovascular function in ECM using a novel cranial window method for intravital microscopy of the pial microcirculation and probed the role of NOS isoforms and phosphorylation patterns in the impaired vascular responses. We show that pial arteriolar responses to endothelial NOS (eNOS) and neuronal NOS (nNOS) agonists (Acetylcholine (ACh) and N-Methyl-D-Aspartate (NMDA)) were blunted in mice with ECM, and could be partially recovered by exogenous supplementation of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4). Pial arterioles in non-ECM mice infected by Plasmodium berghei NK65 remained relatively responsive to the agonists and were not significantly affected by BH4 treatment. These findings, together with the observed blunting of NO production upon stimulation by the agonists, decrease in total NOS activity, augmentation of lipid peroxidation levels, upregulation of eNOS protein expression, and increase in eNOS and nNOS monomerization in the brain during ECM development strongly indicate a state of eNOS/nNOS uncoupling likely mediated by oxidative stress. Furthermore, the downregulation of Serine 1176 (S1176) phosphorylation of eNOS, which correlated with a decrease in cerebrovascular wall shear stress, implicates hemorheological disturbances in eNOS dysfunction in ECM. Finally, pial arterioles responded to superfusion with the NO donor, S-Nitroso-L-glutathione (GSNO), but with decreased intensity, indicating that not only NO production but also signaling is perturbed during ECM. Therefore, the pathological impairment of eNOS and nNOS functions contribute importantly to cerebrovascular dysfunction in ECM and the recovery of intrinsic functionality of NOS to increase NO bioavailability and restore vascular health represents a target for ECM treatment.  相似文献   

11.
In estrogen-depleted [i.e., ovariectomized (Ovx)] animals, an endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor (EDHF)-like mechanism may arise to, at least partially, replace endothelial nitric oxide (NO) synthase (eNOS)-derived NO in modulating cerebral arteriolar tone. Additional findings show that eNOS expression and function is restored in estrogen-treated Ovx female rats, while the nascent EDHF-like activity disappears. Because NO has been linked to repression of EDHF activity in the periphery, the current study was undertaken to examine whether the nascent EDHF role in cerebral vessels of Ovx females relates to a chronically repressed eNOS-derived NO-generating function. We compared the effects of chronic NOS inhibition with Nomega-nitro-L-arginine-methyl ester (L-NAME; 100 mg. kg-1. day-1 for 3 wk) on EDHF-mediated pial arteriolar vasodilation in anesthetized intact, Ovx, and 17beta-estradiol-treated (0.1 mg. kg-1. day-1 ip, 1 wk) Ovx (OVE) female rats as well as in male rats that were prepared with closed cranial windows. In the chronic NOS inhibition groups, pial arteriolar responses were monitored in the absence (all groups) and presence (females only) of indomethacin (Indo; 10 mg/kg iv). Finally, the gap junction inhibitory peptide Gap 27 (300 muM) was applied to block EDHF-related vasodilation. NO donor (S-nitroso-N-acetyl-penicillamine) responses were similar in all rats studied. Acetylcholine (ACh) reactivity was virtually absent in control Ovx rats and chronically NOS-inhibited intact female, OVE, and male rats. However, a partial recovery of ACh reactivity was seen in L-NAME-treated Ovx females. In addition, in the presence of L-NAME, a normal CO2 reactivity was observed in all females, whereas a 50% reduction in CO2 reactivity was seen in males. In intact and OVE rats, both chronic and acute (NG-nitro-L-arginine suffusion) NOS inhibition, combined with Indo, depressed ADP-induced dilation by > or =50%, and subsequent application of Gap 27 had no further effect on ADP-induced vasodilation. ADP reactivity was retained in Ovx rats after combined chronic NOS inhibition and acute Indo, but was attenuated significantly by Gap 27. In males, Gap 27 had no effect on arteriolar reactivity. Taken together, our data demonstrate that in the cerebral microcirculation, NO does not have an inhibitory effect on EDHF production or action. The increased EDHF-like function in chronic estrogen-depleted animals is not due to eNOS deficiency, suggesting a more direct effect of estrogen in modulating EDHF-mediated cerebral vasodilation.  相似文献   

12.
Cyclic GMP (cGMP) mediates various physiological functions of nitric oxide (NO) synthesized by nitric oxide synthase (NOS). A crude peel extract and purified fraction of Flemingia vestita, as well as a crude rhizome extract of Stephania glabra and fractions were tested with respect to the activity of NOS, NO efflux and cGMP concentration in the cestode Raillietina echinobothrida in order to find out the possible mode of anthelmintic action of these plant-derived components. For comparison purposes, the parasites were also treated with pure genistein, sodium nitroprusside (SNP-a known NO donor), and the reference drug, praziquantel (PZQ). At the time of onset of paralysis in the parasites, a significant increase (32%-87%) in the NOS activity and a two to three fold increase of NO efflux into the incubation medium were observed in the treated parasites in comparison to their respective controls. The cGMP concentration in the treated parasites' tissue was also increased by 44%-103%. However, in the presence of NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester, a potent inhibitor of NOS, there was no increase in the cGMP concentration in the parasite tissue. This study indicates that the phytochemicals, in particular genistein and tetrahydropalmatine, from F. vestita and S. glabra, respectively, disturb the downstream signalling pathway of NO, as indicated by the change in cGMP concentration in the parasite tissue.  相似文献   

13.
This study examined the notion that exogenous generation of nitric oxide (NO) modulates NOS gene expression and activity. Bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells (BPAEC) were treated with the NO donors, 1 mM SNAP (S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine), 0.5 mM SNP (sodium nitroprusside) or 0.2 microM NONOate (spermine NONOate) in medium 199 containing 2% FBS. Controls included untreated cells and cells exposed to 1 mM NAP (N-acetyl-D-penicillamine). NOS activity was assessed using a fibroblast-reporter cell assay; intracellular Ca2+ concentrations were assessed by Fura-2 microfluorometry; and NO release was measured by chemiluminescence. Constitutive endothelial (e) and inducible (i) NOS gene and protein expression were examined by northern and western blot analysis, respectively. Two hours exposure to either SNAP or NONOate caused a significant elevation in NO release from the endothelial cells (SNAP = 51.4 +/- 5.9; NONOate = 23.8 +/- 4.2; control = 14.5 +/- 2.8 microM); but A23187 (3 microM)-stimulated NO release was attenuated when compared to controls. Treatment with either SNAP or NONOate for 2 h also resulted in a significant increase in NOS activity in endothelial homogenates (SNAP = 23.6 +/- 2.5; NONOate= 29.8 +/- 7.7; control = 14.5 +/- 2.5fmol cGMP/microg per 10(6) cells). Exposure to SNAP and SNP, but not NONOate, for 1 h caused an increase in intracellular calcium. Between 4 and 8 h, SNAP and NONOate caused a 2- to 3-fold increase in eNOS, but not iNOS, gene (P < 0.05) and protein expression. NAP had little effect on either eNOS gene expression, activity or NO production. Our data indicate that exogenous generation of NO leads to a biphasic response in BPAEC, an early increase in intracellular Ca2+, and increases in NOS activity and NO release followed by increased expression of the eNOS gene, but not the iNOS gene. We conclude that eNOS gene expression and activity are regulated by a positive-feedback regulatory action of exogenous NO.  相似文献   

14.
It was previously shown that, despite the loss of nitric oxide (NO) dependence, ADP-induced pial arteriolar dilation was not attenuated in estrogen-depleted [i.e., ovariectomized (Ovx)] rats. Additional evidence suggested that the NO was replaced by an endothelium-dependent hyperpolarizing factor (EDHF)-like mechanism. To further characterize the nascent EDHF role in Ovx females, the current study was undertaken to test whether, in Ovx rats, ADP-induced pial arteriolar dilation retained its endothelial dependence and whether gap junctions are involved in that response. A closed cranial window and intravital microscopy system was used to monitor pial arteriolar diameter changes in anesthetized rats. The endothelial portion of the ADP-induced dilation was evaluated using light dye endothelial injury (L/D). The study was organized around three experimental approaches. First, the responses of pial arterioles to ADP before and after L/D exposure in intact and Ovx female rats were tested. L/D reduced the ADP response by 50-70% in both groups, thereby indicating that the endothelium dependence of ADP-induced vasodilation is not altered by chronic estrogen depletion. Second, the NO synthase inhibitor N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine (L-NNA) and the prostanoid synthesis inhibitor indomethacin (Indo) were coapplied. In intact females, L-NNA-Indo attenuated the response to ADP by 50%, with no further changes upon the addition of L/D. On the other hand, L-NNA-Indo did not affect ADP reactivity in Ovx rats, but subsequent L/D exposure reduced the ADP response by >50%. The NO-prostanoid-independent, but endothelium-dependent, nature of the response in Ovx females is a hallmark of EDHF participation. Third, gap junctional inhibition strategies were applied. A selective inhibitor of gap junctional function, Gap 27, did not affect ADP reactivity in intact females but reduced the the ADP response by 50% in Ovx females. A similar result was obtained following application of a connexin43 antisense oligonucleotide. These findings suggest that the nascent EDHF dependency of ADP-induced pial arteriolar dilation in Ovx females involves connexin43-related gap junctional communication.  相似文献   

15.
Impaired vascular responsiveness in sepsis may lead to maldistribution of blood flow in organs. We hypothesized that increased production of nitric oxide (NO) via inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) mediates the impaired dilation to ACh in sepsis. Using a 24-h cecal ligation and perforation (CLP) model of sepsis, we measured changes in arteriolar diameter and in red blood cell velocity (V(RBC)) in a capillary fed by the arteriole, following application of ACh to terminal arterioles of rat hindlimb muscle. Sepsis attenuated both ACh-stimulated dilation and V(RBC) increase. In control rats, arteriolar pretreatment with the NO donors S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine or sodium nitroprusside reduced diameter and V(RBC) responses to a level that mimicked sepsis. In septic rats, arteriolar pretreatment with the "selective" iNOS blockers aminoguanidine (AG) or S-methylisothiourea sulfate (SMT) restored the responses to the control level. The putative neuronal NOS (nNOS) inhibitor 7-nitroindazole also restored the response toward control. At 24-h post-CLP, muscles showed no reduction of endothelial NOS (eNOS), elevation of nNOS, and, surprisingly, no induction of iNOS protein; calcium-dependent constitutive NOS (eNOS+nNOS) enzyme activity was increased whereas calcium-independent iNOS activity was negligible. We conclude that 1) AG and SMT inhibit nNOS activity in septic skeletal muscle, 2) NO could impair vasodilative responses in control and septic rats, and 3) the source of increased endogenous NO in septic muscle is likely upregulated nNOS rather than iNOS. Thus agents released from the blood vessel milieu (e.g., NO produced by skeletal muscle nNOS) could affect vascular responsiveness.  相似文献   

16.
Embryos of Helisoma trivolvis exhibit cilia-driven rotation within the egg capsule during development. In this study we examined whether nitric oxide (NO) is a physiological regulator of ciliary beating in cultured ciliary cells. The NO donor S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine (SNAP; 1-1,000 microM) produced a dose-dependent increase in ciliary beat frequency (CBF). In contrast, the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) inhibitor 7-nitroindazole (10 and 100 microM) inhibited the basal CBF and blocked the stimulatory effects of serotonin (100 microM). NO production in response to serotonin was investigated with 4,5-diaminofluorescein diacetate imaging. Although SNAP (100 microM) produced a rise in NO levels in all cells, only 22% of cells responded to serotonin with a moderate increase. The cGMP analog 8-bromo-cGMP (8-Br-cGMP; 0.2 and 2 mM) increased CBF, and the soluble guanylate cyclase inhibitor LY-83583 (10 microM) blocked the cilioexcitatory effects of SNAP and serotonin. These data suggest that NO has a constitutive cilioexcitatory effect in Helisoma embryos and that the stimulatory effects of serotonin and NO work through a cGMP pathway. It appears that in Helisoma cilia, NO activity is necessary, but not sufficient, to fully mediate the cilioexcitatory action of serotonin.  相似文献   

17.
Modified Hb solutions have been developed as O(2) carrier transfusion fluids, but of concern is the possibility that increased scavenging of nitric oxide (NO) within the plasma will alter vascular reactivity even if the Hb does not readily extravasate. The effect of decreasing hematocrit from approximately 30% to 18% by an exchange transfusion of a 6% sebacyl cross-linked tetrameric Hb solution on the diameter of pial arterioles possessing tight endothelial junctions was examined through a cranial window in anesthetized cats with and without a NO synthase (NOS) inhibitor. Superfusion of a NOS inhibitor decreased diameter, and subsequent Hb transfusion produced additional constriction that was not different from Hb transfusion alone but was different from the dilation observed by exchange transfusion of an albumin solution after NOS inhibition. In contrast, abluminal application of the cross-linked Hb produced constriction that was attenuated by the NOS inhibitor. Neither abluminal nor intraluminal cross-linked Hb interfered with pial arteriolar dilation to cromakalim, an activator of ATP-sensitive potassium channels. Pial vascular reactivity to hypocapnia and hypercapnia was unaffected by Hb transfusion. Microsphere-determined regional blood flow indicated selective decreases in perfusion after Hb transfusion in the kidney, small intestine, and neurohypophysis, which does not have tight endothelial junctions. Administration of a NOS inhibitor to reduce the basal level of NO available for scavenging before Hb transfusion prevented further decreases in blood flow to these regions compared with NOS inhibition alone. In contrast, blood flow to skeletal and left ventricular muscle increased, and cerebral blood flow was unchanged after Hb transfusion. This cross-linked Hb tetramer is known to appear in renal lymph but not in urine. We conclude that cell-free tetrameric Hb does not scavenge sufficient NO in the plasma space to significantly affect baseline tone in vascular beds with tight endothelial junctions but does produce substantial constriction in beds with porous endothelium. The data support increasing the molecular size of Hb by polymerization or conjugation to limit extravasation in all vascular beds to preserve normal vascular reactivity.  相似文献   

18.
A previous study with aortic segments isolated from rats fed a fish oil-rich diet indicated an increase in acetylcholine-induced nitric oxide (.NO)-mediated relaxation. However, it remained to be elucidated whether a fish oil-rich diet affects the vascular activity per se and the point of the.NO-cGMP pathway at which fish oil acts. For this purpose, two groups of Sprague-Dawley rats were fed a semipurified diet containing 5% lipids, either corn oil (CO) or menhaden oil (MO), for 8 wk. We studied the mRNA and protein levels of endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) and NOS activity. The bioavailability of vascular.NO was assessed directly by electron spin resonance spectroscopy. The levels of cGMP, l-arginine, and l-citrulline were also evaluated in homogenates. Superoxide anion (O(2)(-).) production and related antioxidant activities were also studied in aortic segments. The aortic content of eNOS mRNA was increased in rats fed the MO-rich diet. This resulted in increases in both eNOS protein levels (70% relative to the rats fed the CO-rich diet) and NOS activity (102%);.NO production increased by 90%, cGMP levels increased by 100%, and l-arginine decreased by 30%. No change in aortic O(2)(-). production was caused by dietary MO. The upregulation of the eNOS-cGMP pathway induced by dietary MO may contribute to the maintenance of vascular homeostasis and explain its beneficial effect in the prevention of arterial diseases.  相似文献   

19.
We previously reported that small mesenteric arteries from hypertensive rats have increased NOS-derived H(2)O(2) and reduced NO/cGMP signaling. We hypothesized that antihypertensive therapy lowers blood pressure through a tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4))-dependent mechanism restoring NO/cGMP signaling and endothelial NOS (NOS3; eNOS) phosphorylation in small arteries. To test this hypothesis, small mesenteric arteries from normotensive rats (NORM), angiotensin II-infused rats (ANG), ANG rats with triple therapy (reserperine, hydrochlorothiazide, and hydralazine), or ANG rats with oral BH(4) therapy were studied. Both triple therapy and oral BH(4) therapy attenuated the rise in systolic blood pressure in ANG rats and restored NO/cGMP signaling in small arteries similarly. Triple therapy significantly increased vascular BH(4) levels and BH(4)-to-BH(2) ratio similar to ANG rats with BH(4) supplementation. Furthermore, triple therapy (but not oral BH(4) therapy) significantly increased GTP cyclohydrolase I (GTPCH I) activity in small arteries without a change in expression. NOS3 phosphorylation at Ser1177 was reduced in small arteries from ANG compared with NORM, while NOS3 phosphorylation at Ser633 and Thr495 were similar in ANG and NORM. NOS3 phosphorylation at Ser1177 was restored with triple therapy or oral BH(4) in ANG rats. In conclusion, antihypertensive therapy regulates NO/cGMP signaling in small arteries through increasing BH(4) levels and NOS3 phosphorylation at Ser1177.  相似文献   

20.
The aim of this study was to investigate the role of nitric oxide (NO) in a cellular model of early preconditioning (PC) in cultured neonatal rat ventricular myocytes. Cardiomyocytes "preconditioned" with 90 min of stimulated ischemia (SI) followed by 30 min reoxygenation in normal culture conditions were protected against subsequent 6 h of SI. PC was blocked by N(G)-monomethyl-L-arginine monoacetate but not by dexamethasone pretreatment. Inducible nitric oxide synthase (NOS) protein expression was not detected during PC ischemia. Pretreatment (90 min) with the NO donor S-nitroso-N-acetyl-L,L-penicillamine (SNAP) mimicked PC, resulting in significant protection. SNAP-triggered protection was completely abolished by 1H-[1,2,4]oxadiazolo[4,3-a]quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ) but was unaffected by chelerythrine or the presence of glibenclamide and 5-hydroxydecanoate. With the use of RIA, SNAP treatment increased cGMP levels, which were blocked by ODQ. Hence, NO is implicated as a trigger in this model of early PC via activation of a constitutive NOS isoform. After exposure to SNAP, the mechanism of cardioprotection is cGMP dependent but independent of protein kinase C or ATP-sensitive K(+) channels. This differs from the proposed mechanism of NO-induced cardioprotection in late PC.  相似文献   

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