Literature DB >> 7689396

Impairment of pulmonary-artery endothelium-dependent relaxation in chronic obstructive lung disease is not due to dysfunction of endothelial cell membrane receptors nor to L-arginine deficiency.

A T Dinh-Xuan1, J Pepke-Zaba, A Y Butt, G Cremona, T W Higenbottam.   

Abstract

1. Endothelium-dependent relaxation mediated by endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF) or nitric oxide (NO), is impaired in pulmonary arteries (PA) of hypoxic patients with chronic obstructive lung disease (COLD). To determine the mechanisms responsible for this impairment, we compared the response of rings of isolated PA from 12 COLD patients and 8 controls to the endothelium-dependent vasodilators acetylcholine (ACh), adenosine diphosphate (ADP), and the calcium ionophore, A23187. The response of PA rings to the endothelium-independent nitro-vasodilator sodium nitroprusside (SNP) was also studied in both groups. The PA rings had been pre-contracted by the alpha-adrenoceptor agonist phenylephrine (PE). 2. Endothelium-dependent relaxation was significantly reduced in PA rings from COLD patients as compared with controls when tested with ACh (37.8 +/- 8.8% vs 73.4 +/- 7.9%), ADP (38.4 +/- 6.7% vs 80 +/- 5.6%), and the calcium ionophore, A23187 (35.8 +/- 6.1% vs 87 +/- 6.6%). Relaxation with SNP was, however, significantly greater in PA rings from COLD patients (99.4 +/- 0.6% vs 90.3 +/- 3.1%), as was the contractile response to PE (1.91 +/- 0.21 g vs 1.33 +/- 0.15 g). Pretreatment with the specific inhibitor of NO formation, NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA; 10(-4) M) significantly reduced the relaxation to ACh in all PA rings. This inhibition could be reversed by L-arginine (10(-3) M), the substrate for NO synthesis. Pretreatment with L-arginine alone, however, did not restore the impaired endothelium-dependent relaxation of PA rings from COLD patients. 3. We conclude that EDRF (NO) production is impaired in PA rings from COLD patients and that this impairment is neither due to endothelial receptors dysfunction nor a defect of L-arginine availability and/or transport. Our hypothesis is that the abnormality must lie within the biosynthesis pathway of NO from L-arginine, possibly involving the endothelial enzyme cell, NO synthase, the normal function of which might be altered by chronic hypoxia.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 7689396      PMCID: PMC2175681          DOI: 10.1111/j.1476-5381.1993.tb13611.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Pharmacol        ISSN: 0007-1188            Impact factor:   8.739


  21 in total

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