The release and vascular action of bradykinin in the isolated perfused bovine udder.

J Physiol

Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow G4 0NR, Scotland, UK.

Published: August 2002

It has been postulated that the mammary kinin system may play a role in modulating mammary blood flow. Until the present study, the local release of bradykinin (BK) or other kinin system constituents into the mammary vasculature had not been reported and there were also conflicting findings on the action of BK on udder vasculature. Udders were removed from healthy lactating cows at slaughter. Pairs of ipsilateral quarters were perfused with Tyrode solution through the external pudendalis artery and drained via the cranial superficial epigastric vein. Mammary secretion was collected through teat cannulae. The perfusion pressure was linearly related to perfusate flux between 60 and 210 ml min(-1) and the flow rate was adjusted (110-150 ml min(-1)) to give a basal pressure of 85 mmHg. PO2, PCO2 and pH in the venous effluent perfusate stabilised at 157 +/- 10 mmHg, 50.1 +/- 2.4 mmHg and 7.1 +/- 0.03, respectively. The venous effluent contained immunoreactive BK and BK precursor, tissue kallikrein activity, and bradykinin-destroying enzyme. The concentration of BK stabilised at 378 +/- 48 pg (ml perfusate)(-1), that of trypsin-activated BK precursor was 679 +/- 59 pg BK equivalents ml(-1) and that of tissue kallikrein, measured as cleavage of D-Val.Leu.Arg-p-nitroanilide (D-Val.Leu.Arg-pNA), was 5.5 +/- 1.7 nmol p-NA h(-1) ml(-1). Arterial infusion of phenylephrine (0.49-490 microM) produced increases in perfusion pressure (vasoconstriction). Acetylcholine (ACh) (0.55-55 microM) and BK (0.1-10 microM) produced only vasodilatation. BK (EC50 = 1.00+/-0.04 microM) was a more potent vasodilator than ACh (EC50 = 9.57+/-0.49 microM). The basal BK concentration was 250 times below the threshold for vasoactivity. The udder produced a milk-like secretion, which was dependent on perfusate flow and contained a concentration of BK which remained unchanged from 60 to 180 min of perfusion (231 +/- 31 pg ml(-1)) unlike that in the venous effluent which doubled between 60 and 120 min. Thus, in addition to its secretion into milk, BK, together with its precursor and tissue kallikrein, is continuously released into the vasculature of the isolated, perfused, lactating bovine udder.

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