Abstract

Carbon monoxide (CO), an end product of heme oxygenase (HO) that is involved in the regulation of vascular tonus, may show a compensatory effect in nitric oxide (NO) deficiency. This study aimed to assess the effect of the HO/CO system on the vascular tone in exercise-trained rats with hypertension induced by chronic NO synthase (NOS) inhibition. Hypertension was induced by N-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester (25 mg/kg/day in drinking water), and exercise training comprised swimming 1 h/day, 5 days/week, for 6 weeks. Systolic blood pressure (BP) was measured weekly using a tail-cuff method. The effects of hypertension and/or exercise-training on the constriction and relaxation responses of the thoracic aorta and resistance arteries of the mesenteric and gastrocnemius vascular beds were evaluated. NOS inhibition produced a gradually developed hypertension, and the magnitude of the increase in BP was significantly attenuated by exercise training. Although phenylephrine (Phe)-induced contraction responses of aorta incubated with an HO-1 inhibitor were reduced in hypertensive animals, there was no difference in the hypertensive-exercise group. However, thoracic aortas in the hypertensive-exercise group exhibited significantly more relaxation in response to a CO donor. There was no change in Phe-induced contraction with or without HO inhibition CO donor relaxation responses in both resistance arteries. These results suggest that the HO/CO system does not contribute to diminishing BP by exercise training in a NOS inhibition-induced hypertension model.

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