Artículos de revistas
Endothelial modulation of a nitric oxide donor complex-induced relaxation in normotensive and spontaneously hypertensive rats
Fecha
2018-05-15Registro en:
Life sciences, v. 201, p. 130-140.
1879-0631
10.1016/j.lfs.2018.03.055
2-s2.0-85047330097
2-s2.0-85047330097.pdf
Autor
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Universidade de São Paulo (USP)
Institución
Resumen
We hypothesized that endothelium modulates relaxation induced by a nitric oxide (NO) donor ruthenium complex (TERPY, [Ru(terpy)(bdq)NO]3+) in mesenteric arteries of normotensive and spontaneously hypertensive (SHR) rats in different ways. We analyzed the mechanism involved in TERPY-induced relaxation in the second and third branches of mesenteric arteries and investigated how endothelium contributes to the TERPY vasodilator effect on SHR blood vessels. TERPY induced concentration-dependent relaxation in endothelium-denuded (E-) and endothelium-intact (E+) mesenteric arteries of normotensive rats and SHR. Pretreatment with ODQ (which inhibits soluble guanylyl cyclase) or TEA (tetraethylammonium, which blocks potassium channels) significantly reduced the TERPY vasodilator effect on E- mesenteric arteries of normotensive rats and SHR. The presence of endothelium shifted the concentration-effect curves for TERPY in E+ mesenteric arteries of normotensive rats to the right. Conversely, the presence of endothelium shifted the concentration-effect curves for TERPY in the case of SHR E+ mesenteric arteries to the left, which suggested increased potency. L-NNA, a more selective endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) inhibitor, reduced TERPY potency in SHR. The presence of endothelium and notably of NOS contributed to the TERPY vasodilator action in SHR: TERPY promoted eNOS Ser1177 phosphorylation with consequent NO production and increased soluble guanylyl cyclase activity, which may have directly activated potassium channels.