Abstract
1. The objective of this study in the hamster cheek pouch was to investigate the role of nitric oxide in bradykinin-induced microvascular leakage. The cheek pouch microcirculatory bed of the anaesthetized hamster was directly observed under microscope and vascular leakage was evidenced by dextranfluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC-dextran) extravasation. 2. Bradykinin superfusion (but not [des-Arg9]-bradykinin up to 3 x 10(-6) M) induced an increase in microvascular permeability (log EC50: -6.5 +/- 0.4) which was exclusively located on the post-capillary venule. Plasma extravasation was blocked by intravenous pretreatment with Hoe 140, a bradykinin B2 receptor antagonist (estimated log ID50: -9.5 +/- 0.2). 3. The effects of bradykinin (3 x 10(-7) M) superfusion were partially but significantly inhibited by indomethacin (10(-5) M, P < 0.05) and abolished by pretreatment with L-nitro-arginine (L-NOARG; 10(-5) M). 4. Acetylcholine (10(-6) M, which releases endothelial nitric oxide (NO), and sodium nitroprusside (10(-6) M, a nitrovasodilator) superfusion did not induce any changes in permeability, per se. Cromakalim (10(-5) M, a potassium channel opener) superfusion induced a moderate but significant plasma extravasation. 5. The effects of bradykinin, blocked by L-NOARG pretreatment, were restored by the co-perfusion of either sodium nitroprusside or cromakalim. Conversely vasoconstriction, produced by a stable analogue of thromboxane A2 (U46619, 3 x 10(-7) M), inhibited the increase in permeability produced by bradykinin. 6. The measurement of arteriolar diameter showed that bradykinin induced a vasodilatation which was blocked by L-NOARG. L-NOARG in itself was a powerful vasoconstrictor. Sodium nitroprusside and cromakalim, in the presence of L-NOARG, were able to restore the inhibited vasodilator response to bradykinin. 7. These results suggest: (1) bradykinin-induced microvascular leakage is mediated by bradykinin B2 receptor activation; (2) the increase in permeability is due to two different independent phenomena, i.e. post-capillary venular endothelial gap formation and arteriolar vasodilatation which increases the post-capillary venular transmural pressure: (3) NO is only involved in the arteriolar dilatation component of the bradykinin-induced increase in microvascular permeability.
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