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1.
Vasodilator responses were assessed in resistance arteries (100-200 microm) isolated from the gracilis muscle of normotensive rats after changes in dietary salt intake. Sprague-Dawley rats were maintained on either a high-salt (HS) diet (4.0% NaCl) or a low-salt (LS) diet (0.4% NaCl) for 4-8 wk (chronic) or 3 days (short-term) with water ad libitum. One group of short-term HS rats received a continuous intravenous infusion of a low dose (5 ng x kg(-1) x min(-1)) of ANG II to prevent the ANG II suppression that occurs with HS diet. Short-term and chronic HS diet eliminated arterial dilation in response to ACh and reduced PO(2) (30-40 mmHg) and the stable prostacyclin analog iloprost. ANG II infusion preserved the response to these vasodilator stimuli in short-term HS animals. Dilator responses to sodium nitroprusside and forskolin were unaffected by HS diet. These findings suggest that ANG II suppression during HS diet impairs vascular relaxation mechanisms upstream from the cAMP and cGMP second messenger systems.  相似文献   

2.
Male Sprague-Dawley rats were maintained on a low-salt (LS) diet (0.4% NaCl) or changed to a high-salt (HS) diet (4% NaCl) for 3 days. Increases in intracellular Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) in response to methacholine (10 microM) and histamine (10 microM) were significantly attenuated in aortic endothelial cells from rats fed a HS diet, whereas thapsigargin (10 microM)-induced increases in [Ca2+]i were unaffected. Methacholine-induced nitric oxide (NO) production was eliminated in endothelial cells of aortas from rats fed a HS diet. Low-dose ANG II infusion (5 ng x kg(-1) x min(-1) iv) for 3 days prevented impaired [Ca2+]i signaling response to methacholine and histamine and restored methacholine-induced NO production in aortas from rats on a HS diet. Adding Tempol (500 microM) to the tissue bath to scavenge superoxide anions increased NO release and caused N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester-sensitive vascular relaxation in aortas from rats fed a HS diet but had no effect on methacholine-induced Ca2+ responses. Chronic treatment with Tempol (1 mM) in the drinking water restored NO release, augmented vessel relaxation, and increased methacholine-induced Ca2+ responses significantly in aortas from rats on a HS diet but not in aortas from rats on a LS diet. These findings suggest that 1) agonist-induced Ca2+ responses and NO levels are reduced in aortas of rats on a HS diet; 2) increased vascular superoxide levels contribute to NO destruction, and, eventually, to impaired Ca2+ signaling in the vascular endothelial cells; and 3) reduced circulating ANG II levels during elevated dietary salt lead to elevated superoxide levels, impaired endothelial Ca2+ signaling, and reduced NO production in the endothelium.  相似文献   

3.
Sprague-Dawley rats were fed either a high-salt (HS) diet (4.0% NaCl) or a low-salt (LS) diet (0.4% NaCl) for 3 days. Nitric oxide (NO) and superoxide production were assessed in the thoracic aorta by evaluating the fluorescence signal intensity from 4,5-diaminofluorescein (DAF-2DA) and dihydroethidine, respectively. Methacholine caused increased NO release in the aortas from rats on a LS but not HS diet. The SOD mimetic tempol restored methacholine-induced NO release in aortas from rats on a HS diet. Methacholine also caused superoxide production in the aortas of rats on a HS diet but not in the aortas of rats on a LS diet. Tempol and N(G)-monomethyl-l-arginine eliminated methacholine-induced superoxide production in the aortas of rats on a HS diet. Aortic rings from rats on the HS diet showed impaired methacholine-induced relaxation, which was improved by tempol. Tempol alone caused a NO-dependent relaxation of norepinephrine-precontracted aortas that was significantly greater in the aortas of rats on the HS diet than in vessels from rats on the LS diet. These data suggest that a HS diet impairs endothelium-dependent relaxation via reduced NO levels and increased superoxide production.  相似文献   

4.
Male Sprague-Dawley rats were maintained on a low-salt (LS) diet (0.4% NaCl) or a high-salt (HS) diet (4% NaCl) for 3 days or 4 wk. PO(2) reduction to 40-45 mmHg, the stable prostacyclin analog iloprost (10 pg/ml), and stimulatory G protein activation with cholera toxin (1 ng/ml) caused vascular smooth muscle (VSM) hyperpolarization, increased cAMP production, and dilation in cerebral arteries from rats on a LS diet. Arteries from rats on a HS diet exhibited VSM depolarization and constriction in response to hypoxia and iloprost, failed to dilate or hyperpolarize in response to cholera toxin, and cAMP production did not increase in response to hypoxia, iloprost, or cholera toxin. Low-dose angiotensin II infusion (5 ng x kg(-1) x min(-1) i.v.) restored normal responses to reduced PO(2) and iloprost in arteries from animals on a HS diet. These observations suggest that angiotensin II suppression with a HS diet leads to impaired relaxation of cerebral arteries in response to vasodilator stimuli acting at the cell membrane.  相似文献   

5.
This study investigated the role of changes in the expression of the cytochrome P-450 4A (CYP450-4A) enzymes that produce 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (20-HETE) in modulating the responses of rat mesenteric resistance arteries to norepinephrine (NE) and reduced Po(2) after short-term (3-day) changes in dietary salt intake. The CYP450-4A2, -4A3, and -4A8 isoforms were all detected by RT-PCR in arteries obtained from rats fed a high-salt (HS, 4% NaCl) diet, whereas only the CYP450-4A3 isoform was detected in vessels from rats fed a low-salt (LS, 0.4% NaCl) diet. Expression of the 51-kDa CYP450-4A protein was significantly increased by a HS diet. Inhibiting 20-HETE synthesis with 30 muM N-methylsulfonyl-12,12-dibromododec-11-enamide (DDMS) reduced the vasoconstrictor response to NE in arteries obtained from rats fed either a LS or HS diet, but NE sensitivity after DDMS treatment was significantly lower in vessels from rats on a HS diet. DDMS treatment also restored the vasodilator response to reduced Po(2) that was impaired in arteries from rats on a HS diet. These findings suggest that 1) a HS diet increases the expression of CYP450-4A enzymes in the mesenteric vasculature, 2) 20-HETE contributes to the vasoconstrictor response to NE in mesenteric resistance arteries, 3) the contribution of 20-HETE to the vasoconstrictor response to NE is greater in rats fed a HS diet than in rats fed a LS diet, and 4) upregulation of the production of 20-HETE contributes to the impaired dilation of mesenteric resistance arteries in response to hypoxia in rats fed a HS diet.  相似文献   

6.
In normotensive rats, an increase in dietary salt leads to decreased arteriolar responsiveness to acetylcholine (ACh) because of suppressed local nitric oxide (NO) activity. We evaluated the possibility that generation of reactive oxygen species in the arteriolar wall is responsible for this loss of NO activity. Arteriolar responses to iontophoretically applied ACh were examined in the superfused spinotrapezius muscle of Sprague-Dawley rats fed a low-salt (LS; 0.45%) or high-salt diet (HS; 7%) for 4-5 wk. Responses to ACh were significantly depressed in HS rats but returned to normal in the presence of the oxidant scavengers superoxide dismutase + catalase or 2,2,6, 6-tetamethylpiperidine-N-oxyl (TEMPO) + catalase. Arteriolar responses to the NO donor sodium nitroprusside were similar in HS and LS rats. Arteriolar and venular wall oxidant activity, as determined by reduction of tetranitroblue tetrazolium, was significantly greater in HS rats than in LS rats. Exposure to TEMPO + catalase reduced microvascular oxidant levels to normal in HS rats. These data suggest that a high-salt diet leads to increased generation of reactive oxygen species in striated muscle microvessels, and this increased oxidative state may be responsible for decreased endothelium-dependent responses associated with high salt intake.  相似文献   

7.
To evaluate the potential role of impaired renin-angiotensin system (RAS) function in contributing to reduced vascular relaxation in Dahl salt-sensitive (S) rats, responses to ACh (10(-6) mol/l) and hypoxia (Po(2) reduction to 40-45 mmHg) were determined in isolated middle cerebral arteries of Dahl S rats, Brown Norway (BN) rats, and consomic rats having chromosome 13 (containing the renin gene) or chromosome 16 of the BN rat substituted into the Dahl S genetic background (SS-13(BN) and SS-16(BN), respectively). Arteries of BN rats on a low-salt (LS) diet (0.4% NaCl) dilated in response to ACh and hypoxia, whereas dilation in response to these stimuli was absent in Dahl S rats on LS diet. Vasodilation to ACh and hypoxia was restored in SS-13(BN) rats on an LS diet but not in SS-16(BN) rats. High-salt diet (4% NaCl), to suppress ANG II, eliminated vasodilation to hypoxia and ACh in BN and in SS-13(BN) rats. Treatment of SS-13(BN) rats with the AT(1) receptor antagonist losartan also eliminated the restored vasodilation in response to ACh and hypoxia. These studies suggest that restoration of normal RAS regulation in SS-13(BN) consomic rats restores vascular relaxation mechanisms that are impaired in Dahl S rats.  相似文献   

8.
Changes in dietary sodium intake are associated with changes in vascular volume and reactivity that may be mediated, in part, by alterations in endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) activity. Caveolin-1 (Cav-1), a transmembrane anchoring protein in the plasma membrane caveolae, binds eNOS and limits its translocation and activation. To test the hypothesis that endothelial Cav-1 participates in the dietary sodium-mediated effects on vascular function, we assessed vascular responses and nitric oxide (NO)-mediated mechanisms of vascular relaxation in Cav-1 knockout mice (Cav-1-/-) and wild-type control mice (WT; Cav-1+/+) placed on a high-salt (HS; 4% NaCl) or low-salt (LS; 0.08% NaCl) diet for 16 days. After the systolic blood pressure was measured, the thoracic aorta was isolated for measurement of vascular reactivity and NO production, and the heart was used for measurement of eNOS expression and/or activity. The blood pressure was elevated in HS mice treated with NG-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester and more so in Cav-1-/- than WT mice and was significantly reduced during the LS diet. Phenylephrine caused vascular contraction that was significantly reduced in Cav-1-/- (maximum 0.25 +/- 0.06 g/mg) compared with WT (0.75 +/- 0.22 g/mg) on the HS diet, and the differences were eliminated with the LS diet. Also, vascular contraction in response to membrane depolarization by high KCl (96 mM) was reduced in Cav-1-/- (0.27 +/- 0.05 g/mg) compared with WT mice (0.53 +/- 0.12 g/mg) on the HS diet, suggesting that the reduced vascular contraction is not limited to a particular receptor. Acetylcholine (10(-5) M) caused aortic relaxation in WT mice on HS (23.6 +/- 3.5%) and LS (23.7 +/- 5.5%) that was enhanced in Cav-1-/- HS (72.6 +/- 6.1%) and more so in Cav-1-/- LS mice (93.6 +/- 3.5%). RT-PCR analysis indicated increased eNOS mRNA expression in the aorta and heart, and Western blots indicated increased total eNOS and phosphorylated eNOS in the heart of Cav-1-/- compared with WT mice on the HS diet, and the genotypic differences were less apparent during the LS diet. Thus Cav-1 deficiency during the HS diet is associated with decreased vasoconstriction, increased vascular relaxation, and increased eNOS expression and activity, and these effects are altered during the LS diet. The data support the hypothesis that endothelial Cav-1, likely through an effect on eNOS activity, plays a prominent role in the regulation of vascular function during substantial changes in dietary sodium intake.  相似文献   

9.
Previous studies suggest that ANG II-induced hypertension in rats fed a high-salt (HS) diet (ANG II-salt hypertension) has a neurogenic component dependent on an enhanced sympathetic tone to the splanchnic veins and independent from changes in sympathetic nerve activity to the kidney or hind limb. The purpose of this study was to extend these findings and test whether altered autonomic control of splanchnic resistance arteries and the heart also contributes to the neurogenic component. Mean arterial pressure (MAP), heart rate (HR), superior mesenteric artery blood flow, and mesenteric vascular resistance (MVR) were measured during 4 control days, 14 days of ANG II delivered subcutaneously (150 ng·kg(-1)·min(-1)), and 4 days of recovery in conscious rats fed a HS (2% NaCl) or low-salt (LS; 0.1% NaCl) diet. Autonomic effects on MAP, HR, and MVR were assessed by acute ganglionic blockade with hexamethonium (20 mg/kg iv) on day 3 of control, days 1, 3, 5, 7, 10, and 13 of ANG II, and day 4 of recovery. MVR increased during ANG II infusion in HS and LS rats but remained elevated only in HS rats. Additionally, the MVR response to hexamethonium was enhanced on days 10 and 13 of ANG II selectively in HS rats. Compared with LS rats, HR in HS rats was higher during the 2nd wk of ANG II, and its response to hexamethonium was greater on days 7, 10, and 13 of ANG II. These results suggest that ANG II-salt hypertension is associated with delayed changes in autonomic control of splanchnic resistance arteries and the heart.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Recent studies have demonstrated that cerebral arteries from rats fed a high-salt (HS) diet exhibit impaired vasodilation and altered electrophysiological response to reduction in PO2. The present study examined whether an increase in salt intake alters the response of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC) to prostacyclin, a crucial mediator of hypoxic dilation in cerebral arteries. VSMC were isolated from cerebral arteries of male Sprague-Dawley rats maintained on an HS (4% NaCl) or a low-salt diet (0.4% NaCl) for 3 days. The stable prostacyclin analog iloprost (10 ng/ml) inhibited serotonin (0.1-10 microM)-induced contractions and the increase in intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) in VSMC isolated from arteries of animals fed the low-salt diet. In contrast, iloprost had no effect on serotonin-induced contractions and increases in [Ca2+]i in VSMC isolated from arteries of rats fed the HS diet. Preventing the fall in ANG in rats fed the HS diet by infusion of a low dose of ANG II (5 ng.kg(-1).min(-1) i.v.) restored the inhibitory effect of iloprost on serotonin-induced contractions and increases in [Ca2+]i in VSMC from animals fed the HS diet. These effects were reversed by AT1 receptor blockade with losartan. These results indicate that ANG II suppression secondary to elevated dietary salt intake impairs vascular relaxation and Ca2+ regulation by prostacyclin.  相似文献   

12.
We examined the effects of dietary soy on the contributions of endothelium-derived hyperpolarising factor (EDHF), nitric oxide (NO), and oxidative stress to vascular tone in isolated aortic rings and small mesenteric and pulmonary arteries in vitro. Male Wistar rats were either continuously fed a soy-deficient diet (SD) or switched from a soy-deficient diet to a soy-rich one for 6 months (SW). Contractile responses were generally smaller in arteries from SW rats. In mesenteric arteries, this difference was blunted by L-NAME, but not by charybdotoxin and apamin. Preconstricted SW mesenteric arteries were more sensitive to acetylcholine (ACh) than SD ones. This difference was unaffected by L-NAME but was abolished by charybdotoxin and apamin. Exogenous superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase induced powerful relaxations in aortic rings, which were smaller in those from SW rats. In mesenteric and pulmonary arteries, however, they partially inhibited ACh-mediated relaxation, and enhanced PGF(2alpha)-mediated contraction, respectively. Our results suggest that feeding aging male rats a soy-rich diet results in improved agonist-mediated EDHF production and a generalized reduction in contractile force, which is partly due to elevated basal NO. Our data also suggest a prorelaxant role for endogenous H(2)O(2) in small arteries, which is modulated by a soy diet.  相似文献   

13.
Resistance arteries (100-150 microm) were isolated from the gracilis muscle of normotensive Sprague-Dawley rats placed on a high-salt (HS) diet (4.0% NaCl) for 3-7 days. Exposure to the HS diet eliminated vascular relaxation in response to hypoxia (PO2 reduction to 35-40 Torr) and iloprost, a stable analog of prostacyclin. Vasodilator responses were restored in arteries isolated from chronically instrumented HS rats receiving a continuous intravenous infusion of either angiotensin II (ANG II; 5-6 ng x kg(-1) x min(-1)) or ANG II plus the AT2 receptor blocker PD-123319 (5 microg x kg(-1) x min(-1)) for 3 days before the isolated vessel studies. In contrast, coinfusion of the AT1 receptor blocker losartan (20 microg x kg(-1) x min(-1)) or coinfusion of both receptor blockers with ANG II eliminated the protective effect of ANG II to restore dilator responses to hypoxia and iloprost. Neither a HS diet nor ANG II infusion affected the dilation of gracilis arteries in response to direct activation of adenylyl cyclase by forskolin, suggesting that the effect of both the HS diet and the ANG II on the vasculature is mediated upstream from second messenger systems. These findings indicate that the protective effect of ANG II to maintain vasodilator reactivity in resistance arteries of rats on a HS diet is mediated via the AT1 receptor subtype.  相似文献   

14.
In skeletal muscle arterioles of normotensive rats fed a high salt diet, the bioavailability of endothelium-derived nitric oxide (NO) is reduced by superoxide anion. Because the impact of dietary salt on resistance vessels in other species is largely unknown, we investigated endothelium-dependent dilation and oxidant activity in spinotrapezius muscle arterioles of C57BL/6J mice fed normal (0.45%, NS) or high salt (7%, HS) diets for 4 wk. Mean arterial pressure in HS mice was not different from that in NS mice, but the magnitude of arteriolar dilation in response to different levels of ACh was 42-57% smaller in HS mice than in NS mice. Inhibition of nitric oxide synthase (NOS) with N(G) monomethyl L-arginine (L-NMMA) significantly reduced resting diameters and reduced responses to ACh (by 45-63%) in NS mice but not in HS mice. Arteriolar wall oxidant activity, as assessed by tetranitroblue tetrazolium reduction or hydroethidine oxidation, was greater in HS mice than in NS mice. Exposure to the superoxide scavenger 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-N-oxyl (TEMPO) + catalase reduced this oxidant activity to normal and restored normal arteriolar responsiveness to ACh in HS mice but had no effect in NS mice. L-NMMA also restored arteriolar oxidant activity to normal in HS mice. ACh further increased arteriolar oxidant activity in HS mice but not in NS mice, and this effect was prevented with L-NMMA. These data suggest that a high salt diet promotes increased generation of superoxide anion from NOS in the murine skeletal muscle microcirculation, thus impairing endothelium-dependent dilation through reduced NO bioavailability.  相似文献   

15.
This study determined the effect of ANG-(1-7) on salt-induced suppression of endothelium-dependent vasodilatation in the mesenteric arteries of male Sprague-Dawley rats. Chronic intravenous infusion of ANG-(1-7), oral administration of the nonpeptide mas receptor agonist AVE-0991, and acute preincubation of the arteries with ANG-(1-7) and AVE-0991 all restored vasodilator responses to both ACh and histamine that were absent in the arteries of rats fed a high-salt (4% NaCl) diet. The protective effects of ANG-(1-7) and AVE-0991 were inhibited by acute or chronic administration of the mas receptor antagonist A-779, the ANG II type 2 (AT(2)) receptor blocker PD-123319, or N-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester, but not the ANG II type 1 receptor antagonist losartan. Preincubation with the antioxidant tempol or the nitric oxide (NO) donor diethylenetriamine NONOate and acute and chronic administration of the AT(2) receptor agonist CGP-42112 mimicked the protective effect of ANG-(1-7) to restore vascular relaxation. Acute preincubation with ANG-(1-7) and chronic infusion of ANG-(1-7) ameliorated the elevated superoxide levels in rats fed a high-salt diet, but the expression of Cu/Zn SOD and Mn SOD enzyme proteins in the vessel wall was unaffected by ANG-(1-7) infusion. These results indicate that both acute and chronic systemic administration of ANG-(1-7) or AVE-0991 restore endothelium-dependent vascular relaxation in salt-fed Sprague-Dawley rats by reducing vascular oxidant stress and enhancing NO availability via mas and AT(2) receptors. These findings suggest a therapeutic potential for mas/AT(2) receptor activation in preventing the vascular oxidant stress and endothelial dysfunction associated with elevated dietary salt intake.  相似文献   

16.
This study determined the effects of hypoxia on diameter, vascular smooth muscle (VSM) transmembrane potential (E(m)), and vascular cAMP levels for in vitro cannulated skeletal muscle resistance arteries (gracilis arteries) from Sprague-Dawley rats fed a low-salt (LS) or a high-salt (HS) diet. Arterial diameter and VSM E(m) were measured in response to hypoxia, iloprost, cholera toxin, forskolin, and aprikalim. In HS rats, arterial dilation and VSM hyperpolarization after hypoxia, iloprost, and cholera toxin were impaired versus responses in LS rats, whereas responses to forskolin and aprikalim were unaltered. Blockade of prostaglandin H(2) and thromboxane A(2) receptors had no effect on responses to hypoxia or iloprost in vessels from both rat groups, suggesting that inappropriate activation of these receptors does not contribute to the impaired hypoxic dilation with HS. Hypoxia, cholera toxin, and iloprost increased vascular cAMP levels in vessels of LS rats only, whereas forskolin increased cAMP levels in all vessels. These data suggest that reduced hypoxic dilation of skeletal muscle microvessels in rats on a HS diet may reflect an impaired ability of VSM to produce cAMP after exposure to prostacyclin.  相似文献   

17.
18.
We tested the hypothesis that exercise training (Ex) attenuates the effects of hypercholesterolemia on endothelium-dependent relaxation in left anterior descending coronary arteries. Adult female pigs were fed a normal-fat (NF) or high-fat (HF) diet for 20 wk. Four weeks after the diet was initiated, pigs were trained or remained sedentary (Sed) for 16 wk, yielding four groups of pigs: 1) NF-Sed, 2) NF-Ex, 3) HF-Sed, and 4) HF-Ex. Sensitivity (EC(50)) to bradykinin (BK) was impaired in HF-Sed arteries. Ex improved BK-induced relaxation such that the EC(50) and maximal response to BK in HF-Ex arteries was not different from that in NF-Sed and NF-Ex. ACh-induced constriction was less in HF-Ex arteries than in HF-Sed, NF-Sed, and NF-Ex. To determine the mechanism(s) by which HF and Ex affected responses to BK and ACh, vasoactive responses were assessed in the presence of N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester [L-NAME; to inhibit nitric oxide (NO) synthase], indomethacin (Indo; to inhibit cyclooxygenase), and L-NAME + Indo. L-NAME inhibited BK-induced relaxation in NF (not HF) arteries. Indo did not significantly alter relaxation to BK in NF arteries; however, relaxation was enhanced in HF-Sed arteries. Double blockade with L-NAME + Indo attenuated BK-induced relaxation in NF arteries and eliminated relaxation in HF arteries. Neither L-NAME nor Indo altered constrictor responses to ACh in NF or HF arteries; however, double blockade with L-NAME + Indo attenuated constriction to ACh in NF-Ex arteries. Endothelium-independent relaxation to sodium nitroprusside was enhanced in HF-Sed and HF-Ex arteries. Collectively, these results indicate that HF impaired endothelial function in coronary arteries by impairing production of NO and by enhancing production of a constrictor that was inhibited by Indo. Ex attenuated the effects of hypercholesterolemia by improving NO-mediated, endothelium-dependent relaxation and by reducing the influence of the Indo-sensitive constrictor.  相似文献   

19.
ACh regulates arousal, and the present study was designed to provide insight into the neurochemical mechanisms modulating ACh release in the pontine reticular formation. Nitric oxide (NO)-releasing beads microinjected into the pontine reticular formation of C57BL/6J (B6) mice significantly (P < 0.0001) increased ACh release. Microdialysis delivery of the NO donor N-ethyl-2-(1-ethyl-2-hydroxy-2-nitrosohydrazino)-ethanamine (NOC-12) to the mouse pontine reticular formation also caused a concentration-dependent increase in ACh release (P < 0.001). These are the first neurochemical data showing that ACh release in the pontine reticular formation of the B6 mouse is modulated by NO. The signal transduction cascade through which NO modulates ACh release in the pontine reticular formation has not previously been characterized. Therefore, an additional series of studies quantified the effects of a soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) inhibitor, 1H-[1,2,4]oxadiazolo-[4,3-a]quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ), on ACh release in the cat medial pontine reticular formation. During naturally occurring states of sleep and wakefulness, but not anesthesia, ODQ caused a significant (P < 0.001) decrease in ACh release. These results show for the first time that NO modulates ACh in the medial pontine reticular formation of the cat via an NO-sensitive sGC signal transduction cascade. Isoflurane and halothane anesthesia have been shown to decrease ACh release in the medial pontine reticular formation. The finding that ODQ did not alter ACh release during isoflurane or halothane anesthesia demonstrates that these anesthetics disrupt the NO-sensitive sGC-cGMP pathway. Considered together, results from the mouse and cat indicate that NO modulates ACh release in arousal-promoting regions of the pontine reticular formation via an NO-sensitive sGC-cGMP pathway.  相似文献   

20.
In vivo microdialysis was used to investigate whether nitric oxide (NO) modulates striatal neurotransmitter release in the rat through inducing cyclic GMP formation via soluble guanylate cyclase or formation of peroxynitrite (ONOO(-)). When NO donors, S-nitroso-N-acetyl-DL-penicillamine (SNAP; 1 mM) or (Z)-1-[2-(2-aminoethyl)-N-(2-ammonioethyl)amino]diazen-1- ium-1, 2-diolate (NOC-18; 1 mM), were retrodialysed for 15 min, acetylcholine (ACh), serotonin (5-HT), glutamate (Glu), gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), and taurine levels were significantly increased, whereas those of dopamine (DA), dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC), and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA) were decreased. Only effects on ACh, 5-HT, and GABA showed calcium dependency. Inhibition of soluble guanylate cyclase by 1H-[1,2,4]oxadiazolo[4,3-alpha]quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ; 100 and 200 microM) dose-dependently reduced NO donor-evoked increases in ACh, 5-HT, Glu, and GABA levels. Coperfusion of SNAP or NOC-18 with an ONOO(-) scavenger, L-cysteine (10 mM) resulted in enhanced concentrations of Glu and GABA. On the other hand, DA concentrations increased rather than decreased, and no reductions in DOPAC and 5-HIAA occurred. This increase in DA and the potentiation of Glu and GABA were calcium-dependent and prevented by ODQ. Similar to NO, infusions of ONOO(-) (10 or 100 microM) decreased DA, DOPAC, and 5-HIAA. Overall, these results demonstrate that NO increases ACh, 5-HT, Glu, and GABA levels primarily through a cyclic GMP-dependent mechanism. For DA, DOPAC, and 5-HIAA, effects are determined by levels of ONOO(-) stimulated by NO donors. When these are high, they effectively reduce extracellular concentrations through oxidation. When they are low, DA concentrations are increased in a cyclic GMP-dependent manner and may act to facilitate Glu and GABA release further. Thus, changes in brain levels of antioxidants, and the altered ability of NO to stimulate cyclic GMP formation during ageing, or neurodegenerative pathologies, may particularly impact on the functional consequences of NO on striatal dopaminergic and glutamatergic function.  相似文献   

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