Abstract

Electrical field stimulation (60 V, 1 ms, single pulses or 20 s trains of 1–10 Hz) of the nerve terminals within the rat vas deferens produced biphasic contractions in preparations oriented to measure either longitudinal or circular muscle contractions. In confirmation of earlier reports, these contractions were blocked by tetrodotoxin 1 μM. The initial fast purinergic contraction was dominant in prostatic halves of the vas deferens while the second slower noradrenergic contraction was greater in epididymal halves. Although previous studies have shown nitric oxide synthase immuno-positive nerves in the vas deferens, electrical field stimulation-induced contractions were unaffected by l-arginine, sodium nitroprusside, N-nitro- l-arginine methyl ester ( l-NAME) or superoxide dismutase in concentrations up to 1 mM. In concentrations above 1 mM, l-NAME reduced the size of the field stimulation-induced contractions but this effect could not be reversed by either l-arginine or sodium nitroprusside. Furthermore, l-arginine, sodium nitroprusside and l-NAME did not affect the contractions induced by exogenous application of noradrenaline (10 μM), ATP (1 mM) or BaCl 2 (1–10 mM). We conclude that nitric oxide does not act as a neuromodulator in isolated preparations of rat vas deferens.

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