Abstract

1. This study involved the chronic administration of low or high insulin to rats with established streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetes. We studied the effect of such treatment on smooth muscle contractility and endothelium-dependent relaxation using aortic strips. 2. Aortae from diabetic rats, but not those from high-insulin-treated diabetic rats, showed an impaired endothelium-dependent in response to acetylcholine (ACh) by comparison with untreated controls. 3. Isotonic high K+-induced contractility was impaired in diabetic aortae. This impairment was prevented by high-insulin treatment. 4. Noradrenaline (NA)-induced contractility was enhanced in aortae from high-insulin-treated diabetic rats, but not in those from untreated diabetic or low-insulin treated diabetic rats. 5. In the combined presence of the nitric oxide inhibitor N(G)-nitro-L-arginine and the cyclo-oxygenase inhibitor indomethacin, NA-induced contractility was significantly greater in aortae from high-insulin-treated diabetic rats than in those from controls or untreated diabetic rats. 6. An increased expression of the mRNA for the alpha1D and alpha1B adrenergic receptors was found in aortae from high-insulin-treated diabetic rats. 7. These results demonstrate that in rats with established STZ-induced diabetes, high-insulin treatment prevents the development of an impaired endothelium-dependent relaxation in the aorta, and that such treatment enhances NA-induced contractility. This enhancement may be related to an upregulation in the expression of the mRNA for the alpha1B or alpha1D adrenergic receptor that is secondary to the hyperinsulinaemia.

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