Literature DB >> 12434131

Nitric oxide synthase inhibitors affect nitric oxide synthesis in normoxic but not in ischemic organs during intestinal ischemia and early reperfusion.

Andrey V Kozlov1, Babak Sobhian, Johanna C Duvigneau, Guiseppina Costantino, Manfred Gemeiner, Hans Nohl, Heinz Redl, Soheyl Bahrami.   

Abstract

Inhibition of endogenous nitric oxide (NO) synthesis during early intestinal ischemia/reperfusion (I/R(i)) enhances remote organ damage related to I/R(i). However, the effects of NO synthase (NOS) inhibitors on NO formation in various organs have not yet been specified. We therefore investigated the effects of N-G-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA), a nonspecific NOS inhibitor, and L-arginine, the NOS substrate, on NO formed in ischemic intestine versus normoxic remote organs (lung and liver). We used electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy and a specific NO trap to assay NO in blood, intestine, lung, and liver of rats subjected to local I/R(i), with and without L-NMMA and L-arginine supplementation. We found that I/R(i) increased NO levels in the intestine and blood, but not in the remote organs lung and liver. Administration of L-NMMA before I/R(i) decreased I/R(i)-independent basal NO levels in normoxic lung and liver without influencing I/R(i)-induced increase in NO levels in intestinal tissue or in blood. L-arginine supplementation increased circulating levels of NO, with sensitivity to L-NMMA, without affecting NO levels in normoxic or ischemic tissue. Our data suggest that NOS activity controls the NO generated in normally perfused remote organs during early I/R(i). Hence NOS inhibitors, when administered during I/R(i), decrease physiological NO levels in normoxic remote organs without affecting increased NO levels originating from ischemic intestine. This may explain the harmful effect of nonspecific NOS inhibitors during early I/R(i). In addition, the generation of NO in remote organs is not limited by tissue L-arginine concentrations and, therefore, not influenced by exogenous L-arginine. The protective effect of L-arginine supplementation during I/R(i) is probably related to increasing intravascular NO formation.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12434131     DOI: 10.1067/mlc.2002.128180

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Lab Clin Med        ISSN: 0022-2143


  2 in total

1.  L-arginine administration ameliorates serum and pulmonary cytokine response after gut ischemia-reperfusion in immature rats.

Authors:  Ting-Liang Fu; Wen-Tong Zhang; Lan Zhang; Feng Wang; Yong Gao; Ming Xu
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2005-02-21       Impact factor: 5.742

2.  Early iNOS impairment and late eNOS enhancement during reperfusion following 2.49 MHz continuous ultrasound exposure after ischemia.

Authors:  C Makena Hightower; Marcos Intaglietta
Journal:  Ultrason Sonochem       Date:  2008-05-24       Impact factor: 7.491

  2 in total

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