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1.
This study determined alterations to nitric oxide (NO)-dependent dilation of skeletal muscle arterioles from obese (OZR) versus lean Zucker rats (LZR). In situ cremaster muscle arterioles from both groups were viewed via television microscopy, and vessel dilation was measured with a video micrometer. Arteriolar dilation to acetylcholine and sodium nitroprusside was reduced in OZR versus LZR, although dilation to aprikalim was unaltered. NO-dependent flow-induced arteriolar dilation (via parallel microvessel occlusion) was attenuated in OZR, impairing arteriolar ability to regulate wall shear rate. Vascular superoxide levels, as assessed by dihydroethidine fluorescence, were elevated in OZR versus LZR. Treatment of cremaster muscles of OZR with the superoxide scavengers polyethylene glycol-superoxide dismutase and catalase improved arteriolar dilation to acetylcholine and sodium nitroprusside and restored flow-induced dilation and microvascular ability to regulate wall shear rate. These results suggest that NO-dependent dilation of skeletal muscle microvessels in OZR is impaired due to increased levels of superoxide. Taken together, these data suggest that the development of diabetes and hypertension in OZR may be associated with an impaired skeletal muscle perfusion via an elevated vascular oxidant stress.  相似文献   

2.
Whereas previous studies have demonstrated that the development of syndrome X in obese Zucker rats (OZR) is associated with impaired arteriolar reactivity to vasoactive stimuli, additional results from these studies indicate that the passive diameter of skeletal muscle arterioles is reduced in OZR versus lean Zucker rats (LZR). On the basis of these prior observations, the present study evaluated structural alterations to the skeletal muscle microcirculation as potential contributors to an elevated vascular resistance. Isolated skeletal muscle resistance arterioles exhibited a reduced passive diameter at all levels of intralumenal pressure and a left-shifted stress-strain curve in OZR versus LZR, indicative of structural remodeling of individual arterioles. Histological analyses using Griffonia simplicifolia I lectin-stained sections of skeletal muscle demonstrated reduced microvessel density (rarefaction) in OZR versus LZR, suggesting remodeling of entire microvascular networks. Finally, under maximally dilated conditions, constant flow-perfused skeletal muscle of OZR exhibited significant elevations in perfusion pressure versus LZR, indicative of an increased resistance to perfusion within the microcirculation. These data suggest that developing structural alterations to the skeletal muscle microcirculation in OZR result in elevated vascular resistance, which may, acting in concert with impaired arteriolar reactivity, contribute to blunted active hyperemic responses and compromised performance of in situ skeletal muscle with elevated metabolic demand.  相似文献   

3.
As obese Zucker rats (OZR) manifesting the metabolic syndrome exhibit enhanced vascular adrenergic constriction and potentially an enhanced adrenergic activity vs. lean Zucker rats (LZR), this study tested the hypothesis that OZR exhibit an improved tolerance to progressive hemorrhage. Preliminary experiments indicated that, corrected for body mass, total blood volume was reduced in OZR vs. LZR. Anesthetized LZR and OZR had a cremaster muscle prepared for in situ videomicroscopy and had renal, splanchnic, hindlimb, and skeletal muscle perfusion monitored with flow probes. Arterial pressure, arteriolar reactivity to norepinephrine, and tissue/organ perfusion were monitored after either infusion of phentolamine or successive withdrawals of 10% total blood volume. Phentolamine infusion indicated that regional adrenergic tone under control conditions differs substantially between LZR and OZR, whereas with hemorrhage OZR exhibit decompensation in arterial pressure before LZR. Renal, distal hindlimb, and skeletal muscle perfusion decreased more rapidly and to a greater extent in OZR vs. LZR after hemorrhage. In contrast, hemorrhage-induced reductions in splanchnic perfusion in OZR lagged behind those in LZR, although a similar maximum reduction was ultimately attained. With increasing hemorrhage, cremasteric arteriolar tone increased more in OZR than LZR, and this increase in active tone was entirely due to an elevated adrenergic contribution. Norepinephrine-induced arteriolar constriction was greater in OZR vs. LZR under control conditions and during hemorrhage, with arterioles from OZR demonstrating early closure vs. LZR. These results suggest that a combination of reduced blood volume and elevated peripheral adrenergic constriction contribute to impaired hemorrhage tolerance in OZR.  相似文献   

4.
This study tested the hypothesis that chronically elevated oxidant stress contributes to impaired active hyperemia in skeletal muscle of obese Zucker rats (OZR) vs. lean Zucker rats (LZR) through progressive deteriorations in microvascular structure. Twelve-week-old LZR and OZR were given 4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine 1-oxyl (tempol) in the drinking water for approximately 4 wk. Subsequently, perfusion of in situ gastrocnemius muscle was determined during incremental elevations in metabolic demand, while a contralateral skeletal muscle arteriole and the gastrocnemius muscle was removed to determine dilator reactivity, vessel wall mechanics, and microvessel density. Under control conditions, active hyperemia was impaired at all levels of metabolic demand in OZR, and this was correlated with a reduced microvessel density, increased arteriolar stiffness, and impaired dilator reactivity. Chronic tempol ingestion improved perfusion during moderate to high metabolic demand only and was associated with improved arteriolar reactivity and microvessel density; passive vessel mechanics were unaltered. Combined antioxidant therapy and nitric oxide synthase inhibition in OZR prevented much of the restored perfusion and microvessel density. In LZR, treatment with N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) hydrochloride and hydralazine (to prevent hypertension) impaired active hyperemia, dilator reactivity, and microvessel density, although arteriolar distensibility was not altered. These results suggest that with the development of the metabolic syndrome, chronic reductions in nitric oxide bioavailability, in part via the scavenging actions of oxidative free radicals, contribute to a loss of skeletal muscle microvessels, leading to impaired muscle perfusion with elevated metabolic demand.  相似文献   

5.
Skeletal muscle arterioles from obese Zucker rats (OZR) exhibit oxidant stress-based alterations in reactivity, enhanced alpha-adrenergic constriction, and reduced distensibility vs. microvessels of lean Zucker rats (LZR). The present study determined the impact of these alterations for perfusion and performance of in situ skeletal muscle during periods of elevated metabolic demand. During bouts of isometric tetanic contractions, fatigue of in situ gastrocnemius muscle of OZR was increased vs. LZR; this was associated with impaired active hyperemia. In OZR, vasoactive responses of skeletal muscle arterioles from the contralateral gracilis muscle were impaired, due in part to elevated oxidant tone; reactivity was improved after treatment with polyethylene glycol-superoxide dismutase (PEGSOD). Arterioles of OZR also exhibited increased alpha-adrenergic sensitivity, which was abolished by treatment with phentolamine (10-5 M). Intravenous infusion of phentolamine (10 mg/kg) or PEG-SOD (2,000 U/kg) in OZR altered neither fatigue rates nor active hyperemia from untreated levels; however, combined infusion improved performance and hyperemia, although not to levels in LZR. Microvessel density in the contralateral gastrocnemius muscle, determined via histological analyses, was reduced by approximately 25% in OZR vs. LZR, while individual arterioles from the contralateral gracilis muscle demonstrated reduced distensibility. These data suggest that altered arteriolar reactivity contributes to reduced muscle performance and active hyperemia in OZR. Further, despite pharmacological improvements in arteriolar reactivity, reduced skeletal muscle microvessel density and arteriolar distensibility also contribute substantially to reduced active hyperemia and potentially to impaired muscle performance.  相似文献   

6.
Reduced skeletal muscle microvessel density (MVD) in the obese Zucker rat (OZR) model of the metabolic syndrome is a function of a chronic reduction in vascular nitric oxide (NO) bioavailability. Previous studies suggest that exercise can improve NO bioavailability and reduce chronic inflammation and that low vascular NO bioavailability may be associated with impaired angiogenic responses via increased matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-2 and MMP-9 activity. As such, we hypothesized that chronic exercise (EX) would increase NO bioavailability in OZR and blunt microvascular rarefaction through reduced MMP activity, and potentially via altered plasma cytokine levels. Ten weeks of treadmill exercise (1 h/day, 5 days/wk, 22 m/min) reduced body mass and fasting insulin and triglyceride levels in EX-OZR vs. sedentary (SED) OZR. In EX-OZR, gastrocnemius muscle MVD was improved by 19 +/- 4%, whereas skeletal muscle arteriolar dilation and conduit arterial methacholine-induced NO release were increased. In EX-OZR, functional hyperemia was improved vs. SED-OZR, and minimum vascular resistance within perfused gastrocnemius muscle was reduced, although no change in arteriolar stiffness was identified. Western blotting and gelatin zymography demonstrated that neither expression nor activity of MMP-2 or MMP-9 was altered in skeletal muscle of EX vs. SED animals. Plasma markers of inflammation associated with angiogenesis, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 and IL-1beta, were increased in SED-OZR and were reduced with training, whereas IL-13 was reduced in SED-OZR and increased with exercise. These data suggest that exercise-induced improvements in skeletal muscle MVD in OZR are associated with increased NO bioavailability and may stem from altered inflammatory profiles rather than MMP function.  相似文献   

7.
This study examined skeletal muscle microvessel reactivity to constrictor stimuli in obese (OZR) versus lean Zucker rats (LZR). Gracilis arteries from both rat groups were isolated, cannulated with glass micropipettes, and viewed via television microscopy. Changes in vessel diameter were measured with a video micrometer. Arterial constriction to norepinephrine was elevated in OZR versus LZR, although vasoconstrictor reactivity to endothelin and angiotensin II was unaltered. Differences in reactivity between vessels of LZR and OZR were not explained by the loss of either endothelial nitric oxide synthase or beta-adrenergic receptor function. Reactivity of in situ cremasteric arterioles of OZR to norepinephrine was elevated versus LZR. Treatment with prazosin increased the diameter of in vivo gracilis arteries of OZR to levels determined in LZR and also normalized blood pressure in OZR. These results suggest that the constrictor reactivity of skeletal muscle microvessels in OZR is heightened in response to alpha-adrenergic stimuli and that development of diabetes in OZR may be associated with impaired skeletal muscle perfusion and hypertension due to microvessel hyperreactivity in response to sympathetic stimulation.  相似文献   

8.

Background and Aims

Endothelial small- and intermediate-conductance KCa channels, SK3 and IK1, are key mediators in the endothelium-derived hyperpolarization and relaxation of vascular smooth muscle and also in the modulation of endothelial Ca2+ signaling and nitric oxide (NO) release. Obesity is associated with endothelial dysfunction and impaired relaxation, although how obesity influences endothelial SK3/IK1 function is unclear. Therefore we assessed whether the role of these channels in the coronary circulation is altered in obese animals.

Methods and Results

In coronary arteries mounted in microvascular myographs, selective blockade of SK3/IK1 channels unmasked an increased contribution of these channels to the ACh- and to the exogenous NO- induced relaxations in arteries of Obese Zucker Rats (OZR) compared to Lean Zucker Rats (LZR). Relaxant responses induced by the SK3/IK1 channel activator NS309 were enhanced in OZR and NO- endothelium-dependent in LZR, whereas an additional endothelium-independent relaxant component was found in OZR. Fura2-AM fluorescence revealed a larger ACh-induced intracellular Ca2+ mobilization in the endothelium of coronary arteries from OZR, which was inhibited by blockade of SK3/IK1 channels in both LZR and OZR. Western blot analysis showed an increased expression of SK3/IK1 channels in coronary arteries of OZR and immunohistochemistry suggested that it takes place predominantly in the endothelial layer.

Conclusions

Obesity may induce activation of adaptive vascular mechanisms to preserve the dilator function in coronary arteries. Increased function and expression of SK3/IK1 channels by influencing endothelial Ca2+ dynamics might contribute to the unaltered endothelium-dependent coronary relaxation in the early stages of obesity.  相似文献   

9.
Previously, using an animal model of syndrome X, the obese Zucker rat (OZR), we documented impaired endothelium-dependent vasodilation. The aim of this study was to determine whether reduced expression or altered posttranslational regulation of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) underlies the vascular dysfunction in OZR rats. There was no significant difference in the relative abundance of eNOS in hearts, aortas, or skeletal muscle between lean Zucker rats (LZR) and OZR regardless of age. There was no difference in eNOS mRNA levels, as determined by real-time PCR, between LZR and OZR. The inability of insulin resistance to modulate eNOS expression was also documented in two additional in vivo models, the ob/ob mouse and the fructose-fed rat, and in vitro via adenoviral expression of protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B in endothelial cells. We next investigated whether changes in the acute posttranslational regulation of eNOS occurs with insulin resistance. Phosphorylation of eNOS at S632 (human S633) and T494 was not different between LZR and OZR; however, phosphorylation of S1176 was significantly enhanced in OZR. Phosphorylation of S1176 was not different in the ob/ob mouse or in fructose-fed rats. The association of heat shock protein 90 with eNOS, a key regulatory step controlling nitric oxide and aberrant O2- production, was not different between OZR and LZR. Taken together, these results suggest that changes in eNOS expression or posttranslation regulation do not underlie the vascular dysfunction seen with insulin resistance and that other mechanisms, such as altered localization, reduced availability of cofactors, substrates, and the elevated production of O2-, may be responsible.  相似文献   

10.
Insulin exerts both NO-dependent vasodilator and endothelin-dependent vasoconstrictor effects on skeletal muscle arterioles. The intracellular enzymes 1-phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-kinase) and Akt have been shown to mediate the vasodilator effects of insulin, but the signaling molecules involved in the vasoconstrictor effects of insulin in these arterioles are unknown. Our objective was to identify intracellular mediators of acute vasoconstrictor effects of insulin on skeletal muscle arterioles. Rat cremaster first-order arterioles (n=40) were isolated, and vasoreactivity to insulin was studied using a pressure myograph. Insulin induced dose-dependent vasoconstriction of skeletal muscle arterioles (up to -22 +/- 3% of basal diameter; P <0.05) during PI3-kinase inhibition with wortmannin (50 nmol/l). Insulin-induced vasoconstriction was abolished by inhibition of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2) with PD-98059 (40 micromol/l). In addition, inhibition of ERK1/2 without PI3-kinase inhibition uncovered insulin-mediated vasodilatation in skeletal muscle arterioles (up to 37 +/- 10% of baseline diameter; P <0.05). Effects of insulin on ERK1/2 activation in arterioles were then investigated by Western blot analysis. Insulin induced a transient 2.4-fold increase in ERK1/2 phosphorylation (maximal at approximately 15 min) in skeletal muscle arterioles (P <0.05). Removal of the arteriolar endothelium abolished insulin-induced vasoconstriction, which suggests that activation of ERK1/2 in endothelial cells is involved in acute insulin-mediated vasoconstriction. To investigate this, acute effects of insulin on ERK1/2 phosphorylation were studied in human microvascular endothelial cells. In support of the findings in skeletal muscle arterioles, insulin induced a 1.9-fold increase in ERK1/2 phosphorylation (maximal at approximately 15 min) in microvascular endothelial cells (P <0.05). We conclude that acute vasoconstrictor effects of insulin in skeletal muscle arterioles are mediated by activation of ERK1/2 in endothelium. This ERK1/2-mediated vasoconstrictor effect antagonizes insulin-induced, PI3-kinase-dependent vasodilatation in skeletal muscle arterioles. These findings provide a novel mechanism by which insulin may determine blood flow and glucose disposal in skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

11.
Functional hyperemia requires the coordination of smooth muscle cell relaxation along and between branches of the arteriolar network. Vasodilation is conducted from cell to cell along the arteriolar wall through gap junction channels composed of connexin protein subunits. Within skeletal muscle, it is unclear whether arteriolar endothelium, smooth muscle, or both cell layers provide the cellular pathway for conduction. Furthermore, the constitutive profile of connexin expression within the microcirculation is unknown. We tested the hypothesis that conducted vasodilation and connexin expression are intrinsic to the endothelium of arterioles (17 +/- 1 microm diameter) that supply the skeletal muscle fibers in the cremaster of anesthetized C57BL/6 mice. ACh delivered to an arteriole (500 ms, 1-microA pulse; 1-microm micropipette) produced local dilation of 17 +/- 1 microm; conducted vasodilation observed 1 mm upstream was 9 +/- 1 microm (n = 5). After light-dye treatment to selectively disrupt endothelium (250-microm segment centered 500 microm upstream, confirmed by loss of local response to ACh while constriction to phenylephrine and dilation to sodium nitroprusside remained intact), we found that conducted vasodilation was nearly abolished (2 +/- 1 microm; P < 0.05). Whole-mount immunohistochemistry for connexins revealed punctate labeling at borders of arteriolar endothelial cells, with connexin40 and connexin37 in all branches and connexin43 only in the largest branches. Immunoreactivity for connexins was not apparent in smooth muscle or in capillary or venular endothelium, despite robust immunolabeling for alpha-actin and platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1, respectively. We conclude that vasodilation is conducted along the endothelium of mouse skeletal muscle arterioles and that connexin40 and connexin37 are the primary connexins forming gap junction channels between arteriolar endothelial cells.  相似文献   

12.
Previous studies from this laboratory suggest that during maturation, rapid microvascular growth is accompanied by changes in the mechanisms responsible for regulation of tissue blood flow. To further define these changes, we studied isolated gracilis muscle arterioles from weanling ( approximately 25 days) and juvenile ( approximately 44 days) Sprague-Dawley rats to test the hypothesis that endothelial mechanisms for the control of arteriolar tone are altered with growth. Responses to the endothelium-dependent dilator acetylcholine (ACh) were greater in weanling arterioles (WA) than in juvenile arterioles (JA), whereas there were no consistent differences between age groups in arteriolar responses to other endothelium-dependent agonists (A-23187, vascular endothelial growth factor, and simvastatin). Inhibition of nitric oxide synthase (NOS) with N(omega)-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester (l-NAME) attenuated ACh-induced dilation in JA but not in WA. In JA, combined inhibition of NOS and cyclooxygenase (with indomethacin) reduced the dilator responses to ACh and simvastatin by approximately 90% and approximately 70%, respectively, but had no effect in WA. Cytochrome P450 epoxygenase inhibition [with 2-(propargyloxyphenyl) hexanoic acid] had no effect on responses to ACh or simvastatin in either age group. Inhibition of Ca(2+)-activated or ATP-dependent potassium channels (with tetraethylammonium or glibenclamide, respectively) reduced these arteriolar responses in JA but not those in WA. These findings suggest that in fully grown microvascular networks, endothelium-dependent arteriolar dilation is mediated by the combined release of endothelial nitric oxide and vasodilator prostanoids, and in part through activation of Ca(2+)-activated and ATP-dependent potassium channels. However, during earlier microvascular growth, this dilation is mediated by other factors yet to be identified. This may have significant implications for the regulation of tissue perfusion during microvascular development.  相似文献   

13.
This study determined alterations to hypoxic dilation of isolated skeletal muscle resistance arteries (gracilis arteries; viewed via television microscopy) from obese Zucker rats (OZR) compared with lean Zucker rats (LZR). Hypoxic dilation was reduced in OZR compared with LZR. Endothelium removal and cyclooxygenase inhibition (indomethacin) severely reduced this response in both groups, although nitric oxide synthase inhibition (N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester) reduced dilation in LZR only. Treatment of vessels with a PGH(2)-thromboxane A(2) receptor antagonist had no effect on hypoxic dilation in either group. Arterial dilation to arachidonic acid, iloprost, acetylcholine, and sodium nitroprusside was reduced in OZR versus LZR, although dilation to forskolin and aprikalim was unaltered. Treatment of arteries from OZR with oxidative radical scavengers increased dilation to hypoxia and agonists, with no effect on responses in LZR. The restored hypoxic dilation in OZR was abolished by indomethacin. These results suggest that hypoxic dilation of skeletal muscle microvessels from LZR represents the summated effects of prostanoid and nitric oxide release, whereas the impaired response of vessels in OZR may reflect scavenging of PGI(2) by superoxide anion.  相似文献   

14.
Severe sepsis is a systemic inflammatory response to infection resulting in acute organ dysfunction. Vascular perfusion abnormalities are implicated in the pathology of organ failure, but studies of microvascular function in human sepsis are limited. We hypothesized that impaired microvascular responses to reactive hyperemia lead to impaired oxygen delivery relative to the needs of tissue and that these impairments would be associated with organ failure in sepsis. We studied 24 severe sepsis subjects 24 h after recognition of organ dysfunction; 15 healthy subjects served as controls. Near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) was used to measure tissue 1) microvascular hemoglobin signal strength and 2) oxygen saturation of microvascular hemoglobin (StO2). Both values were measured in thenar skeletal muscle before and after 5 min of forearm stagnant ischemia. At baseline, skeletal muscle microvascular hemoglobin was lower in septic than control subjects. Microvascular hemoglobin increased during reactive hyperemia in both groups, but less so in sepsis. StO2 at baseline and throughout ischemia was similar between the two groups; however, the rate of tissue oxygen consumption was significantly slower in septic subjects than in controls. The rate of increase in StO2 during reactive hyperemia was significantly slower in septic subjects than in controls; this impairment was accentuated in those with more organ failure. We conclude that organ dysfunction in severe sepsis is associated with dysregulation of microvascular oxygen balance. NIRS measurements of skeletal muscle microvascular perfusion and reactivity may provide important information about sepsis and serve as endpoints in future therapeutic interventions aimed at improving the microcirculation.  相似文献   

15.
This study characterized myogenic activation of skeletal muscle (gracilis) resistance arteries from lean (LZR) and obese Zucker rats (OZR). Arteries from OZR exhibited increased myogenic activation versus LZR; this increase was impaired by endothelium denudation or nitric oxde synthase inhibition. Treatment of vessels with 17-octadecynoic acid impaired responses in both strains by comparable amounts. Dihydroethidine microfluorography indicated elevated vascular superoxide levels in OZR versus LZR; immunohistochemistry demonstrated elevated vascular nitrotyrosine levels in OZR, indicating increased peroxynitrite presence. Vessel treatment with oxidative radical scavengers (polythylene glycol-superoxide dismutase/catalase) or inhibition of Ca(2+)-activated K(+) (K(Ca)) channels (iberiotoxin) did not alter myogenic activation in LZR but normalized activation in OZR. Application of peroxynitrite to vessels of OZR caused a greater vasoconstriction versus LZR; the response was impaired in OZR by elevated intraluminal pressure and was abolished in both strains by iberiotoxin. These results suggest that enhanced myogenic activation of gracilis arteries of OZR versus LZR 1) is not due to alterations in cytochrome P-450 contribution, and 2) may be due to elevated peroxynitrite levels inhibiting K(Ca) channels following increased intraluminal pressure.  相似文献   

16.
Compromised microvascular responsiveness is one of the key factors associated with mortality of septic patients. The present study addresses the mechanism of protection by ascorbate against impaired vasoconstriction in septic mice. Sepsis (i.e., cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) model) elevated both plasma protein carbonyl (i.e., an index of oxidative stress) and plasma nitrite/nitrate (NOx) levels, reduced baseline mean arterial blood pressure (MABP), and inhibited the MABP pressor response to angiotensin II (Ang II) at 6 h post-CLP. At the microvascular level, sepsis increased the inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) mRNA level in cremaster muscle arterioles (18-25 microm diameter) at 3 h post-CLP, and impaired vasoconstriction to Ang II in these arterioles at 6 h post-CLP. At 24 h post-CLP, sepsis resulted in 9% survival. An intravenous bolus of ascorbate (200 mg/kg body wt) given 30 min prior to CLP prevented the protein carbonyl and NOx increases, partially restored the baseline arterial pressure, and completely protected against all arteriolar iNOS mRNA increases, arteriolar constriction hyporesponsiveness, and pressor response impairment. Survival increased to 65%. In septic mice, iNOS gene knockout resulted in protection of arteriolar constriction and pressor responses identical to that provided by ascorbate. Ascorbate bolus given 3 h post-CLP protected against the increase in plasma NOx concentration and against the pressor response impairment. We conclude that ascorbate may protect arteriolar vasoconstrictor responsiveness in sepsis by inhibiting excessive NO production.  相似文献   

17.
These studies tested the hypothesis that in obese Zucker rats (OZRs), a model of metabolic syndrome, the impaired functional vasodilation is due to increased thromboxane receptor (TP)-mediated vasoconstriction and/or decreased prostacyclin-induced vasodilation. Spinotrapezius arcade arterioles from 12-wk-old lean (LZR) and OZR were chosen for microcirculatory observation. Arteriolar diameter (5 LZR and 6 OZR) was measured after 2 min of muscle stimulation in the absence or presence of 1 microM SQ-29548 (TP antagonist). Additionally, arteriolar diameter (6 for each group) was measured after application of iloprost (prostacyclin analog; 0.28, 2.8, and 28 microM), arachidonic acid (10 microM), and sodium nitroprusside (0.1, 1, and 10 microM) in the absence or presence of 1 microM SQ-29548. A 10 microM concentration of adenosine was used to induce a maximal dilation. Basal diameters were not different between LZRs and OZRs. Functional hyperemia and arachidonic acid-mediated vasodilations were significantly attenuated in OZR compared with LZR, and treatment with 1 microM SQ-29548 significantly enhanced the dilations in OZRs, although it had no effect in LZRs. Vasodilatory responses to iloprost and sodium nitroprusside (1 and 10 microM) were significantly reduced in OZR. Adenosine-mediated vasodilation was not different between groups. These results suggest that the impaired functional dilation in the OZR is due to an increased TP-mediated vasoconstriction and a decreased PGI2-induced vasodilation.  相似文献   

18.
The objective of this study is to compare the effectiveness of metabolic signals derived from erythrocytes and derived from the vessel wall for regulating blood flow in heterogeneous microvascular networks. A theoretical model is used to simulate blood flow, mass transport, and vascular responses. The model accounts for myogenic, shear-dependent, and metabolic flow regulation. Metabolic signals are assumed to be propagated upstream along vessel walls via a conducted response. Arteriolar tone is assumed to depend on the conducted metabolic signal as well as local wall shear stress and wall tension, and arteriolar diameters are calculated based on vascular smooth muscle mechanics. The model shows that under certain conditions metabolic regulation based on wall-derived signals can be more effective in matching perfusion to local oxygen demand relative to regulation based on erythrocyte-derived signals, resulting in higher extraction and lower oxygen deficit. The lower effectiveness of the erythrocyte-derived signal is shown to result in part from the unequal partition of hematocrit at diverging bifurcations, such that low-flow vessels tend to receive a reduced hematocrit and thereby experience a reduced erythrocyte-derived metabolic signal. The model simulations predict that metabolic signals independent of erythrocytes may play an important role in local metabolic regulation of vascular tone and flow distribution in heterogeneous microvessel networks.  相似文献   

19.
Insulin has an exercise-like action to increase microvascular perfusion of skeletal muscle and thereby enhance delivery of hormone and nutrient to the myocytes. With insulin resistance, insulin's action to increase microvascular perfusion is markedly impaired. This review examines the present status of these observations and techniques available to measure such changes as well as the possible underpinning mechanisms. Low physiological doses of insulin and light exercise have been shown to increase microvascular perfusion without increasing bulk blood flow. In these circumstances, blood flow is proposed to be redirected from the nonnutritive route to the nutritive route with flow becoming dominant in the nonnutritive route when insulin resistance has developed. Increased vasomotion controlled by vascular smooth muscle may be part of the explanation by which insulin mediates an increase in microvascular perfusion, as seen from the effects of insulin on both muscle and skin microvascular blood flow. In addition, vascular dysfunction appears to be an early development in the onset of insulin resistance, with the consequence that impaired glucose delivery, more so than insulin delivery, accounts for the diminished glucose uptake by insulin-resistant muscle. Regular exercise may prevent and ameliorate insulin resistance by increasing "vascular fitness" and thereby recovering insulin-mediated capillary recruitment.  相似文献   

20.
The present study evaluated the contribution of cytochrome P-450 omega-hydroxylase in modulating the reactivity of cremaster muscle arterioles in normotensive rats on high-salt (HS) and low-salt (LS) diet and in rats with reduced renal mass hypertension (RRM-HT). Changes in arteriolar diameter in response to ACh, sodium nitroprusside (SNP), ANG II, and elevated O(2) were measured via television microscopy under control conditions and following cytochrome P-450 omega-hydroxylase inhibition with 17-octadecynoic acid (17-ODYA) or N-methylsulfonyl-12,12-dibromododec-11-enamide (DDMS). In normotensive rats on either LS or HS diet, resting tone was unaffected and arteriolar reactivity to ACh or SNP was minimally affected by cytochrome P-450 omega-hydroxylase inhibition. In RRM-HT rats, cytochrome P-450 omega-hydroxylase inhibition reduced resting tone and significantly enhanced arteriolar dilation to ACh and SNP. Treatment with 17-ODYA or DDMS inhibited arteriolar constriction to ANG II and O(2) in all the groups, although the degree of inhibition was greater in RRM-HT than in normotensive animals. These results suggest that metabolites of cytochrome P-450 omega-hydroxylase contribute to the altered reactivity of skeletal muscle arterioles to vasoconstrictor and vasodilator stimuli in RRM-HT.  相似文献   

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