Abstract

1. In this investigation we studied the effects of nitric oxide on contractility and heart rate in normal saline-perfused rat hearts where shear stress-induced endothelial NO synthesis substantially contributes to total cardiac NO production. In addition, we sought to estimate the concentrations of exogenous NO producing inotropic effects. 2. We investigated the effects of glyceryl trinitrate (GTN), S-nitroso-d,l-penicillamine (SNAP), sodium (Z)-1-(N, N-diethylamino)diazen-1-ium-1,2-diolat (DEA/NO), and DEA/NO in the presence of the NO synthase inhibitor Nomega-nitro-L-arginine (L-NA) in constant-flow-perfused spontaneously beating rat Langendorff hearts and in rat working hearts. 3. In Langendorff hearts, GTN (10 nM to 100 microM, n = 32) induced a positive inotropic response that plateaued at 1 microM GTN with a maximal rate of increase of left ventricular pressure during ventricular contraction (+dP/dtmax) of 6. 33 +/- 2.56 % (n = 11, P < 0.5). Similarly, both spontaneous NO donors (0.1 nM to 1 microM, corresponding to approximately 0.03-0.3 microM NO) induced a positive inotropic response of 10.6 +/- 3.1 % (SNAP; n = 15, P < 0.05) and 11.5 +/- 2.7 % (DEA/NO, n = 15, P < 0. 05). 4. The positive inotropic effect of SNAP and DEA/NO progressively declined from 1 microM to 100 microM of the NO donors (corresponding to approximately 0.3-30 microM NO). 5. In the isolated working rat heart, 0.1 microM DEA/NO induced an increase of +dP/dtmax of 7.5 +/- 2.5 % (n = 9, P < 0.05). Inhibition of NO synthase by L-NA produced a 4-fold increase in this effect of DEA/NO. 6. We suggest that physiological NO concentrations support myocardial performance. In normal rat hearts the positive inotropic effect of NO appears to be almost maximally exploited by the endogenous NO production.

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