Electrical field stimulation-mediated relaxation of rabbit middle cerebral artery. Evidence of a cholinergic endothelium-dependent component.
- 1 June 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation Research
- Vol. 70 (6) , 1104-1112
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.res.70.6.1104
Abstract
The effects of electrical field stimulation (EFS) of rabbit middle cerebral arteries were examined using wire-mounted arterial segments. EFS of segments maintained at rest tension caused a tetrodotoxin-sensitive sympathetic contraction. In agonist-contracted segments maintained at approximately 60% of tissue maximum force, EFS caused a relaxation in two thirds of the preparations. Maximum response (mean +/- SEM) was 33 +/- 3.5% of maximal relaxation. The EFS relaxation was tetrodotoxin-sensitive but was not blocked by either chronic surgical sympathectomy or exposure to guanethidine (5 microM). Electron microscopy of chromaffin-fixed arterial sections showed the presence of chromaffin-positive large and small vesicles. Within the same sheath of Schwann were also a smaller number of nerve profiles containing many small clear vesicles. Removal of the vascular endothelium or treatment with atropine (10 nM) eliminated the EFS relaxation in approximately 50% of the segments and reduced the response in another 35-40%; in the remainder, relaxation was unaffected. Combined data for endothelium removal and atropine treatment showed that each caused a significant (p less than 0.01) reduction in the EFS relaxation. Atropine also significantly reduced EFS relaxation in guanethidine-treated segments. There was no reduction in EFS relaxation after procedures that antagonized ATP- or substance P-mediated relaxations. These results indicate that EFS of precontracted rabbit middle cerebral artery causes a neurogenic nonadrenergic relaxation. The neuroeffector mechanism mediating this response has a predominantly cholinergic endothelium-dependent component as well as a noncholinergic endothelium-independent component.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide and Cerebral Blood Vessels: Distribution and Vasomotor EffectsJournal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 1987
- Endothelium-dependent increases in rat gastric mucosal hemodynamics induced by acetylcholine and vagal stimulationEuropean Journal of Pharmacology, 1987
- Evidence for the Presence of Cholinergic Nerves in Cerebral Arteries: An Immunohistochemical Demonstration of Choline AcetyltransferaseJournal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 1985
- Neuropeptide Y: Immunocytochemical localization to and effect upon feline pial arteries and veins in vitro and in situActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1984
- Substance P in the cerebral vasculature: depletion by capsaicin suggests a sensory roleBrain Research, 1982
- Cholinergic Cerebral Vasodilatation in the Rabbit: Absence of Concomitant Metabolic ActivationJournal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 1982
- MODULATION OF ENDOGENOUS NORADRENALINE RELEASE BY PREJUNCTIONAL α‐ADRENORECEPTORS: COMPARISON OF A CEREBRAL AND PERIPHERAL ARTERYJournal of Autonomic Pharmacology, 1982
- Atropine lowers blood pressure in normotensive rats through blockade of α-adrenergic receptorsLife Sciences, 1981
- Synaptic transmission of vasoconstrictor nerves in rabbit basilar arteryEuropean Journal of Pharmacology, 1980
- A direct method for recording tension changes in the wall of small blood vessels in vitroInflammation Research, 1972