info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Mitochondrial nitric oxide metabolism during rat heart adaptation to high altitude: effect of sildenafil, l -NAME, and l -arginine treatments
Fecha
2009-06Registro en:
Zaobornyj, Tamara; Valdez, Laura Batriz; Iglesias, Dario Ezequiel; Gasco, Manuel; Gonzales, Gustavo F.; et al.; Mitochondrial nitric oxide metabolism during rat heart adaptation to high altitude: effect of sildenafil, l -NAME, and l -arginine treatments; American Physiological Society; American Journal of Physiology - Heart and Circulatory Physiology; 296; 6; 6-2009; H1741-H1747
0363-6135
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Zaobornyj, Tamara
Valdez, Laura Batriz
Iglesias, Dario Ezequiel
Gasco, Manuel
Gonzales, Gustavo F.
Boveris, Alberto Antonio
Resumen
Mitochondrial nitric oxide metabolism during rat heart adaptation to high altitude: effect of sildenafil, L-NAME, and L-arginine treatments. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 296: H1741–H1747, 2009. First published April 3, 2009; doi:10.1152/ajpheart.00422.2008.—Rats submitted to high altitude (Cerro de Pasco, Peru´, 4,340 m, PO2 12.2 kPa) for up to 84 days showed a physiological adaptive response with decreased body weight gain (15%), increased right ventricle weight (100%), and increased hematocrit (40%) compared with sea level animals. These classical parameters of adaptation to high altitude were accompanied by an increase in heart mitochondrial enzymes: complexes I-III activity by 34% and mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase (mtNOS) activity and expression by 75%. The hyperbolic increase for mtNOS activity during adaptation to high altitude was similar to the observed pattern for hematocrit. Hematocrit and mtNOS activity mean values correlated linearly (r2 0.75, P 0.05). Chronic treatment for 28 days with sildenafil (50 mg kg1 day1 ) decreased the response of mtNOS to high altitude by 25%. Conversely, NGnitro-L-arginine methyl ester treatment (8.3 mg kg1 day1 ) increased such response by 40%, whereas L-arginine treatment (106 mg kg1 day1 ) had no effect. Nitric oxide (NO) production by mtNOS accounts for 49% of total cellular NO production in sea level rats and for 54% in rats exposed to high altitude for 84 days. It is concluded that mtNOS is a substantial source of cardiac NO, a factor in the adaptive response to sustained heart hypoxia that is susceptible to be modified by pharmacological treatments.