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1.
We hypothesized that hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) has a role in the local regulation of skeletal muscle blood flow, thus significantly affecting the myogenic tone of arterioles. In our study, we investigated the effects of exogenous H2O2 on the diameter of isolated, pressurized (at 80 mmHg) rat gracilis skeletal muscle arterioles (diameter of approximately 150 microm). Lower concentrations of H2O2 (10(-6)-3 x 10(-5) M) elicited constrictions, whereas higher concentrations of H2O2 (6 x 10(-5)-3 x 10(-4) M), after initial constrictions, caused dilations of arterioles (at 10(-4) M H2O2, -19 +/- 1% constriction and 66 +/- 4% dilation). Endothelium removal reduced both constrictions (to -10 +/- 1%) and dilations (to 33 +/- 3%) due to H2O2. Constrictions due to H2O2 were completely abolished by indomethacin and the prostaglandin H2/thromboxane A2 (PGH2/TxA2) receptor antagonist SQ-29548. Dilations due to H2O2 were significantly reduced by inhibition of nitric oxide synthase (to 38 +/- 7%) but were unaffected by clotrimazole or sulfaphenazole (inhibitors of cytochrome P-450 enzymes), indomethacin, or SQ-29548. In endothelium-denuded arterioles, clotrimazole had no effect, whereas H2O2-induced dilations were significantly reduced by charybdotoxin plus apamin, inhibitors of Ca(2+)-activated K+ channels (to 24 +/- 3%), the selective blocker of ATP-sensitive K+ channels glybenclamide (to 14 +/- 2%), and the nonselective K(+)-channel inhibitor tetrabutylammonium (to -1 +/- 1%). Thus exogenous administration of H2O2 elicits 1) release of PGH2/TxA2 from both endothelium and smooth muscle, 2) release of nitric oxide from the endothelium, and 3) activation of K+ channels, such as Ca(2+)-activated and ATP-sensitive K+ channels in the smooth muscle resulting in biphasic changes of arteriolar diameter. Because H2O2 at low micromolar concentrations activates several intrinsic mechanisms, we suggest that H2O2 contributes to the local regulation of skeletal muscle blood flow in various physiological and pathophysiological conditions.  相似文献   

2.
Our previous studies have demonstrated that a decrease in arteriolar diameter that causes endothelial deformation elicits the release of nitric oxide (NO). Thus we hypothesized that cardiac contraction, via deformation of coronary vessels, elicits the release of NO and increases in coronary flow. Coronary flow was measured at a constant perfusion pressure of 80 mmHg in Langendorff preparations of rat hearts. Hearts were placed in a sealed chamber surrounded with perfusion solution. The chamber pressure could be increased from 0 to 80 mmHg to generate extracardiac compression. To minimize the impact of metabolic vasodilatation and rhythmic changes in shear stress, nonbeating hearts, by perfusing the hearts with a solution containing 20 mM KCl, were used. After extracardiac compression for 10 or 20 s, coronary flow increased significantly, concurrent with an increased release of nitrite into the coronary effluent and increased phosphorylation of endothelial NO synthase in the hearts. Inhibition of NO synthesis eliminated the compression-induced increases in coronary flow. Shear stress-induced dilation could not account for this increased coronary flow. Furthermore, in isolated coronary arterioles, without intraluminal flow, the release of vascular compression elicited a NO-dependent dilation. Thus this study reveals a new mechanism that, via coronary vascular deformation, elicited by cardiac contraction, stimulates the endothelium to release NO, leading to increased coronary perfusion.  相似文献   

3.
The role of metabolic factors derived from cardiac muscle in the development of reactive hyperemia after brief occlusions of the coronary circulation seems to be well established. However, the contribution of occlusion-induced changes in hemodynamic forces to eliciting reactive hyperemia is less known. We hypothesized that in isolated coronary arterioles changes in intraluminal pressure and flow, during and after release of occlusion (O/R), themselves via activating intrinsic mechanosensitive mechanisms, elicit release of vasoactive factors resulting in reactive dilations. Thus in isolated coronary arterioles (diameter: 88 +/- 8 microm) changes in diameter to changes in pressure or pressure plus flow (P+F) during and after a brief period (30, 60, and 120 s) of O/R of cannulating tube were measured by videomicroscopy. In response to both types of O/R, diameter first decreased, then, subsequently increased during occlusions. When only pressure was changed (from 80-10-80 mmHg), after release of occlusion, peak dilations increased as a function of the duration of occlusions. After flow was established (30 microl/min), O/R elicited changes in both pressure and flow (from 80-10-80 mmHg and from 0 to 30 microl/min). In these conditions, after the release of occlusions, not only the peak but also the duration of reactive dilation increased significantly as a function of the length of occlusions. The dilations during, and peak dilations after occlusions both in pressure and P+F protocols were significantly reduced by the inhibition of NO synthase with Nomega-nitro-L-arginine-methyl-ester (L-NAME) or by endothelium removal, whereas duration of postocclusion dilations were reduced by L-NAME or by endothelium removal only in P+F protocols. Furthermore, in both protocols, catalase significantly reduced the peak but not the duration of reactive dilations. Thus, mechanosensitive mechanisms that are sensitive to deformation, pressure, stretch, and wall shear stress elicit release of NO and H2O2, resulting in reactive dilation of isolated coronary arterioles.  相似文献   

4.
The mechanisms that account for acetylcholine (ACh)-induced responses of skeletal muscle arterioles of mice lacking endothelial nitric oxide (NO) synthase (eNOS-KO) were investigated. Isolated, cannulated, and pressurized arterioles of gracilis muscle from male eNOS-KO (74.1 +/- 2.3 microm) and wild-type (WT, 87.2 +/- 2.1 microm) mice developed spontaneous tone accounting for 63 and 61% of their passive diameter (116.8 +/- 3.4 vs. 143.2 +/- 2.8 microm, respectively) and dilated dose-dependently to ACh (10(-9)-10(-7) M). These dilations were significantly smaller in vessels of eNOS-KO compared with WT mice (29.2 +/- 2.0 microm vs. 46.3 +/- 2.1 microm, at maximum concentration) but responses to the NO donor, sodium nitrite (NaNO(2), 10(-6)-3 x 10(-5) M), were comparable in the vessels of the two strains. N(G)-nitro-L-arginine (L-NNA, 10(-4) M), an inhibitor of eNOS, inhibited ACh-induced dilations by 60-90% in arterioles of WT mice but did not affect responses in those of eNOS-KO mice. In arterioles of eNOS-KO mice, dilations to ACh were not affected by indomethacin but were essentially abolished by inhibitors of cytochrome P-450, clotrimazole (CTZ, 2 x 10(-6) M) or miconazole (MCZ, 2 x 10(-6) M), as well as by either high K(+) (40 mM) or iberiotoxin [10(-7) M, a blocker of Ca(2+)-dependent K(+) channels (K(Ca) channels)]. On the other hand, in WT arterioles CTZ or MCZ inhibited ACh-induced dilations only by approximately 10% and only in the presence of L-NNA. These results indicate that in arterioles of eNOS-KO mice, endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor (EDHF), synthesized via cytochrome P-450, accounts entirely for the mediation of ACh-induced dilation via an increase in K(Ca)-channel activity. In contrast, in arterioles of WT mice, endothelium-derived NO predominantly mediates ACh-induced dilation in which participation of EDHF becomes apparent only after inhibition of NO synthesis.  相似文献   

5.

Aims

The molecular mechanisms of the vasoconstrictor responses evoked by hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) have not been clearly elucidated in skeletal muscle arterioles.

Methods and Results

Changes in diameter of isolated, cannulated and pressurized gracilis muscle arterioles (GAs) of Wistar-Kyoto rats were determined under various test conditions. H2O2 (10–100 µM) evoked concentration-dependent constrictions in the GAs, which were inhibited by endothelium removal, or by antagonists of phospholipase A (PLA; 100 µM 7,7-dimethyl-(5Z,8Z)-eicosadienoic acid), protein kinase C (PKC; 10 µM chelerythrine), phospholipase C (PLC; 10 µM U-73122), or Src family tyrosine kinase (Src kinase; 1 µM Src Inhibitor-1). Antagonists of thromboxane A2 (TXA2; 1 µM SQ-29548) or the non-specific cyclooxygenase (COX) inhibitor indomethacin (10 µM) converted constrictions to dilations. The COX-1 inhibitor (SC-560, 1 µM) demonstrated a greater reduction in constriction and conversion to dilation than that of COX-2 (celecoxib, 3 µM). H2O2 did not elicit significant changes in arteriolar Ca2+ levels measured with Fura-2.

Conclusions

These data suggest that H2O2 activates the endothelial Src kinase/PLC/PKC/PLA pathway, ultimately leading to the synthesis and release of TXA2 by COX-1, thereby increasing the Ca2+ sensitivity of the vascular smooth muscle cells and eliciting constriction in rat skeletal muscle arterioles.  相似文献   

6.
Effects of prior exposure of pial arterioles to endothelin-1 (ET-1) (10(-9) M) on the constriction induced by the by-products of hemolyzed blood (5-HT, LTC4, LPA, and thromboxane analog U-46619) were examined. Piglets (age: 1-3 d) anesthetized with a mixture of ketamine hydrochloride and acepromazine were implanted with cranial windows, and anesthesia was maintained with alpha-chloralose. Topical applications of the by-products of hemolyzed blood mildly constricted pial arterioles. Following prior exposure of the microvessels to ET-1, application of the by-products of hemolyzed blood produced significantly potentiated and long-lasting constrictions compared to the controls. In another experiment, pretreatment of pial arterioles with U-46619 (10(-8) M) also potentiated the constriction induced by ET-1. The constriction produced was fast and longer-lasting. Thus, these data show that by-products of hemolyzed blood, though not potent vasoconstrictors per se, potently constricted pial arterioles in the presence of ET-1. The same agents in the CSF can also potentiate constriction induced by ET-1. Hence, by-products of hemolyzed blood may play a significant role in the initiation and maintenance of cerebral arterial narrowing observed following intracranial bleeding.  相似文献   

7.
The signaling pathways underlying the regulation of vascular resistance by purines in intact microvessels and particularly in communication of remote vasomotor responses are unclear. One process by which remote regions of arterioles communicate is via transmission of signals axially along the vessel wall. In this study, we identified a pathway for local and conducted dilations initiated by purines. Adenosine (Ado) or ATP (bind P1 and P2 purinergic receptors, respectively) was micropipette applied to arterioles (maximum diameter approximately 40 microm) in the cheek pouch of anesthetized hamsters. Observations were made at the site of stimulation (local) or approximately 1200 microm upstream along the same vessel. P2 antagonists (pyridoxalphosphate-6-azophenyl-2',4'-disulfonic acid tetrasodium and suramin) inhibited local constriction to ATP, whereas local and upstream dilations were unaffected. In contrast, during inhibition of P1 receptors (with xanthine amine congener) the local constriction was unchanged, whereas both local and upstream dilations to ATP were inhibited. Hydrolysis of ATP to Ado is implicated in the dilator response as blocking 5'-ectonucleotidase (with alpha,beta-methyleneadenosine 5'-diphosphate) attenuated ATP-induced dilations. After endothelium denudation, constriction to ATP was unchanged, but dilations to both ATP and Ado were inhibited, identifying endothelial cells (ECs) as the primary target for P1-mediated dilation. Purines increased EC Ca2+ locally and upstream. Chelation of EC Ca2+ (with BAPTA) abolished the local and upstream dilations to P1 receptor stimulation. Collectively, these data demonstrate that stimulation of P1 receptors on ECs produces a vasodilation that spreads to remote regions. There is an associated increase in EC Ca2+, which is a required signaling intermediate in the manifestation of both the local and axially communicated arteriolar dilations.  相似文献   

8.
Venular control of arteriolar perfusion has been the focus of several investigations in recent years. This study investigated 1) whether endogenous adenosine helps control venule-dependent arteriolar dilation and 2) whether venular leukocyte adherence limits this response via an oxidant-dependent mechanism in which nitric oxide (NO) levels are decreased. Intravital microscopy was used to assess changes in arteriolar diameters and NO levels in rat mesentery. The average resting diameter of arterioles (27.5 +/- 1.0 microm) paired with venules with minimal leukocyte adherence (2.1 +/- 0.3 per 100-microm length) was significantly larger than that of unpaired arterioles (24.5 +/- 0.8 microm) and arterioles (23.3 +/- 1.3 microm) paired with venules with higher leukocyte adherence (9.0 +/- 0.5 per 100-microm length). Local superfusion of adenosine deaminase (ADA) induced significant decreases in diameter and perivascular NO concentration in arterioles closely paired to venules with minimal leukocyte adherence. However, ADA had little effect on arterioles closely paired to venules with high leukocyte adherence or on unpaired arterioles. To determine whether the attenuated response to ADA for the high-adherence group was oxidant dependent, the responses were also observed in arterioles treated with 10(-4) M Tempol. In the high-adherence group, Tempol fully restored NO levels to those of the low-adherence group; however, the ADA-induced constriction remained attenuated, suggesting a possible role for an oxidant-independent vasoconstrictor released from the inflamed venules. These findings suggest that adenosine- and venule-dependent dilation of paired arterioles may be mediated, in part, by NO and inhibited by venular leukocyte adherence.  相似文献   

9.
N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) elicits pial arteriolar dilation that has been associated with neuronal nitric oxide (NO) production. However, endothelial factors or glial P-450 epoxygenase products may play a role. We tested whether NMDA-induced pial vasodilation 1) primarily involves NO diffusion from the parenchyma to the surface arterioles, 2) involves intact endothelial function, and 3) involves a miconazole-sensitive component. Arteriolar diameters were determined using closed cranial window-intravital microscopy in anesthetized piglets. NMDA (10-100 microM) elicited virtually identical dose-dependent dilations in paired arterioles (r = 0.94, n = 15). However, NMDA- but not bradykinin (BK)-induced dilations of arteriolar sections over large veins were reduced by 31 +/- 1% (means +/- SE, P < 0.05, n = 4) compared with adjacent sections on the cortical surface. Also, 100 microM NMDA increased cerebrospinal fluid levels of NO metabolites from 3.7 +/- 1.0 to 5.3 +/- 1.2 microM (P < 0.05, n = 6). Endothelial stunning by intracarotid injection of phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate did not affect NMDA-induced vasodilation but attenuated vascular responses to hypercapnia and BK by approximately 70% (n = 7). Finally, miconazole (n = 6, 20 microM) pretreatment and coapplication with NMDA did not alter vascular responses to NMDA. In conclusion, NMDA appears to dilate pial arterioles exclusively through release and diffusion of NO from neurons to the pial surface in piglets.  相似文献   

10.
Our previous study showed that arteriolar tone is enhanced in Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2-DM) due to an increased level of constrictor prostaglandins. We hypothesized that, in mice with T2-DM, hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) is involved in the increased synthesis of constrictor prostaglandins, hence enhanced basal tone in skeletal muscle arterioles. Isolated, pressurized gracilis muscle arterioles ( approximately 100 microm in diameter) of mice with T2-DM (C57BL/KsJ-db(-)/db(-)) exhibited greater basal tone to increases in intraluminal pressure (20-120 mmHg) than that of control vessels (at 80 mmHg, control: 25 +/- 5%; db/db: 34 +/- 4%, P < 0.05), which was reduced back to control level by catalase (db/db: 24 +/- 4%). Correspondingly, in carotid arteries of db/db mice, the level of dichlorofluorescein-detectable and catalase-sensitive H(2)O(2) was significantly greater. In control arterioles, exogenous H(2)O(2) (0.1-100 micromol/l) elicited dilations (maximum, 58 +/- 10%), whereas in arterioles of db/db mice H(2)O(2) caused constrictions (-28 +/- 8%), which were converted to dilations (maximum, 16 +/- 5%) by the thromboxane A(2)/prostaglandin H(2) (TP) receptor antagonist SQ-29548. In addition, arteriolar constrictions in response to the TP receptor agonist U-46619 were not different between the two groups of vessels. Endothelium denudation did not significantly affect basal tone and H(2)O(2)-induced arteriolar responses in either control or db/db mice. Also, in arterioles of db/db mice, but not in controls, 3-nitrotyrosine staining was detected in the endothelial layer of vessels. Thus we propose that, in mice with T2-DM, arteriolar production of H(2)O(2) is enhanced, which leads to increased synthesis of the constrictor prostaglandins thromboxane A(2)/prostaglandin H(2) in the smooth muscle cells, which enhance basal arteriolar tone. These alterations may contribute to disturbed regulation of skeletal muscle blood flow in Type 2 diabetes mellitus.  相似文献   

11.
We have previously reported that adenosine formed in response to reduced arteriolar and/or tissue PO(2) preserves endothelial nitric oxide (NO) synthesis during sympathetic vasoconstriction in the rat intestine. To more precisely identify the site and mechanism of adenosine formation under these conditions, we tested the hypothesis that ATP released in response to reduced O(2) levels serves as a source of adenosine. Direct application of ATP to the wall of first-order arterioles elicited dose-dependent dilations of 15-33% above resting diameter that were reduced by 71-80% by the 5'-ectonucleotidase inhibitor alpha,beta-methyleneadenosine 5'-diphosphate (AOPCP, 4.5 x 10(-5) M) and completely abolished by N(G)-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA, 10(-4) M). Under control conditions, sympathetic nerve stimulation at 3 and 8 Hz induced arteriolar constrictions of 11 +/- 1 and 19 +/- 1 microm, respectively. These responses were enhanced by 58-69% in the presence of L-NMMA or when local PO(2) was maintained at resting levels. However, in the presence of AOPCP, the enhancing effects of L-NMMA and the high O(2) superfusate on sympathetic constriction were preserved. These results suggest that, although exogenously applied ATP can stimulate arteriolar NO release in the intestine largely through its sequential extracellular hydrolysis to adenosine, this process does not contribute to adenosine formation and sustained NO release during sympathetic constriction in this vascular bed.  相似文献   

12.
Tempol catalyzes the formation of H(2)O(2) from superoxide and relaxes blood vessels. We tested the hypothesis that the generation of H(2)O(2) by tempol in vascular smooth muscle cells during oxidative stress contributes to the vasorelaxation. Tempol and nitroblue tetrazolium (NBT) both metabolize superoxide in vascular smooth muscle cells, but only tempol generates H(2)O(2). Rat pressurized mesenteric arteries were exposed for 20 min to the thromboxane-prostanoid receptor agonist, U-46619, or norepinephrine. During U-46619, tempol caused a transient dilation (22 +/- 2%), whereas NBT was ineffective (2 +/- 1%), and neither dilated vessels constricted with norepinephrine, which does not cause vascular oxidative stress. Neither endothelium removal nor blockade of K(+) channels with 40 mM KCl affected the tempol-induced dilation, but catalase blunted the tempol dilation by 53 +/- 7%. Tempol, but not NBT, increased H(2)O(2) in rat mesenteric vessels detected with dichlorofluorescein. To test physiological relevance in vivo, topical application of tempol caused a transient dilation (184 +/- 20%) of mouse cremaster arterioles exposed to angiotensin II for 30 min, which was not seen with NBT (9 +/- 4%). The vasodilation to tempol was reduced by 68 +/- 6% by catalase. We conclude that the transient relaxation of blood vessels by tempol after prolonged exposure to U-46619 or angiotensin II is mediated in part via production of H(2)O(2) and is largely independent of the endothelium and potassium channels.  相似文献   

13.
Adrenomedullin (ADM) is a vasodilator produced by vascular endothelium and smooth muscle cells. Although plasma ADM levels are increased in patients with hypertension, heart failure, and myocardial infarction, little information exists regarding the microvascular response to ADM in the human heart. In the present study we tested the hypothesis that ADM produces coronary arteriolar dilation in humans and examined the mechanism of this dilation. Human coronary arterioles were dissected and cannulated with micropipettes. Internal diameter was measured by video microscopy. In vessels constricted with ACh, the diameter response to cumulative doses of ADM (10(-12)-10(-7) M) was measured in the presence and absence of human ADM-(22-52), calcitonin gene-related peptide-(8-37), N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), indomethacin (Indo), (1)H-[1,2,4]oxadiazolo-[4,3-a]quinoxalin-1-one, SQ-22536, or KCl (60 mM). ADM dilated human coronary arterioles through specific ADM receptors (maximum dilation = 69 +/- 11%). L-NAME or N-monomethyl-L-arginine attenuated dilation to ADM (for L-NAME, maximum dilation = 66 +/- 7 vs. 41 +/- 13%, P < 0.05). Thus the mechanism of ADM-induced dilation involves generation of nitric oxide. However, neither (1)H-[1,2,4]oxadiazolo-[4, 3-a]quinoxalin-1-one, SQ-22536, nor Indo alone altered dilation to ADM. High concentrations of KCl blocked dilation to ADM. The magnitude of ADM dilation was reduced in subjects with hypertension. We propose that, in human coronary arterioles, ADM elicits vasodilation in part through production of nitric oxide and in part through activation of K(+) channels, with little contribution from adenylyl cyclase. The former dilator mechanism is independent of the more traditional pathway involving activation of soluble guanylate cyclase.  相似文献   

14.
We aimed to test the hypothesis that an enhanced level of reactive oxygen species (ROS) is primarily responsible for the impairment of nitric oxide (NO)-mediated regulation of arteriolar wall shear stress (WSS) in hyperhomocysteinemia (HHcy). Thus flow/WSS-induced dilations of pressurized gracilis muscle arterioles (basal diameter: approximately 170 microm) isolated from control (serum Hcy: 6 +/- 1 microM), methionine diet-induced HHcy rats (4 wk, serum Hcy: 30 +/- 6 microM), and HHcy rats treated with vitamin C, a known antioxidant (4 wk, 150 mg. kg body wt-1.day-1; serum Hcy: 32 +/- 10 microM), were investigated. In vessels of HHcy rats, increases in intraluminal flow/WSS-induced dilations were converted to constrictions. Constrictions were unaffected by inhibition of NO synthesis by N omega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME). Vitamin C treatment of HHcy rats reversed the WSS-induced arteriolar constrictions to L-NAME-sensitive dilations but did not affect control responses. Similar changes in responses were obtained for the calcium ionophore A-23187. In addition, diastolic and mean arterial blood pressure and serum 8-isoprostane levels (a marker of in vivo oxidative stress) were significantly elevated in rats with HHcy, changes that were normalized by vitamin C treatment. Taken together, our data show that in chronic HHcy long-term vitamin C treatment, by decreasing oxidative stress in vivo, enhanced NO bioavailability, restored the regulation of shear stress in arterioles, and normalized systemic blood pressure. Thus our study provides evidence that oxidative stress is an important in vivo mechanism that is primarily responsible for the development of endothelial dysregulation of WSS in HHcy.  相似文献   

15.
Z Ungvari  A Koller 《Journal of applied physiology》2001,91(1):522-7; discussion 504-5
To clarify the contribution of intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i))-dependent and -independent signaling mechanisms in arteriolar smooth muscle (aSM) to modulation of arteriolar myogenic tone by nitric oxide (NO), released in response to increases in intraluminal flow from the endothelium, changes in aSM [Ca(2+)](i) and diameter of isolated rat gracilis muscle arterioles (pretreated with indomethacin) were studied by fluorescent videomicroscopy. At an intraluminal pressure of 80 mmHg, [Ca(2+)](i) significantly increased and myogenic tone developed in response to elevations of extracellular Ca(2+) concentration. The Ca(2+) channel inhibitor nimodipine substantially decreased [Ca(2+)](i) and completely inhibited myogenic tone. Dilations to intraluminal flow (that were inhibited by N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester) or dilations to the NO donor S-nitroso-N-acetyl-DL-penicillamine (that were inhibited by the guanylate cyclase inhibitor 1H-[1,2,4]oxadiazolo[4,3-a]quinoxalin-1-one) were not accompanied by substantial decreases in aSM [Ca(2+)](i). 8-Bromoguanosine cGMP and the cGMP-specific phosphodiesterase inhibitor zaprinast significantly dilated arterioles yet elicited only minimal decreases in [Ca(2+)](i). Thus flow-induced endothelial release of NO elicits relaxation of arteriolar smooth muscle by a cGMP-dependent decrease of the Ca(2+) sensitivity of the contractile apparatus without substantial changes in the pressure-induced level of [Ca(2+)](i).  相似文献   

16.
In skeletal muscle arterioles, the pathway leading to non-nitric oxide (NO), non-prostaglandin-mediated endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor (EDHF)-type dilations is not well characterized. To elucidate some of the steps in this process, simultaneous changes in endothelial intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) and the diameter of rat gracilis muscle arterioles (approximately 60 microm) to acetylcholine (ACh) were measured by fura 2 microfluorimetry (in the absence of NO and prostaglandins). ACh elicited rapid increases in endothelial [Ca(2+)](i) (101 +/- 7%), followed by substantial dilations (73 +/- 2%, coupling time: 1.3 +/- 0.2 s) that were prevented by endothelial loading of an intracellular Ca(2+) chelator [1,2-bis(2-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid]. Arteriolar dilations to ACh were also inhibited by intraluminal administration of the Ca(2+)-activated K(+) (K(Ca)) channel blockers charybdotoxin plus apamin or by palmitoleic acid, an uncoupler of myoendothelial gap junctions without affecting changes in endothelial [Ca(2+)](i). The presence of large conductance K(Ca) channels on arteriolar endothelial cells was demonstrated with immunohistochemisty. We propose that in skeletal muscle arterioles, EDHF-type mediation is evoked by an increase in endothelial [Ca(2+)](i), which by activating endothelial K(Ca) channels elicits hyperpolarization that is conducted via myoendothelial gap junctions to the smooth muscle resulting in decreases in [Ca(2+)](i) and consequently dilation.  相似文献   

17.
Obesity frequently leads to the development of hypertension. We hypothesized that high-fat diet (HFD)-induced obesity impairs the endothelium-dependent dilation of arterioles. Male Wistar rats were fed with normal (control) or HFD (60% of saturated fat, for 10 wk). In rats with HFD, body weight, mean arterial blood pressure, and serum insulin, cholesterol, and glucose were elevated. In isolated gracilis muscle arterioles (diameter: approximately 160 microm) of HFD, rat dilations to ACh (at 1 microM, maximum: 83 +/- 3%) and histamine (at 10 microM, maximum: 16 +/- 4%) were significantly (P < 0.05) decreased compared with those of control responses (maximum: 90 +/- 2 and 46 +/- 4%, respectively). Dilations to the NO donor sodium nitroprusside were similar in the two groups. Inhibition of NO synthesis by N(omega)-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester reduced ACh- and histamine-induced dilations in control arterioles but had no effect on microvessels of HFD rats. The superoxide dismutase mimetic Tiron or xanthine oxidase inhibitor allopurinol enhanced ACh (maximum: 90 +/- 2 and 93 +/- 2%, respectively)- and histamine (maximum: 30 +/- 7 and 37 +/- 8%, respectively)-induced dilations in HFD arterioles, whereas the NAD(P)H oxidase inhibitor apocynin had no significant effect. Correspondingly, in carotid arteries of HFD rats, an enhanced superoxide production was shown by lucigenin-enhanced chemiluminescence, in association with an increased xanthine oxidase, but not NAD(P)H oxidase activity. In addition, a marked xanthine oxidase immunostaining was detected in the endothelial layer of the gracilis arterioles of HFD, but not in control rats. These findings suggest that, in obese rats, NO mediation of endothelium-dependent dilation of skeletal muscle arterioles is reduced because of an enhanced xanthine oxidase-derived superoxide production. These alterations demonstrate substantial dysregulation of arteriolar tone by the endothelium in HFD-induced obesity, which may contribute to disturbed tissue blood flow and development of increased peripheral resistance.  相似文献   

18.
In hamster cremaster muscle, it has been shown previously that contraction of skeletal muscle fibers underlying small groups of capillaries (modules) induces dilations that are proportional to metabolic rate in the two arteriolar generations upstream of the stimulated capillaries (Berg BR, Cohen KD, and Sarelius IH. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 272: H2693-H2700, 1997). These remote dilations were hypothesized to be transmitted via gap junctions and not perivascular nerves. In the present study, halothane (0.07%) blocked dilation in the module inflow arteriole, and dilation in the second arteriolar generation upstream, the branch arteriole, was blocked by both 600 mosM sucrose and halothane but not tetrodotoxin (2 microM). Dilations in both arterioles were not blocked by the gap junction uncoupler 18-beta-glycyrrhetinic acid (40 microM), and 80 mM KCl did not block dilation of the module inflow arteriole. These data implicate a gap junctional-mediated pathway insensitive to 18-beta-glycyrrhetinic acid in dilating the two arterioles upstream of the capillary module during "remote" muscle contraction. Dilation in the branch arteriole, but not the module inflow arteriole, was attenuated by 100 microM N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine. Thus selective contraction of muscle fibers underneath capillaries results in dilations in the upstream arterioles that have characteristics consistent with a signal that is transmitted along the vessel wall through gap junctions, i.e., a conducted vasodilation. The observed insensitivities to 18-beta-glycyrrhetinic acid, to KCl, and to N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine suggest, however, that there are multiple signaling pathways by which remote dilations can be initiated in these microvessels.  相似文献   

19.
We tested the hypothesis that tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) increases pulmonary vasoconstriction by decreases in nitric oxide- (NO) dependent vasodilation. Lungs were isolated from guinea pigs 18 h after intraperitoneal injection of either TNF-alpha (1.60 x 10(5) U/kg) or control. U-46619 (365 mM/min) caused increases in pulmonary arterial and capillary pressures, pulmonary arterial and venous resistances, and lung weight. TNF-alpha augmented the U-46619-induced increases in pulmonary arterial and capillary pressures, pulmonary arterial and venous resistances, and lung weight. Methylene blue (1 microM), which inhibits the activation of soluble guanylate cyclase by NO, had an effect similar to TNF-alpha on the pulmonary response to U-46619 alone but was not additive to the effect of TNF-alpha. NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (270 microM), an inhibitor of NO generation, also enhanced the response to U-46619. Lung effluent levels of nitrite, the oxidation product of NO, were reduced after treatment with either TNF-alpha or NG-monomethyl-L-arginine compared with U-46619 alone. In addition, lungs isolated after TNF-alpha treatment showed decreased vasodilation in response to acetylcholine (10(-8)-10(-5) M) compared with control; however, vasodilation in response to L-arginine (10 mM) and nitroprusside (10(-6.3) and 10(-6) M), agents that promote NO release, was not decreased in TNF-alpha-treated lungs. The data indicate that TNF-alpha induces an increase in vascular constriction in response to U-46619 and a decrease in vasodilation in response to acetylcholine. The mechanism for the TNF-alpha-induced alteration in pulmonary vascular reactivity may be decreased generation of NO.  相似文献   

20.
Closed circuit television microscopy was used to quantitate in vivo responses of small vessels in the rat cremaster muscle to topically applied serotonin. Sprague-Dawley rats were anesthetized with a combination of urethane (800 mg/kg) and alpha-chloralose (60 mg/kg). The cremaster muscle with intact circulation and innervation was suspended in a bath which had controlled pH, pCO2, and pO2. Microvascular diameters of first order arterioles and venules and fourth-order arterioles were measured from the television monitor while serotonin (10(-9)M-10(-4)M) was added to the bath. Fourth-order arterioles (3-11 micron diameter) dilated to a maximum of 267% of their control value with a serotonin concentration of 10(-6)M. Serotonin (10(-4)M) constricted first-order arterioles (78-121 micron) to 61% of their control value. The threshold concentration (10(-8)M) for a serotonin-induced dilation of fourth-order arterioles was 1000 fold less than the threshold concentration (10(-5)M) for serotonin-induced constriction of first-order arterioles. Serotonin (10(-8)M - 10(-4)M) did not alter the diameter of first-order venules (115-195 micron) from the control value. The dose-dependent constriction of first-order arterioles and dose-dependent dilation of fourth-order arterioles by serotonin appear to be independent of each other. In addition, the lack of constriction of first-order venules suggests a heterogenous distribution of serotonin receptors and that the predominate control mechanisms are different at different levels of the arteriolar and venous microcirculation of rat skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

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