AI Article Synopsis

  • Previous research on rat aorta indicated that L-NMMA and ADMA enhance vasoconstriction while having minimal effect on acetylcholine-induced relaxation when tone is matched to controls.
  • The study aimed to see if the effectiveness of L-NMMA or ADMA in inhibiting nitric oxide-mediated relaxation depended on the strength of different relaxant stimuli, like acetylcholine, butyrylcholine, and CGRP-1.
  • Results showed that while acetylcholine's relaxant effect was largely resistant to L-NMMA or ADMA, these inhibitors significantly suppressed relaxation induced by butyrylcholine and CGRP-1, confirming that their blocking ability is influenced by the efficacy of the agonist used.

Article Abstract

Previous work on rat aorta has shown that L-NMMA and ADMA each enhance vasoconstrictor-induced tone, consistent with blockade of basal nitric oxide activity, whereas they exert little inhibitory effect on acetylcholine-induced relaxation when tone is matched carefully to that of control tissues. The aim of this study was to determine if the ability of L-NMMA or ADMA to inhibit nitric oxide-mediated relaxation was critically determined by the efficacy of the relaxant stimulus. The effects of L-NMMA or ADMA were examined on relaxation to a range of agonists producing different maximal responses, namely, acetylcholine, the muscarinic partial agonist, butyrylcholine, and calcitonin gene-related peptide-1 (CGRP-1). The effects of L-NMMA or ADMA were also examined on relaxation to acetylcholine when its apparent efficacy at the M3 muscarinic receptor was reduced using the irreversible receptor blocking agent, phenoxybenzamine. Maximal relaxation induced by butyrylcholine or CGRP-1 was lower than to acetylcholine. While acetylcholine-induced relaxation was largely resistant to blockade by L-NMMA or ADMA (0.1 or 1mM), relaxation to butyrylcholine or CGRP-1 was powerfully suppressed. Phenoxybenzamine (0.1-10μM for 30min) concentration-dependently reduced maximal acetylcholine-induced relaxation. When the efficacy of acetylcholine was reduced by phenoxybenzamine, its residual relaxant effect was powerfully inhibited by L-NMMA or ADMA (0.1 or 1mM). Thus, in rat aorta, the ability of L-NMMA or ADMA to block agonist-induced nitric oxide activity is critically determined by the efficacy of the relaxant stimulus.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejphar.2014.08.002DOI Listing

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