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Dirofilaria immitis: heartworm infection alters pulmonary artery endothelial cell behavior
Authors:Mupanomunda, Maria   Williams, Jeffrey F.   Mackenzie, Charles D.   Kaiser, Lana
Abstract:Mupanomunda, Maria, Jeffrey F. Williams, Charles D. Mackenzie, and Lana Kaiser. Dirofilaria immitis:heartworm infection alters pulmonary artery endothelial cell behavior.J. Appl. Physiol. 82(2): 389-398, 1997.---Thepathogenesis of filariasis has generally been attributed to eitherphysical presence of the adult parasites or the host's immune responseto the parasites. However, the spectrum of filariasis cannot beentirely explained by these causes, and other mechanisms must beoperative. It is now evident that factors released by filarialparasites likely contribute to the pathogenesis of filarial diseases.Adult heartworms (Dirofilaria immitis) reside in the rightheart and pulmonary artery, so the pulmonary artery should be exposedto the highest concentration of filarial factors. We tested thehypothesis that endothelium-dependent relaxation is altered in the invitro pulmonary artery from heartworm-infected dogs. Relaxationresponses to endothelium-dependent vasodilators (methacholine,bradykinin, substance P, and A-23187) and the non-endothelium-dependent vasodilator nitroglycerin and contractile responses were measured inrings of pulmonary artery from control and heartworm-infected dogs.Endothelium-dependent relaxation was assessed in the presence andabsence of inhibitors of nitric oxide synthase, cyclooxygenase, andguanylate cyclase. Responses to methacholine, substance P, and A-23187,but not to bradykinin, nitroglycerin, norepinephrine, or KCl, weredepressed in pulmonary artery from heartworm-infected dogs whencompared with control, suggesting that changes in endothelial cell andnot vascular smooth muscle behavior are involved in altered relaxation.The mechanism of endothelium-dependent relaxation in control pulmonaryartery appears to involve nitric oxide in the case of methacholine andboth nitric oxide and a cyclooxygenase product in the case ofbradykinin and A-23187. The mechanism of endothelium-dependentrelaxation in pulmonary artery from heartworm-infected dogs was notclearly elucidated. These data provide no evidence that heartworminfection globally influences either endothelial cell receptor functionor the vascular smooth muscle guanylate cyclase guanosine 3',5'-cyclicmonophosphate system, making it likely that changes in intracellularsignaling are primarily responsible for the observed alteration ofendothelium-mediated relaxation. Alteration of endothelial cellfunction by filarial parasites may be an important component inthe pathology associated with filariasis.

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