Literature DB >> 16514005

Selective cerebral vascular dysfunction in Mn-SOD-deficient mice.

F M Faraci1, M L Modrick, C M Lynch, L A Didion, P E Fegan, S P Didion.   

Abstract

We tested the hypothesis that the mitochondrial form of superoxide dismutase [manganese superoxide dismutase (Mn-SOD)] protects the cerebral vasculature. Basilar arteries (baseline diameter approximately 140 microm) from mice were isolated, cannulated, and pressurized to measure vessel diameter. In arteries from C57BL/6 mice preconstricted with U-46619, acetylcholine (ACh; an endothelium-dependent vasodilator) produced dilation that was similar in male and female mice and abolished by an inhibitor of nitric oxide synthase. Vasodilation to ACh was not altered in heterozygous male or female Mn-SOD-deficient (Mn-SOD+/-) mice compared with wild-type littermate controls (Mn-SOD+/+). Constriction of the basilar artery to arginine vasopressin, but not KCl or U-46619, was increased in Mn-SOD+/- mice (P<0.05), and this effect was prevented by tempol, a scavenger of superoxide. We also examined responses of cerebral (pial) arterioles (branches of the middle cerebral artery, control diameter approximately 30 microm) to ACh in anesthetized mice using a cranial window. Responses to ACh, but not nitroprusside (an endothelium-independent agonist), were reduced (P<0.05) in cerebral arterioles in Mn-SOD+/- mice, and this effect was prevented by tempol. Thus these are the first data on the role of Mn-SOD in cerebral circulation. In the basilar artery, ACh produced nitric oxide-mediated dilation that was similar in male and female mice. Under normal conditions in cerebral arteries, responses to ACh were not altered but constrictor responses were selectively enhanced in Mn-SOD+/- mice. In the cerebral microcirculation, there was superoxide-mediated impairment of responses to ACh.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16514005     DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00939.2005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)        ISSN: 0161-7567


  23 in total

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