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1.
A recent report from this laboratory (Chitaley K, Wingard C, Webb R, Branam H, Stopper V, Lewis R, and Mills T. Nature Medicine 7: 119-122, 2001) showed that inhibition of Rho-kinase increased the erectile response (intracavernosal pressure and mean arterial pressure) by a process that does not require nitric oxide or cGMP. The present study investigated whether vasoconstrictor agents, which are active in the penis, act via the Rho-kinase pathway. Western analysis revealed RhoA and Rho-kinase protein in the penis. Treatment with the selective Rho-kinase inhibitor Y-27632 significantly increased the magnitude of the erectile response. Intracavernous administration of endothelin-1 (ET-1; 50 pmol) or methoxamine (10 microg/kg) reduced the erectile response to autonomic stimulation. If Y-27632 was given before ET-1 or methoxamine, the vasoconstrictor effect was reduced, and intracavernosal pressure and mean arterial pressure remained elevated. However, when given after methoxamine, Y-27632 had a reduced vasodilatory effect, and Y-27632 had no vasodilatory effect when given after ET-1. These findings suggest that ET-1 and methoxamine increase Rho-kinase activity in the cavernous circulation and support the hypothesis that the vasoconstriction that maintains the penis in the nonerect state is mediated, in part, by the Rho-kinase pathway.  相似文献   

2.
Androgens are reported to act as strong modulators of erectile function influencing both nitric oxide and vasoconstrictor signaling. Castration results in a depressed erectile response that is associated with a loss of nitric oxide production and increased responsiveness to constrictive agents. The increased vasoconstrictor response may be a result of an active RhoA/Rho-kinase signaling pathway. We report here results of studies designed to test the hypothesis that inhibition of the Rho-kinase pathway restores erectile function in a castrate model by relaxing the smooth muscle. Mean arterial (MAP) and corpus cavernosal (CCP) pressures were monitored during intracavernosal injection of the Rho-kinase inhibitor Y-27632. Castration reduced the maximal erectile response (CCP/MAP) by 33%, and testosterone replacement restored the response (intact, 0.736 +/- 0.040; castrate, 0.492 +/- 0.022; testosterone, 0.681 +/- 0.073). Injection of Y-27632 increased CCP in all experimental groups; it also left shifted the voltage response curve and increased the maximal CCP/MAP response (intact, 0.753 +/- 0.091; castrate, 0.782 +/- 0.081; testosterone treated, 0.894 +/- 0.033). Y-27632 dose dependently relaxed phenylephrine-stimulated cavernosal tissues. Cavernosal tissues showed increased RhoA and Rho-kinase protein levels after castration. Our data support the hypothesis that an active Rho/Rho-kinase pathway contributes to the reduced erectile response after castration due to an upregulation of RhoA/Rho-kinase protein levels and that inhibition of this pathway may serve as an effective treatment for erectile dysfunction.  相似文献   

3.
Penile erection is a muscular and vascular event mediated by the autonomic nervous system. The neurophysiology of erection remains poorly understood and controversial, requiring a suitable model for in-vitro studies of erectile function. Such a model, based in the rat whose penile innervation is very similar to man, is described here. The first study using this model considers the influence of systemic blodd pressure (BP) on penile erection. In 33 anaesthetized rats the pelvic and cavernosal nerves were identified and dissected. Supra maximal electrical stimulation was delivered over 1 minute by a train of 1 ms pulses onto the pelvic nerve (10 V, 15 Hz) or the cavernosal nerve (6 V, 10 Hz). Systemic blood pressure and intracavernosal pressure (ICP) were monitored and stored on a computer. As in previous animal models (dog, monkey), four phases of the cavernosal response to neural electrical stimulation were observed: latency, tumescence, full erection, and détumescence. In all rats electrical stimulation of either the pelvic or cavernosal nerves significantly increased intracavernosal pressure. Complete erectile response (rigidity and unfolding of the penis) was only seen with intracavernosal pressures > 95 mm Hg. Intracavernosal pressure increased proportionally with blood preessure during the full erection phase according to the equation ICP=0.94 BP ? 31 mm Hg (r=0.94 BP ? 31 mm Hg (r=0.94) for electrical stimulation of the cavernosal nerve, or the alternative aquation ICP=0.76 BP ? 21 mm Hg (r=0.73) for electrical stimulation of the pelvic nerve. The rat is a readily available model for the study of erection and present obvious advantages over existing models such as the dog, cat and monkey. Cavernosal repsonse to neural stimulation was closely related to arterial blood pressure and the two linear equations presented above should be considered further in studies modifying autonomic neurotransmission as well as in relation to the effects of pharmacological compounds with vasomotor actions on erectile function.  相似文献   

4.
Endothelin (ET)-1 contributes to the regulation of pulmonary vascular tone by stimulation of the ET(A) and ET(B) receptors. Although activation of the ET(A) receptor causes vasoconstriction, stimulation of the ET(B) receptors can elicit either vasodilation or vasoconstriction. To examine the physiological role of the ET(B) receptor in the pulmonary circulation, we studied a genetic rat model of ET(B) receptor deficiency [transgenic(sl/sl)]. We hypothesized that deficiency of the ET(B) receptor would predispose the transgenic(sl/sl) rat lung circulation to enhanced pulmonary vasoconstriction. We found that the lungs of transgenic(sl/sl) rats are ET(B) deficient because they lack ET(B) mRNA in the pulmonary vasculature, have minimal ET(B) receptors as determined with an ET-1 radioligand binding assay, and lack ET-1-mediated pulmonary vasodilation. The transgenic(sl/sl) rats have higher basal pulmonary arterial pressure and vasopressor responses to brief hypoxia or ET-1 infusion. Plasma ET-1 levels are elevated and endothelial nitric oxide synthase protein content and nitric oxide production are diminished in the transgenic(sl/sl) rat lung. These findings suggest that the ET(B) receptor plays a major physiological role in modulating resting pulmonary vascular tone and reactivity to acute hypoxia. We speculate that impaired ET(B) receptor activity can contribute to the pathogenesis of pulmonary hypertension.  相似文献   

5.
Maintenance of the detumescent state of the penis is believed to involve the actions of several vasoconstrictors. However, our mechanistic understanding of any synergistic vasoconstrictor influences is extremely limited. We tested the hypothesis that a vasoconstrictor combination of endothelin (ET-1) and phenylephrine (PE) augments the constrictor responses in rat corporal cavernosal tissues by a mechanism involving the RhoA-Rho kinase pathway. Independently, ET-1 (1 nM-30 microM) and PE (100 nM-100 microM) both caused dose-dependent contractions of isolated rat cavernosal tissues. In combination, ET-1 (30 nM) augmented the contractile effect of PE and shifted the calculated EC50 for PE (90 +/- 12 to 45 +/- 5 microM). The active stress generated by cavernosal strips during the ET-1 + PE combined stimulation (4.9 +/- 0.2 mN/mm2) was greater than the combined stress generated with ET-1 (0.4 +/- 0.1 mN/mm2) or PE (3.3 +/- 0.2 mN/mm2) stimulations alone. Blockade of ETA receptors (30 nM; A-127722) reversed the augmented stress generation and the Rho-kinase inhibitor Y-27632 differentially and dose-dependently relaxed the tissue. The combined constrictor effect was associated with a fourfold increase of RhoA in the membrane faction of the tissue homogenates. We conclude that the ET-1 + PE combination potentiate vasoconstriction through mutual activation of the RhoA-Rho kinase pathway. The interactions of these agonists likely play important roles in the maintenance of the flaccid state and contribute to some forms of erectile dysfunction.  相似文献   

6.
Recently, it has been shown that brain topical superfusion of endothelin (ET)-1 at concentrations around 100 nM induces repetitive cortical spreading depressions (CSDs) in vivo. It has remained unclear whether this effect of ET-1 is related to a primary neuronal/astroglial effect, such as an increase in neuronal excitability or induction of interastroglial calcium waves, or a penumbra-like condition after vasoconstriction. In vitro, ET-1 regulates interastroglial communication via combined activation of ET(A) and ET(B) receptors, whereas it induces vasoconstriction via single activation of ET(A) receptors. We have determined the ET receptor profile and intracellular signaling pathway of ET-1-induced CSDs in vivo. In contrast to the ET(B) receptor antagonist BQ-788 and concentration dependently, the ET(A) receptor antagonist BQ-123 completely blocked the occurrence of ET-1-induced CSDs. The ET(B) receptor antagonist did not increase the efficacy of the ET(A) receptor antagonist. Direct stimulation of ET(B) receptors with the selective ET(B) agonist BQ-3020 did not trigger CSDs. The phospholipase C (PLC) antagonist U-73122 inhibited CSD occurrence in contrast to the protein kinase C inhibitor G?-6983. Our findings indicate that ET-1 induces CSDs through ET(A) receptor and PLC activation. We conclude that the induction of interastroglial calcium waves is unlikely the primary cause of ET-1-induced CSDs. On the basis of the receptor profile, likely primary targets of ET-1 mediating CSD are either neurons or vascular smooth muscle cells.  相似文献   

7.
We have reported that eucapnic intermittent hypoxia (E-IH) causes systemic hypertension, elevates plasma endothelin 1 (ET-1) levels, and augments vascular reactivity to ET-1 and that a nonspecific ET-1 receptor antagonist acutely lowers blood pressure in E-IH-exposed rats. However, the effect of chronic ET-1 receptor inhibition has not been evaluated, and the ET receptor subtype mediating the vascular effects has not been established. We hypothesized that E-IH causes systemic hypertension through the increased ET-1 activation of vascular ET type A (ET(A)) receptors. We found that mean arterial pressure (MAP) increased after 14 days of 7 h/day E-IH exposure (109 +/- 2 to 137 +/- 4 mmHg; P < 0.005) but did not change in sham-exposed rats. The ET(A) receptor antagonist BQ-123 (10 to 1,000 nmol/kg iv) acutely decreased MAP dose dependently in conscious E-IH but not sham rats, and continuous infusion of BQ-123 (100 nmol.kg(-1).day(-1) sc for 14 days) prevented E-IH-induced increases in MAP. ET-1-induced constriction was augmented in small mesenteric arteries from rats exposed 14 days to E-IH compared with those from sham rats. Constriction was blocked by the ET(A) receptor antagonist BQ-123 (10 microM) but not by the ET type B (ET(B)) receptor antagonist BQ-788 (100 microM). ET(A) receptor mRNA content was greater in renal medulla and coronary arteries from E-IH rats. ET(B) receptor mRNA was not different in any tissues examined, whereas ET-1 mRNA was increased in the heart and in the renal medulla. Thus augmented ET-1-dependent vasoconstriction via vascular ET(A) receptors appears to elevate blood pressure in E-IH-exposed rats.  相似文献   

8.
Vascular endothelin (ET) type B (ET(B)) receptors exert dilator and constrictor actions in a complex interaction with ET(A) receptors. We aimed to clarify the presence and relative importance of nitric oxide (NO) and other mechanisms underlying the dilator effects of ET(B) receptors in rat kidneys. Complete inhibition of NO production with Nomega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME, 25 mg/kg iv) enhanced the renal vasoconstriction elicited by ET-1 injected into the renal artery from -15 to -30%. Additional infusion of the NO donor nitroprusside (NP) into the renal artery did not reverse this effect (-29%) but effectively buffered ANG II-mediated vasoconstriction. Similarly, ET-1 responses were enhanced after a smaller intrarenal dose of L-NAME (-22 vs. -15%) and were unaffected by subsequent NP infusion (-21%). These results indicate that the responsiveness to ET-1 is buffered by ET(B) receptor-stimulated phasic release of NO, rather than its static mean level. Infusion of the ET(B) receptor antagonist BQ-788 into the renal artery further enhanced the ET-1 constrictor response to NP+L-NAME (-92 vs. -49%), revealing an NO-independent dilator component. In controls, vasoconstriction to ET-1 was unaffected by vehicle (-27 vs. -20%) and markedly enhanced by BQ-788 (-70%). The same pattern was observed when indomethacin (Indo) was used to inhibit cyclooxygenase (-20% for control, -22% with Indo, and -56% with ET(B) antagonist) or methylsulfonyl-6-(2-propargyloxyphenyl)-hexanamide (MS-PPOH) or miconazole+Indo was used to inhibit epoxygenase alone (-10% for control, -11% with MS-PPOH, and -35% with ET(B) antagonist) or in combination (-14% for control, -20% with Indo + miconazole, and -43% with ET(B) antagonist). We conclude that phasic release of NO, but not its static level, mediates part of the dilator effect of ET(B) receptors and that an NO-independent mechanism, distinct from prostanoids and epoxyeicosatetraenoic acids, perhaps ET(B) receptor clearance of ET-1, plays a major buffering role.  相似文献   

9.
Sauvageau S  Thorin E  Villeneuve L  Dupuis J 《Peptides》2008,29(11):2039-2045
Blockade of the endothelin (ET) system is beneficial in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). The contribution of ET-3 and its interactions with ET receptors have never been evaluated in the monocrotaline (MCT)-induced model of PAH. Vasoreactivity of pulmonary arteries was investigated; ET-3 localization was determined by confocal imaging and gene expression of prepro-ET-3 quantified using RT-PCR. ET-3 plasma levels tended to increase in PAH. ET-3 localized in the media of pulmonary arteries, where gene expression of prepro-ET-3 was reduced in PAH. ET-3 induced similar pulmonary vasoconstrictions in sham and PAH rats. In sham rats, the ET(A) antagonist A-147627 (10nmol/l) significantly reduced the maximal response to ET-3 (E(max) 77+/-1 to 46+/-2%, mean+/-S.E.M., P<0.001), while the ET(B) antagonist A-192621 (1mumol/l) reduced the sensitivity (EC(50) 21+/-7 to 59+/-16nmol/l, P<0.05) without affecting E(max). The combination of both antagonists completely abolished ET-3-induced pulmonary vasoconstriction. In PAH, the ET(A) antagonist further reduced the maximal response to ET-3 and shifted the EC(50) (E(max) 23+/-2%, P<0.001, EC(50) 104+/-24nmol/l, P<0.05), while the ET(B) antagonist only shifted the EC(50) (123+/-36nmol/l, P<0.05) without affecting the E(max). In PAH, dual ET receptor inhibition did not further reduce constriction compared to selective ET(A) inhibition. ET-3 significantly contributes to pulmonary vasoconstriction by activating the ET(B) at low concentration, and the ET(A) at high concentration. The increased inhibitory effect of the ET(A) antagonist in PAH suggests that the contribution of ET(B) to ET-3-induced vasoconstriction is reduced. Although ET-3 is a potent pulmonary vasoconstrictor in PAH, its potential pathophysiologic contribution remains uncertain.  相似文献   

10.
Clinical studies have documented an abrupt rise in plasma endothelin-1 (ET-1) coincident with an increase in mean arterial pressure (MAP) during the response to acute stress. We therefore examined the ET(A) and ET(B) receptor-dependent effects of ET-1 on the pressor response to acute environmental stress in ET-1-dependent hypertension. Stress was induced by administration of air jet pulses (3 min) in ET(B) receptor-deficient (ET(B) sl/sl) rats fed normal salt (NS; 0.8% NaCl), high salt (HS; 8% NaCl), and HS plus the ET(A) receptor antagonist ABT-627 (5 mg.kg(-1).day(-1)) on successive weeks. MAP was chronically monitored by telemetry. Total pressor response (area under the curve) was significantly reduced in ET(B) sl/sl rats maintained on a HS vs. NS diet [-6.8 mmHg (SD 18.7) vs. 29.3 mmHg (SD 8.1) x 3 min, P < 0.05]. Conversely, the total pressor response was augmented in both wild-type [34.2 mmHg (SD 29.2) x 3 min, P < 0.05 vs. NS] and ET(B) sl/sl rats [49.1 mmHg (SD 11.8) x 3 min, P < 0.05 vs. NS] by ABT-627. Blockade of ET(B) receptors in Sprague-Dawley rats caused an increase in basal MAP that was enhanced by HS and lowered by mixed ET(A)/ET(B) receptor antagonism; none of these treatments, however, had any effect on the pressor response. These data demonstrate that increasing endogenous ET-1 suppresses the pressor response to acute stress through ET(A) receptor activation in a genetic model of ET-1-dependent hypertension. These results are consistent with reports that ET-1 can attenuate sympathetically mediated responses.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Endothelin-1 (ET-1) has been reported to induce pulmonary vasoconstriction via either ET(A) or ET(B) receptors, and vasorelaxation after ET-1 injection has been observed. Our study investigated the effects of ET-1 in isolated rabbit lungs, which were studied at basal tone (part I) and after preconstriction (U-46619; part II). Pulmonary arterial pressure (PAP) and lung weight gain were monitored continuously. In part I, ET-1 (10(-8) M; n = 6; control) was injected after pretreatment with the ET(A)-receptor antagonist BQ-123 (10(-6) M; n = 6) or the ET(B)-receptor antagonist BQ-788 (10(-6) M; n = 6). The same protocol was carried out in part II after elevation of pulmonary vascular tone. ET-1 induced an immediate PAP increase (DeltaPAP 4.3 +/- 0.4 mmHg at 10 min) that was attenuated by pretreatment with BQ-123 (P < 0.05 at 10 min and P < 0.01 thereafter) and that was more pronounced after BQ-788 (P < 0.01 at 10 min and P < 0.001 thereafter). In part II, ET-1 induced an immediate rise in PAP with a maximum after 5 min (DeltaPAP 6.3 +/- 1.4 mmHg), leveling off at DeltaPAP 3.2 +/- 0.2 mmHg after 15 min. Pretreatment with BQ-123 failed to attenuate the increase. BQ-788 significantly reduced the peak pressure at 5 min (0.75 +/- 0.4 mmHg; P < 0.001) as well as the plateau pressure thereafter (P < 0.01). We conclude that ET-1 administration causes pulmonary vasoconstriction independent of basal vascular tone, and, at normal vascular tone, the vasoconstriction seems to be mediated via ET(A) receptors. BQ-788 treatment resulted in even more pronounced vasoconstriction. After pulmonary preconstriction, ET(A) antagonism exerted no effects on PAP, whereas ET(B) antagonism blocked the PAP increase. Therefore, ET-1-induced pulmonary vasoconstriction is shifted from an ET(A)-related to an ET(B)-mediated mechanism after pulmonary vascular preconstriction.  相似文献   

13.
Endothelin-1 (ET-1) elicits a vasoconstrictor response via ET(A) receptors, whereas simultaneous activation of ET(B) receptors triggers the release of nitric oxide (NO), which may limit the constrictor effect of ET-1. Recently, stimulation of ET(B) receptors has been shown to increase the secretion of adrenomedullin (AM), a newly identified vasorelaxing peptide. The present study was designed to see whether AM can oppose the vasoconstrictor response to ET-1. In the isolated perfused paced rat heart preparation, infusion of ET-1 at concentrations of 1 nmol/l for 30 min induced a significant coronary vasoconstriction, whereas it had no effect on perfusion pressure at a dose of 0.08 nmol/l. N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME; 300 micromol/l), a potent inhibitor of NO synthase (NOS), did not change the perfusion pressure when added alone to the perfusion fluid but it unmasked the constrictor effect of ET-1 at both concentrations. In the presence of L-NAME, AM (0.03 to 1 nmol/l) markedly reversed the pressor response to ET-1 at both concentrations. Administration of AM (0.03 and 1 nmol/l) alone resulted in a dose-dependent decrease in perfusion pressure, which was not modified in the presence of L-NAME. In conclusion, the coronary vasoconstrictor response to ET-1 is markedly augmented in the presence of a NOS inhibitor. This constrictor response is substantially reversed by AM. Our results indicate that AM may serve as a paracrine modulator of ET-1-induced vasoconstriction independently of the NO pathway.  相似文献   

14.
Erectile dysfunction in the aging male is caused, in part, by inadequate relaxation of the corpora cavernosal smooth musculature. Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), a peptide neurotrasmitter localized in the corpora cavernosa, is down-regulated in the aging rat penis. We examined the hypothesis that this reduction in CGRP may contribute to decreased cavernosal smooth muscle relaxation. Therefore, we sought to determine whether adenoviral-mediated gene transfer of prepro-CGRP (AdRSVCGRP) could enhance erectile responses in aged rats. We found a significant decrease in CGRP concentrations and in cAMP and cGMP levels in aged rat cavernosal tissue compared to younger rats. Aged rats also had significantly lower erectile function as determined by cavernosal nerve stimulation compared to younger rats. Five days after transfection with AdRSVCGRP, these aged rats had an approximately threefold increase in cavernosal CGRP levels compared to animals transfected with adenoviruses encoding nuclear-targeted beta-galactosidase (AdRSV beta gal). The AdRSVCGRP-transfected animals also demonstrated an increase in CGRP mRNA and immunohistochemical localization of CGRP in the smooth muscle of the corpora cavernosa. In addition, cAMP levels in the corpora cavernosa were significantly increased, whereas cGMP levels remained unchanged. Adenoviral transduction efficiency of beta-galactosidase reporter gene was measured by chemiluminescence and was observed in cavernosal tissue 5 days after transfection with AdRSV beta gal. More importantly, 5 days after administration of AdRSVCGRP, a significant increase was observed in the erectile response to cavernosal nerve stimulation in the aged rat, similar to the response observed in younger rats. These data suggest that in vivo adenoviral gene transfer of CGRP can physiologically improve erectile function in the aged rat.  相似文献   

15.
Cardiovascular diseases are characterized by insulin resistance and elevated endothelin (ET)-1 levels. Furthermore, ET-1 induces insulin resistance. To elucidate this mechanism, six healthy subjects were studied during a hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp during infusion of (the ET-1 precursor) big ET-1 alone or after ET(A)- or ET(B)-receptor blockade. Insulin levels rose after big ET-1 with or without the ET(B) antagonist BQ-788 (P < 0.05) but were unchanged after the ET(A) antagonist BQ-123 + big ET-1. Infused glucose divided by insulin fell after big ET-1 with or without BQ-788 (P < 0.05). Insulin and infused glucose divided by insulin values were normalized by ET(A) blockade. Mean arterial blood pressure rose during big ET-1 with or without BQ-788 (P < 0.001) but was unchanged after BQ-123. Skeletal muscle, splanchnic, and renal blood flow responses to big ET-1 were abolished by BQ-123. ET-1 levels rose after big ET-1 (P < 0.01) in a similar way after BQ-123 or BQ-788, despite higher elimination capacity after ET(A) blockade. In conclusion, ET-1-induced reduction in insulin sensitivity and clearance as well as splanchnic and renal vasoconstriction are ET(A) mediated. ET(A)-receptor stimulation seems to inhibit the conversion of big ET-1 to ET-1.  相似文献   

16.
Erectile dysfunction (ED) affects approximately 50% of male patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) and is possibly due to the vascular and neuropathic complications of DM. Recently, apoptosis has been regarded as a downstream event in ED. More recently, the importance of alterations in apoptosis-related molecules in the mechanism of DM-induced ED has begun to be appreciated. Endothelin-1 (ET-1) plays a role via ET(A) and ET(B) receptors in the regulation of cavernosal smooth-muscle tone in penile tissues. We found that the ET-1 level in the penis of rats with DM was higher than that in the penis of control animals. The present study investigated a rat model in which DM was induced by a 3-week regimen of streptozotocin (STZ) to assess the expression of several apoptosis-related molecules in penile tissue and, concomitantly, the effects of ET antagonism on these changes. Male Sprague-Dawley rats (weight [+/-SD], 450 +/- 26 g) received a citrate saline vehicle or STZ (65 mg/kg ip). DM was confirmed by the presence of hyperglycemia. Diabetic animals were further separated into two treatment groups 1 week after onset of disease: one group received ET(A/B) dual receptor antagonist (SB209670) by means of osmotic minipump at a dosage of 1 mg/day, and the other group received saline. Rats in both groups were treated for 2 weeks and then sacrificed. Plasma glucose levels (+/-SD) in rats with DM were significantly higher than those in rats without DM (506 +/- 70 vs. 111 +/- 11 mg/dl). In the penile tissue of rats with DM, a 35% decrease in the expression of Bcl-2 protein (an important antiapoptotic marker detectable by immunoblotting) was seen, and ET(A/B) dual antagonist was observed to significantly counteract this decrease. Real-time polymerase chain reaction revealed that the expression of Bcl-2 mRNA was consistent with Bcl-2 protein expression. Levels of Bax and caspase-3, two important proapoptotic markers, were not significantly altered in the present study. Thus, we conclude that, in the penis of rats with early stage DM, the protection against apoptosis has decreased but can be improved by ET antagonism.  相似文献   

17.
Increased superoxide anion (O(2)(-).) may contribute to vascular dysfunction in aging. In aged cavernosal tissue, lucigenin-enhanced chemiluminescence demonstrated a threefold increase in superoxide formation, and the oxidative fluorescent probe hydroethidine indicated higher superoxide levels throughout the aged penis. This increase in superoxide was associated with impaired cavernosal nerve-mediated and agonist-induced erectile responses, increased nitrotyrosine staining, and lower cGMP levels, but no compensatory change in cavernosal extracellular (EC)-superoxide dismutase (EC-SOD) mRNA or protein. In vivo adenoviral (Ad) gene transfer of EC-SOD to the penis resulted in higher expression of EC-SOD mRNA, protein, SOD activity, cGMP levels, and lower nitrotyrosine staining. Transfection with AdCMVEC-SOD resulted in a significant increase in erectile response to cavernosal nerve stimulation, ACh, and zaprinast to a magnitude similar to young rats. These data provide evidence in support of the hypothesis that erectile dysfunction associated with aging is related in part to an increase in cavernosal O(2)(-). formation. Gene-transfer of EC-SOD reduces superoxide formation and restores age-associated erectile function and may represent a novel therapeutic target for the treatment of erectile dysfunction.  相似文献   

18.
In the vascular system, endothelin (ET) type B (ET(B)) receptors for ET-1 are located on endothelial and on venous and arterial smooth muscle cells. In the present study, we investigated the hemodynamic effects of chronic ET(B) receptor blockade at low and high doses in the Syrian Golden hamster. After 16 days of gavage with A-192621 (0.5 or 30 mg.kg(-1).day(-1)), a selective ET(B) receptor antagonist, hamsters were anesthetized with a mixture of ketamine and xylazine (87 and 13 mg/kg im, respectively), and basal mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) and pressor responses to exogenous ET-1 were evaluated. The lower dose of A-192621 (0.5 mg.kg(-1).day(-1)) did not modify basal MAP, whereas the higher dose (30 mg.kg(-1).day(-1)) increased MAP and plasma ET levels. Radio-telemetry recordings confirmed the increase in MAP induced by the higher dose of A-192621 in conscious hamsters. On the other hand, although the lower dose of A-192621 was devoid of intrinsic pressor effects, it markedly reduced the transient hypotensive phase induced by intravenously injected IRL-1620, a selective ET(B) receptor agonist. Finally, A-192621 (0.5 mg.kg(-1).day(-1)) alone or A-192621 (30 mg.kg(-1).day(-1)) + atrasentan (6 mg.kg(-1).day(-1)), a selective ET(A) receptor antagonist, potentiated the pressor response to exogenous ET-1. Our results suggest that, in the hamster, ET(B) receptors on vascular smooth muscle cells are importantly involved in the clearance of endogenous ET-1, whereas the same receptor type on the endothelium is solely involved in the vasodilatory responses to the pressor peptide. Blockade of endothelial and vascular smooth muscle cell ET(B) receptors triggers a marked potentiation of ET(A)-dependent increases in systemic resistance.  相似文献   

19.
Relaxation of the smooth muscle cells in the cavernosal arterioles and sinuses results in increased blood flow into the penis, raising corpus cavernosum pressure to culminate in penile erection. Nitric oxide, released from non-adrenergic/non-cholinergic nerves, is considered the principle stimulator of cavernosal smooth muscle relaxation, however, the inhibition of vasoconstrictors (that is, norepinephrine and endothelin-1, refs. 5-9) cannot be ignored as a potential regulator of penile erection. The calcium-sensitizing rho-A/Rho-kinase pathway may play a synergistic role in cavernosal vasoconstriction to maintain penile flaccidity. Rho-kinase is known to inhibit myosin light chain phosphatase, and to directly phosphorylate myosin light-chain (in solution), altogether resulting in a net increase in activated myosin and the promotion of cellular contraction. Although Rho-kinase protein and mRNA have been detected in cavernosal tissue, the role of Rho-kinase in the regulation of cavernosal tone is unknown. Using pharmacologic antagonism (Y-27632, ref. 13, 18), we examined the role of Rho-kinase in cavernosal tone, based on the hypothesis that antagonism of Rho-kinase results in increased corpus cavernosum pressure, initiating the erectile response independently of nitric oxide. Our finding, that Rho-kinase antagonism stimulates rat penile erection independently of nitric oxide, introduces a potential alternate avenue for the treatment of erectile dysfunction.  相似文献   

20.
A paradoxical microcirculatory constriction has been observed in hearts of patients with ischemia, secondary to coronary stenosis. Here, using the isolated mouse heart (Langendorff), we examined the mechanism of this response, assuming involvement of nitric oxide (NO) and endothelin-1 (ET-1) systems. Perfusion pressure was maintained at 65 mmHg for 70 min (protocol 1), or it was reduced to 30 mmHg over two intervals, between the 20- and 40-min marks (protocol 2) or from the 20-min mark onward (protocol 3). In protocol 1, coronary resistance (CR) remained steady in untreated heart, whereas it progressively increased during treatment with the NO synthesis inhibitor N(G)-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) (2.7-fold) or the ET(A) antagonist BQ-610 (2.8 fold). The ET(B) antagonist BQ-788 had instead no effect by itself but curtailed vasoconstriction to BQ-610. In protocol 2, hypotension raised CR by 2.2-fold. This response was blunted by reactive oxygen species (ROS) scavengers (mannitol and superoxide dismutase plus catalase) and was converted into vasodilation by l-NAME, BQ-610, or BQ-788. Restoration of normal pressure was followed by vasodilation and vasoconstriction, respectively, in untreated and treated preparations. In protocol 3, CR progressively increased with hypotension in the absence but not presence of L-NAME or BQ-610. We conclude that the coronary vasculature is normally relaxed by two concerted processes, a direct action of NO and ET-1 curtailing an ET(B2)-mediated tonic vasoconstriction through ET(A) activation. The negative feedback mechanism on ET(B2) subsides during hypotension, and the ensuing vasoconstriction is ascribed to ET-1 activating ET(A) and ET(B2) and reactive nitrogen oxide species originating from ROS-NO interaction.  相似文献   

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