Ethanol induces vascular relaxation via redox-sensitive and nitric oxide-dependent pathways.

Vascul Pharmacol

Department of Psychiatric Nursing and Human Sciences, Laboratory of Pharmacology, College of Nursing of Ribeirão Preto, University of São Paulo, Ribeirão Preto, SP, Brazil.

Published: August 2012

We investigated the role of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and nitric oxide (NO) in ethanol-induced relaxation. Vascular reactivity experiments showed that ethanol (0.03-200 mmol/L) induced relaxation in endothelium-intact and denuded rat aortic rings isolated from male Wistar rats. Pre-incubation of intact or denuded rings with l-NAME (non selective NOS inhibitor, 100 μmol/L), 7-nitroindazole (selective nNOS inhibitor, 100 μmol/L), ODQ (selective inhibitor of guanylyl cyclase enzyme, 1 μmol/L), glibenclamide (selective blocker of ATP-sensitive K(+) channels, 3 μmol/L) and 4-aminopyridine (selective blocker of voltage-dependent K(+) channels, 4-AP, 1 mmol/L) reduced ethanol-induced relaxation. Similarly, tiron (superoxide anion (O(2)(-)) scavenger, 1 mmol/L) and catalase (hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) scavenger, 300 U/mL) reduced ethanol-induced relaxation to a similar extent in both endothelium-intact and denuded rings. Finally, prodifen (non-selective cytochrome P450 enzymes inhibitor, 10 μmol/L) and 4-methylpyrazole (selective alcohol dehydrogenase inhibitor, 10 μmol/L) reduced ethanol-induced relaxation. In cultured aortic vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs), ethanol stimulated generation of NO, which was significantly inhibited by l-NAME. In endothelial cells, flow cytometry studies showed that ethanol increased cytosolic Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)]c), O(2)(-) and cytosolic NO concentration ([NO]c). Tiron inhibited ethanol-induced increase in [Ca(2+)]c and [NO]c. The major new finding of this work is that ethanol induces relaxation via redox-sensitive and NO-cGMP-dependent pathways through direct effects on ROS production and NO signaling. These findings identify putative molecular mechanisms whereby ethanol, at pharmacological concentrations, influences vascular reactivity.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vph.2011.11.006DOI Listing

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