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Central role of intracellular calcium stores in acute flow‐ and agonist‐evoked endothelial nitric oxide release
Author(s) -
Hutcheson Iain R.,
Griffith Tudor M.
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
british journal of pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.432
H-Index - 211
eISSN - 1476-5381
pISSN - 0007-1188
DOI - 10.1038/sj.bjp.0701340
Subject(s) - ryanodine receptor , cyclopiazonic acid , thapsigargin , nitric oxide , endoplasmic reticulum , chemistry , nitric oxide synthase , calcium , calcium in biology , voltage dependent calcium channel , superoxide dismutase , endocrinology , medicine , biophysics , intracellular , biochemistry , biology , oxidative stress , organic chemistry
1 We have used a cascade bioassay system and isolated arterial ring preparations to investigate the contribution of Ca 2+ release from endothelial intracellular stores to nitric oxide (NO) production evoked by increases in shear stress and by acetylcholine in rabbit aorta. 2 Experiments were performed before and following incubation with either the endoplasmic reticulum Ca 2+ ‐ATPase inhibitors cyclopiazonic acid (CPA, 10 μ M ) and thapsigargin (TSG, 1 μ M ) or ryanodine (30, 100 μ M ) which binds to a specific endoplasmic reticulum Ca 2+ ‐release channel. 3 In cascade bioassay all three agents induced relaxations of the recipient ring (CPA, 24.4±3.8%; TSG, 51.5±10.6%; ryanodine, 17.4±1.6%) which were significantly attenuated by preincubation of the donor with 100 μ M N G ‐nitro‐ L ‐arginine methyl ester ( L ‐NAME). However, in isolated rings, only CPA and TSG induced L ‐NAME‐sensitive relaxations (CPA 52.7±6.5%; TSG 61.3±7%). 4 Addition of superoxide dismutase (SOD) to the donor perfusate evoked relaxations of the recipient ring in cascade bioassay (13.3±1.4%, n =22). Prior administration of SOD attenuated relaxations to TSG (23.2±3.8%, n =4) and ryanodine (1.7±0.8%, n =4), and pre‐incubation with TSG and ryanodine blunted SOD‐induced responses (4±1.5%, n =4 and 8.9±1.1%, n =4, respectively). By contrast, no interaction was observed between the relaxations evoked by SOD and CPA. In isolated rings, SOD exerted no direct relaxant action and did not modulate relaxations to CPA, TSG or ryanodine. 5 In cascade bioassay studies time‐averaged shear stress was manipulated with dextran (1–4% w/v, 80000 MW) to increase perfusate viscosity. NO‐dependent relaxation of the recipient ring induced by increased perfusate viscosity was significantly attenuated by CPA ( P <0.01; n =6) and TSG ( P <0.05; n =7), but not by ryanodine ( n =6). 6 Endothelium‐dependent relaxations to acetylcholine (0.1–30 μ M ) in cascade bioassay and in isolated aortic ring preparations were markedly attenuated by pretreatment with CPA and TSG, but were unaffected by ryanodine. Ryanodine and CPA caused only a small attenuation of endothelium‐independent relaxations to sodium nitroprusside (0.001–10 μ M ), whereas TSG had no effect. 7 We conclude that release of Ca 2+ from CPA‐ and TSG‐sensitive endothelial stores is necessary for NO release evoked by acute flow changes and agonists in rabbit abdominal aorta. Ca 2+ ‐induced Ca 2+ release via the ryanodine‐sensitive release channel plays no direct role in these responses. Free radical interactions may complicate the interpretation of findings in cascade bioassay compared with isolated ring preparations.British Journal of Pharmacology (1997) 122 , 117–125; doi: 10.1038/sj.bjp.0701340