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1.
Cigarette smoking is an independent risk factor for vasculogenic erectile dysfunction (ED). Nitric oxide (NO) has been demonstrated to be the principal mediator of cavernous smooth muscle relaxation and penile erection. Therefore, we examined whether or not enzyme activities and factors involved in the NO generation pathway are affected in rabbit corpus cavernosum after administration of nicotine- and tar-free cigarette smoke extract (CSE). CSE was prepared by bubbling a stream of cigarette smoke into phosphate-buffered saline. CSE was injected subcutaneously into adult male rabbits once a day for 5 wk. In the CSE group, significantly decreased cyclic GMP production as a marker of NO generation was associated with attenuated overall nitric oxide synthase (NOS) activity, enhanced arginase activity, accumulation of endogenous NOS inhibitors such as monomethylarginine (MMA) and asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA), and decreased dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase (DDAH) activity as an metabolizing enzyme of endogenous NOS inhibitors. Neuronal NOS (nNOS) and DDAH I protein expression were decreased without altering endothelial NOS expression, while arginase I expression was upregulated. These results suggest that impaired NO production would result from blunted NOS activity, which is possibly brought about by the downregulation of nNOS protein, accumulation of endogenous NOS inhibitors, and enhanced arginase activity together with upregulation of arginase I protein in cavernous tissue. The impaired DDAH activity due to decreased expression of DDAH I protein would result in an accumulation of endogenous NOS inhibitors with CSE. These alterations may be relevant to induction of the erectile dysfunction following CSE.  相似文献   

2.
Nagai A  Yamashita K  Imamura M  Azuma H 《Life sciences》2008,82(23-24):1162-1168
The present experiments were designed to investigate whether electrically polarized hydroxyapatite (HA electret) modifies reendothelialization and intimal hyperplasia occurring after endothelial removal of the rabbit carotid artery. Both HA electret and non-polarized HA, which served as a control, had been powdered and mixed with agarose gel. One of the two was applied around the external surface of the carotid artery. Histological analyses revealed that HA electret but not control HA significantly inhibited intimal hyperplasia. The number of Ki67-positive cells detectable in the intimal layer was significantly fewer in the HA electret group. In the HA electret group, abundant TUNEL-positive cells were detected in the media. The number of CD31-positive cells detected on the luminal surface was significantly higher in the HA electret group. Endothelium- and nitric oxide (NO)-dependent relaxation in response to carbachol was significantly improved only in the HA electret group. In conclusion, this is the first report demonstrating that HA electret significantly improved intimal hyperplasia by accelerating the regeneration of functioning endothelial cells and enhancing the apoptosis of medial smooth muscle cells.  相似文献   

3.
Emerging evidence supports the idea that arginase, expressed in the vascular endothelial cells of humans and other species, modulates endothelial nitric oxide (NO) synthase-3 (NOS-3) activity by regulating intracellular L-arginine bioavailability. Arginase II is thought to be expressed in the mitochondria of a variety of nonendothelial cells, whereas arginase I is known to be confined to the cytosol of hepatic and other cells. The isoforms that regulate NOS-3 and their subcellular distribution, however, remain incompletely characterized. We therefore tested the hypothesis that arginase II is confined to the mitochondria and that mitochondrial arginase II reciprocally regulates vascular endothelial NO production. Western blot analysis, immunocytochemistry with MitoTracker, and immunoelectron microscopy confirmed that arginase II is confined predominantly but not exclusively to the mitochondria. Arginase activity was significantly decreased, whereas NO production was significantly increased in the aorta and isolated endothelial cells from arginase II knockout (ArgII(-/-)) mice compared with wild-type (WT) mice. The vasorelaxation response to acetylcholine (ACh) was markedly enhanced and the vasoconstrictor response to phenylephrine (PE) attenuated in ArgII(-/-) in pressurized mouse carotid arteries. Furthermore, inhibition of NOS-3 by N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) impaired ACh response and restored the PE response to that observed in WT vessels. Vascular stiffness, as assessed by pulse wave velocity (PWV), was significantly decreased in ArgII(-/-) compared with WT mice. On the other hand, 14 days of oral L-NAME treatment significantly increased PWV in both WT and ArgII(-/-) mice, such that they were not significantly different from one another. These data suggest that arginase II is predominantly confined to the mitochondria and that this mitochondrial arginase II regulates NO production, vascular endothelial function, and vascular stiffness by modulating NOS-3 activity.  相似文献   

4.
Enhanced vascular arginase activity impairs endothelium-dependent vasorelaxation by decreasing l-arginine availability to endothelial nitric oxide (NO) synthase, thereby reducing NO production. Elevated angiotensin II (ANG II) is a key component of endothelial dysfunction in many cardiovascular diseases and has been linked to elevated arginase activity. We determined signaling mechanisms by which ANG II increases endothelial arginase function. Results show that ANG II (0.1 μM, 24 h) elevates arginase activity and arginase I expression in bovine aortic endothelial cells (BAECs) and decreases NO production. These effects are prevented by the arginase inhibitor BEC (100 μM). Blockade of ANG II AT(1) receptors or transfection with small interfering RNA (siRNA) for Gα12 and Gα13 also prevents ANG II-induced elevation of arginase activity, but siRNA for Gαq does not. ANG II also elevates active RhoA levels and induces phosphorylation of p38 MAPK. Inhibitors of RhoA activation (simvastatin, 0.1 μM) or Rho kinase (ROCK) (Y-27632, 10 μM; H1152, 0.5 μM) block both ANG II-induced elevation of arginase activity and phosphorylation of p38 MAPK. Furthermore, pretreatment of BAECs with p38 inhibitor SB-202190 (2 μM) or transfection with p38 MAPK siRNA prevents ANG II-induced increased arginase activity/expression and maintains NO production. Additionally, inhibitors of p38 MAPK (SB-203580, 5 μg·kg(-1)·day(-1)) or arginase (ABH, 8 mg·kg(-1)·day(-1)) or arginase gene knockout in mice prevents ANG II-induced vascular endothelial dysfunction and associated enhancement of arginase. These results indicate that ANG II increases endothelial arginase activity/expression through Gα12/13 G proteins coupled to AT(1) receptors and subsequent activation of RhoA/ROCK/p38 MAPK pathways leading to endothelial dysfunction.  相似文献   

5.
Elevated levels of serum uric acid (UA) are commonly associated with primary pulmonary hypertension but have generally not been thought to have any causal role. Recent experimental studies, however, have suggested that UA may affect various vasoactive mediators. We therefore tested the hypothesis that UA might alter nitric oxide (NO) levels in pulmonary arterial endothelial cells (PAEC). In isolated porcine pulmonary artery segments (PAS), UA (7.5 mg/dl) inhibits acetylcholine-induced vasodilation. The incubation of PAEC with UA caused a dose-dependent decrease in NO and cGMP production stimulated by bradykinin or Ca(2+)-ionophore A23187. We explored cellular mechanisms by which UA might cause reduced NO production focusing on the effects of UA on the l-arginine-endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) and l-arginine-arginase pathways. Incubation of PAEC with different concentrations of UA (2.5-15 mg/dl) for 24 h did not affect l-[(3)H]arginine uptake or activity/expression of eNOS. However, PAEC incubated with UA (7.5 mg/dl; 24 h) released more urea in culture media than control PAEC, suggesting that arginase activation might be involved in the UA effect. Kinetic analysis of arginase activity in PAEC lysates and rat liver and kidney homogenates demonstrated that UA activated arginase by increasing its affinity for l-arginine. An inhibitor of arginase (S)-(2-boronoethyl)-l-cysteine prevented UA-induced reduction of A23187-stimulated cGMP production by PAEC and abolished UA-induced inhibition of acetylcholine-stimulated vasodilation in PAS. We conclude that UA-induced arginase activation is a potential mechanism for reduction of NO production in PAEC.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Cigarette-induced endothelial dysfunction could be an early mediator of atherosclerosis. In this study, we explored the mechanisms of cigarette smoke extract (CSE)-induced human aortic endothelial cells (HAEC) apoptosis. We found that 10-65% of HAECs underwent apoptotic changes when HAECs were exposed to 0.001-0.02 cigarette equivalent unit of CSE for 4 h. CSE activated the caspases-3 and 8, the p38 MAP kinase and stress activated protein kinase/c-Jun N-terminal protein kinase (SAPK/JNK). Specific inhibitors of p38 MAP or SAPK/JNK reduced CSE-induced caspase activation. We further showed that eNOS pre-activation by L-arginine reduced endothelial apoptosis from 65% to 5%; and eNOS inhibition by N-omega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester accentuated CSE-induced endothelial apoptosis. We suggest that appropriate endogenous NO production may be an important protective mechanism against smoking-induced endothelial damage.  相似文献   

8.
Although the cardiovascular morbidity and mortality induced by cigarette smoking exceed those attributable to lung cancer, the molecular basis of smoking-induced vascular injury remains unclear. To test the link between cigarette smoke, oxidative stress, and vascular inflammation, rats were exposed to the smoke of five cigarettes per day (for 1 wk). Also, isolated arteries were exposed to cigarette smoke extract (CSE; 0 to 40 microg/ml, for 6 h) in organoid culture. We found that smoking impaired acetylcholine-induced relaxations of carotid arteries, which could be improved by the NAD(P)H oxidase inhibitor apocynin. Lucigenin chemiluminescence measurements showed that both smoking and in vitro CSE exposure significantly increased vascular O(2)(*-) production. Dihydroethidine staining showed that increased O(2)(*-) generation was present both in endothelial and smooth muscle cells. CSE also increased vascular H(2)O(2) production (dichlorofluorescein fluorescence). Vascular mRNA expression of the proinflammatory cytokines IL-1beta, IL-6, and TNF-alpha and that of inducible nitric oxide synthase was significantly increased by both smoking and CSE exposure, which could be prevented by inhibition of NAD(P)H oxidase (diphenyleneiodonium and apocynin) or scavenging of H(2)O(2). In cultured endothelial cells, CSE elicited NF-kappaB activation and increased monocyte adhesiveness, which were prevented by apocynin and catalase. Thus we propose that water-soluble components of cigarette smoke (which are likely to be present in the bloodstream in vivo in smokers) activate the vascular NAD(P)H oxidase. NAD(P)H oxidase-derived H(2)O(2) activates NF-kappaB, leading to proinflammatory alterations in vascular phenotype, which likely promotes development of atherosclerosis, especially if other risk factors are also present.  相似文献   

9.
An early event in the pathogenesis of emphysema is the development of inflammation associated with accumulation of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) in small airways, and inflammatory cell recruitment from the circulation involves migration across endothelial and epithelial cell barriers. Platelet-activating factor (PAF) promotes transendothelial migration in several vascular beds, and we postulated that increased PAF production in the airways of smokers might enhance inflammatory cell recruitment and exacerbate inflammation. To examine this possibility, we incubated human lung microvascular endothelial cells (HMVEC-L) with cigarette smoke extract (CSE) and found that CSE inhibits PAF-acetylhydrolase (PAF-AH) activity. This enhances HMVEC-L PAF production and PMN adherence, and adherence is blocked by PAF receptor antagonists (CV3988 or ginkgolide B). CSE also inhibited PAF-AH activity of lung endothelial cells isolated from wild-type (WT) and iPLA(2)β knockout mice, and with WT cells, CSE enhanced PAF production and RAW 264.7 cell adherence. In contrast, CSE did not affect PAF production or RAW 264.7 cell adherence to iPLA(2)β-null cells, suggesting that iPLA(2)β plays an important role in PAF production by lung endothelial cells. These findings suggest that inhibition of PAF-AH by components of cigarette smoke may initiate or exacerbate inflammatory lung disease by enhancing PAF production and promoting accumulation of inflammatory cells in small airways. In addition, iPLA(2)β is identified as a potential target for therapeutic interventions to reduce airway inflammation and the progression of chronic lung disease.  相似文献   

10.
The availability of l-arginine can be a rate-limiting factor for cellular NO production by nitric oxide synthases (NOS). Arginase competes with NOS for l-arginine as the common substrate. Increased arginase activity has been linked to low NO levels, and an inhibition of arginase activity has been reported to improve endothelium-dependent vasorelaxation. Based on the above, we hypothesized that an increase in the circulating NO pool following flavanol consumption could be correlated with decreased arginase activity. To test this hypothesis we (a) investigated the effects of (−)-epicatechin and its structurally related metabolites on endothelial arginase expression and activity in vitro; (b) evaluated the effects of dietary flavanol-rich cocoa on kidney arginase activity in vivo; and (c) assessed human erythrocyte arginase activity following flavanol-rich cocoa beverage consumption in a double-blind intervention study with cross-over design. The results demonstrate that cocoa flavanols lower arginase-2 mRNA expression and activity in HUVEC. Dietary intervention with flavanol-rich cocoa caused diminished arginase activity in rat kidney and, erythrocyte arginase activity was lowered in healthy humans following consumption of a high flavanol beverage in vivo.  相似文献   

11.
It has been demonstrated that the lowest intakes of manganese (Mn) were associated with more than a fivefold increased risk of bronchial reactivity. It was also known that nitric oxide (NO) production was found to be significantly higher in asthmatics. There is a reciprocal pathway between arginase and nitric oxide synthase (NOS) for NO production, and Mn is required for arginase activity and stability. We investigated plasma NO, arginase, and its cofactor Mn levels to evaluate this reciprocal pathway in patients with childhood asthma. Arginase activities and Mn and NO levels were measured in plasma from 31 patients with childhood asthma and 22 healthy control subjects. Plasma arginase activities and Mn concentrations were found to be significantly lower and NO levels were significantly higher found to be significantly lower and NO levels were significantly higher in patients with childhood asthma as compared to the control subjects. There was a significantly positive correlation between plasma Mn and arginase and negative correlations between arginase and NO values and Mn and NO values in patients with childhood asthma. These data indicate that the lower concentration of Mn could cause lower arginase activity and this could also upregulate NO production by increasingl-arginine content in patients with childhood asthma.  相似文献   

12.
应用鼠颈动脉结扎模型,采用原位杂交、免疫组化技术观察血管单核细胞趋化蛋白-1(monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, MCP-1)的表达及内膜增生情况,探讨辛伐他汀抗内膜增生机制.结果发现损伤血管内膜增生明显,MCP-1的表达增加;辛伐他汀干预可明显抑制血管MCP-1的表达及新生内膜形成.提示血管内膜增生可能与MCP-1表达上调有关,辛伐他汀抑制内膜增生也许通过MCP-1介导.  相似文献   

13.
Angiogenesis is an integral part of both the pulmonary inflammatory response to chronic exposure to cigarette smoke and the lung tissue remodeling associated with cigarette smoke-induced chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). To investigate the role of angiogenesis in the pathogenesis of COPD, we evaluated the effect of cigarette smoke extract (CSE) on angiogenesis of pulmonary artery endothelial cells (PAEC). Incubation of PAEC with 2.5-10% CSE resulted in a dose-dependent inhibition of endothelial monolayer wound repair. CSE also caused inhibition of tube formation on Matrigel, migration in a Boyden chamber, and proliferation of PAEC. Because calpain, a family of calcium-dependent intracellular proteases, mediates cytoskeletal signaling in endothelial motility, we explored the role of calpain in the CSE-induced inhibition of endothelial angiogenesis. Incubation of CSE resulted in a dose-dependent decrease in calpain activity. Calpain inhibitor-1, a specific inhibitor of calpain, potentiates inhibitory effect of CSE on the endothelial monolayer wound repair, tube formation, cell migration, and cell proliferation. Transfection of PAEC with antisense oligodeoxyribonucleotides of calpastatin, the major endogenous calpain inhibitor, prevented CSE-induced increase in calpastatin protein content and CSE-induced decreases in calpain activity. It also prevented CSE-induced decreases in monolayer wound repair, tube formation, and migration. These results suggest that CSE attenuates angiogenesis of PAEC and the mechanism involves inhibition of calpain. Impaired angiogenesis may impede the repair process in the lungs of cigarette smokers and contribute to the altered structural remodeling observed in the lungs of patients with cigarette smoke-related COPD.  相似文献   

14.
Arginases compete with nitric oxide (NO) synthases for L-arginine as common substrate. Pulmonary vascular and airway diseases in which arginase activity is increased are associated with decreased NO production and reduced smooth muscle relaxation. The developmental patterns of arginase activity and type I and II isoforms expression in the lung have not been previously evaluated. Hypothesizing that lung arginase activity is developmentally regulated and highest in the fetus, we measured the expression of both arginase isoforms and total arginase activity in fetal, newborn, and adult rat lung, pulmonary artery, and bronchial tissue. In addition, intrapulmonary arterial muscle force generation was evaluated in the absence and presence of the arginase inhibitor Nomega-hydroxy-nor-L-arginine (nor-NOHA). Arginase II content, as well as total arginase activity, was highest in fetal rat lung, bronchi, and pulmonary arterial tissue and decreased with age (P<0.05), and its lung cell expression was developmentally regulated. In the presence of nor-NOHA, pulmonary arterial force generation was significantly reduced in fetus and newborn (P<0.01). No significant change in force generation was noted in bronchial tissue following arginase inhibition. In conclusion, arginase II is regulated developmentally, and both expression and activity are maximal during fetal life. We speculate that the maintenance of a high pulmonary vascular resistance and decreased lung NO production prenatally may, in part, be dependent on increased arginase expression and/or activity.  相似文献   

15.
Previously, we have found that acetaldehyde, a volatile component of cigarette smoke, stimulates the protein kinase C (PKC) pathway and inhibits ciliary motility. A "smokeless" cigarette (Eclipse) now exists in which most of the tobacco is not burned, reducing the pyrolyzed components in the extract. We hypothesized that acetaldehyde is a component of cigarette smoke that activates PKC in the airway epithelial cell, and therefore the Eclipse cigarette would not activate epithelial cell PKC. In this study, bovine bronchial epithelial cells (BBEC) were incubated with cigarette smoke extract (CSE) or Eclipse smoke extract (ESE). We found that PKC activity was significantly higher in cells exposed to 5% CSE than cells exposed to 5% ESE or media. When acetaldehyde levels of both extracts were measured by gas chromatography, CSE was found to have 15-20 times greater concentration (microM) of acetaldehyde than ESE. When BBEC were treated with 5% CSE, ciliary beating was further decreased from baseline levels. This decrease in ciliary beating was not observed in cells treated with ESE, suggesting that acetaldehyde contained in CSE slows cilia. These results suggest that volatile components such as acetaldehyde in cigarette smoke may inhibit ciliary motility via a PKC-dependent mechanism.  相似文献   

16.
Cigarette smoke is associated with increased carotid intimal thickening or stroke. Preliminary work showed that exposure to smoke resulted in a 4.5-fold reduction of heat shock protein-70 (HSP70) expression in spleens of mice using gene microarray analysis. In the current study, we investigated the role of extracellular HSP70 in carotid intimal thickening of mice exposed to cigarette smoke. Intimal thickening was induced by placement of a cuff around the right carotid artery of mice. Cuff injury resulted in increased HSP70 mRNA expression in carotid arteries that persisted for 21 days. Cigarette smoke exposure decreased arterial HSP70 expression and significantly increased intimal thickening compared with mice exposed to air. Treatment of mice exposed to cigarette smoke with intravenous recombinant HSP70 attenuated intimal thickening through reduced phosphorylated extracellular signal-regulated kinase (pERK) expression in the arterial wall. In vitro experiments with rat aortic smooth muscle cells confirmed that recombinant HSP70 decreases pERK and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) expression in cells exposed to cigarette smoke extract and H(2)O(2). Our study suggests that decreased expression of arterial HSP70 is an important mechanism by which exposure to cigarette smoke augments intimal thickening. The effects of recombinant HSP70 suggest a role for extracellular HSP70.  相似文献   

17.
《Life sciences》1993,53(14):PL229-PL234
The vasodilating effect of substance P (SP) at the microvascular level is endothelium-dependent. In the present study we evaluated whether SP activates nitric oxide (NO) production by venular endothelial cell. We evaluated NO activation by measuring cyclic GMP levels in cultured endothelial cells isolated from coronary postcapillary venules of bovine origin (CVEC). Our results indicate that 5 min exposure of CVEC to 10 nM SP doubled basal cyclic GMP levels. Cell treatment with the NO synthase inhibitor L-NMMA reduced the basal levels of cyclic GMP and abolished the effect of SP but did not modify the increase in cyclic GMP in response to exogenous NO. These data indicate that a) microvascular endothelium responds in an autocrine fashion to NO with increased cyclic GMP levels, b) SP activates cyclic GMP pathway through NO production.  相似文献   

18.
Cigarette smoke and virus infections contribute to the pathogenesis and exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and asthma. The objective of this study was to examine the effects of a water-soluble cigarette smoke extract (CSE) and/or respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection on release from monocytes of the blood from donors of tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) and nitric oxide (NO). Both RSV infection and CSE stimulated TNF-alpha release from monocytes and there was an additive effect if both the agents were present. There was a decrease in NO release, but the effect was significant only with CSE or a combination of CSE and RSV infection. Interferon gamma significantly increased TNF-alpha release and cotinine significantly increased NO release. Nicotine decreased both TNF-alpha and NO responses. The general pattern observed for individual donors was increased TNF-alpha and decreased NO. The proportion of extreme responses with very high TNF-alpha and very low NO in the presence of both RSV and CSE increased to 20% compared with 5% observed with CSE or RSV alone. The results show that RSV infection and components of cigarette smoke elicit inflammatory responses that could contribute to damage to the respiratory tract and these individual factors could be more harmful in combination.  相似文献   

19.
《Free radical research》2013,47(3):137-145
Abstract

Nitric oxide (NO) is produced from the conversion of L-arginine by NO synthase (NOS) and regulates a variety of processes in the gastrointestinal tract. Considering the increased activity of arginase in colitis tissue, it is speculated that arginase could inhibit NO synthesis by competing for the same L-arginine substrate, resulting in the exacerbation of colitis. We examined the role of arginase and its relationship to NO metabolism in dextran sulfate sodium (DSS)-induced colitis. Experimental colitis was induced in mice by administration of 2.5% DSS in drinking water for 8 days. Treatment for arginase inhibition was done by once daily intraperitoneal injection of Nω-hydroxy-nor- arginine (nor-NOHA). On day 8, we evaluated clinical parameters (body weight, disease activity index, and colon length), histological features, the activity and expression of arginase, L-arginine content, the expression of NO synthase (NOS), and the concentration of NO end-product (NOx: nitrite + nitrate). Administration of nor-NOHA improved the worsened clinical parameters and histological features in DSS-induced colitis. Treatment with nor-NOHA attenuated the increased activity of arginase, upregulation of arginase Ι at both mRNA and protein levels, and decreased the content of L-arginine in colonic tissue in the DSS-treated mice. Conversely, despite the decreased expression of NOS2 mRNA, the decreased concentration of NOx in colonic tissues was restored to almost normal levels. The consumption of L-arginine by arginase could lead to decreased production of NO from NOS, contributing to the pathogenesis of the colonic inflammation; thus, arginase inhibition might be effective for improving colitis.  相似文献   

20.
Nitric oxide (.NO) generation from conversion of l-arginine to citrulline by nitric oxide synthase isoforms plays a critical role in vascular homeostasis. Loss of .NO is linked to vascular pathophysiology and is decreased in chronically inflamed gut blood vessels in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD; Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis). Mechanisms underlying decreased .NO production in IBD gut microvessels are not fully characterized. Loss of .NO generation may result from increased arginase (AR) activity, which enzymatically competes with nitric oxide synthase for the common substrate l-arginine. We characterized AR expression in IBD microvessels and endothelial cells and its contribution to decreased .NO production. AR expression was assessed in resected gut tissues and human intestinal microvascular endothelial cells (HIMEC). AR expression significantly increased in both ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease microvessels and submucosal tissues compared with normal. TNF-alpha/lipopolysaccharide increased AR activity, mRNA and protein expression in HIMEC in a time-dependent fashion. RhoA/ROCK pathway, a negative regulator of .NO generation in endothelial cells, was examined. The RhoA inhibitor C3 exoenzyme and the ROCK inhibitor Y-27632 both attenuated TNF-alpha/lipopolysaccharide-induced MAPK activation and blocked AR expression in HIMEC. A significantly higher AR activity and increased RhoA activity were observed in IBD submucosal tissues surrounding microvessels compared with normal control gut tissue. Functionally, inhibition of AR activity decreased leukocyte binding to HIMEC in an adhesion assay. Loss of .NO production in IBD microvessels is linked to enhanced levels of AR in intestinal endothelial cells exposed to chronic inflammation in vivo.  相似文献   

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