Abstract

Dimalonic acid C 60 (10 −5 M), a new fullerene derivative, produced an augmentation of phenylephrine-induced tone and reduced both the acetylcholine-induced maximum relaxation and the amplitude of substance P (10 −8 M)-induced relaxation in endothelium-containing thoracic aorta of rabbit; the acetylcholine- and substance P-induced relaxation was restored in the presence of superoxide dismutase (250 U/ml). Dimalonic acid C 60 (10 −5 M) did not influence the phenylephrine-induced contractile response in the absence of endothelium, but the acetylcholine-induced relaxation was eliminated by removal of the endothelium. Superoxide anion generation, using hypoxanthine (1 mM)/xanthine oxidase (16 mU/ml), reduced the acetylcholine-induced relaxation and produced an augmentation of phenylephrine-induced tone in endothelium-containing strips; these effects were negated by the addition of superoxide dismutase (250 U/ml). A nitric oxide-generating agent, S-nitroso- N-acetylpenicillamine, caused relaxation of aorta without endothelium in a concentration-dependent manner, and the concentration-response curve was shifted to the right in the presence of dimalonic acid C 60. This inhibitory effect of dimalonic acid C 60 was also masked in the presence of superoxide dismutase. Sodium nitroprusside-induced relaxation was not affected by either dimalonic acid C 60 or superoxide dismutase. These observations suggest that dimalonic acid C 60 inhibits endothelium (nitric oxide)-dependent agonist-induced relaxation through the production of superoxide.

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