Abstract

Rats exposed to chronic hypoxia (CH; 4 wk at 0.5 atm) exhibit attenuated renal vasoconstrictor reactivity to phenylephrine (PE). Preliminary studies from our laboratory suggest that this response is mediated by hypoxic induction of heme oxygenase (HO) and subsequent release of the endogenous vasodilator carbon monoxide. Because vascular HO mRNA is increased within hours of hypoxic exposure, we hypothesized that the onset of reduced reactivity may occur fairly rapidly and correlate with HO expression. Therefore, we examined the onset of attenuated vasoconstriction on CH exposure as well as the duration of hyporeactivity on return to a normoxic environment. Renal vascular resistance (RVR) responses to graded intravenous infusion of PE were measured in conscious rats under control conditions and after 24 h, 48 h, and 4 wk of CH exposure. Vasoreactivity responses were also determined in 4-wk CH rats 1, 5, 24, and 96 h after return to normoxia. We found that RVR responses to PE were significantly blunted after 48 h and 4 wk but not after 24 h of hypoxic exposure. Inhibition of HO with zinc protoporphyrin IX increased RVR and decreased renal blood flow in 48-h CH rats but not controls. Although reactivity to PE was gradually restored after 4 wk of CH, responsiveness was still slightly blunted at 96 h after return to normoxia. Western blot analysis demonstrated a correlation between HO-1 protein levels and attenuated vasoconstrictor response in CH and posthypoxic rats. These data suggest that the onset and offset of physiologically relevant vascular HO expression occur within 2--3 days.

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