Abstract

This study examines the effect of various plasma proteins from man on the spontaneous contractile activity of the rat portal vein. Albumin, gamma-globulin, alpha-globulin, beta-globulin (the major plasma proteins), and immunoglobulin IgG (the major immunoglobulin present in the gamma-globulin fraction) were obtained commercially. Mesenteric portal vein strips were prepared from rats and placed in a physiological salt solution in muscle baths for the measurement of longitudinal mechanical response. Portal veins exposed to albumin or gamma-globulin showed a dose-dependent increase in the spontaneous activity, whereas those exposed to alpha-globulin or alpha- and beta-globulin together showed a dose-dependent inhibition of spontaneous activity. Immunoglobulin IgG produced a dose-dependent increase in the spontaneous activity similar to that of gamma-globulin. The increased spontaneous activity produced by albumin was not prevented by ouabain but was inhibited by phentolamine. Spontaneous contractile activity was stimulated by albumin in the chemically (6-hydroxydopamine) denervated portal vein. These findings indicate that albumin acts in a manner similar to noradrenaline. The increased spontaneous activity caused by gamma-globulin (IgG) was inhibited by ouabain or verapamil. The effect of IgG was not dependent on alpha-adrenergic, cholinergic, histaminergic, serotoninergic, or renin angiotensin systems nor was it affected by removal of the endothelium. These observations may have implications in the pathophysiology of essential hypertension.

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