Coronary flow regulation in mouse heart during hypercapnic acidosis: Role of NO and its compensation during eNOS impairment
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Contributors
Abstract
Aims: This study addressed the hypotheses that the hypercapnic flow response in wild-type (WT) mouse heart is mainly mediated by nitric oxide (NO) and, thus, severely blunted in endothelial nitric oxide synthase knockout (eNOS-KO) mice and in WT mice after continuous pharmacological block (2 weeks) of NOS enzymes (WT-LN). Methods and results: Step changes of arterial pCO 2 were performed in isolated perfused hearts (n = 105). Contributions of NOS (L-NAME, TRIM), cyclooxygenase (indomethacin), epoxyeicosanotrienes (miconazole), adenosine A2A-receptors (SCH 58261), K V-channels (4-AP), KCa-channels (TEA), and K ATP-channels (glibenclamide) were studied in WT and eNOS-KO mouse hearts. Change of arterial pCO2 increased coronary flow by 31.3 ± 4% in WT, a response that was significantly decreased to 9.2 ± 6% after L-NAME. Additional glibenclamide infusion (n = 5) completely abolished the steady-state flow increase during hypercapnic acidosis (-4.2 ± 2.3%, P = 0.004 vs. control). Hearts from eNOS-KO mice as well as WT-LN showed a fully preserved flow response insensitive towards NOS-blockade. Whereas indomethacin, miconazole, TEA, and SCH 58261 were ineffective to reduce the flow response, glibenclamide blunted it in eNOS-KO hearts. Conclusion: NO-production and K ATP-channel activation together may fully account for the steady-state hypercapnic flow response in mouse heart. However, chronic deletion of eNOS does not result in a reduced hypercapnic flow response. Enhanced activation of KATP-channels and potentially Kv-channels contributes to the compensatory mechanisms involved in the hypercapnic flow response when eNOS activity is absent.
Details
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 188-196 |
Number of pages | 9 |
Journal | Cardiovascular research |
Volume | 77 |
Issue number | 1 |
Publication status | Published - Jan 2008 |
Peer-reviewed | Yes |
External IDs
PubMed | 18006478 |
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Keywords
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Keywords
- Acidosis, Coronary circulation, Hypercapnia, Nitric oxide, Potassium channels