Abstract

1. We have shown that exogenously administered L-arginine protects against water immersion restraint (WIR) stress-induced gastric mucosal lesions in rats through preservation of nitric oxide (NO) generation via constitutive nitric oxide synthase (cNOS), but not inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), in the gastric mucosa. We have also indicated that impaired gastric mucus synthesis and secretion occur through a decrease in gastric cNOS activity in WIR-stressed rats. Therefore, in the presesnt study, we examined whether exogenously administered L-arginine exerts a protective effect against WIR stress-induced gastric mucosal lesions in rats through preservation of gastric mucus synthesis and secretion by NO generated from the administered amino acid via cNOS in the gastric mucosa. 2. Rats were subjected to WIR stress for 3 and 6 h. Either L-arginine (150-600 mg/kg) or D-arginine (600 mg/kg) was injected intraperitoneally 0.5 h prior to WIR stress. Either N(G)-monomethyl L-arginine (L-NMMA; 100 mg/kg) or N(G)-monomethyl D-arginine (D-NMMA; 100 mg/kg) was injected subcutaneously 0.5 h prior to WIR stress. Total NOS, cNOS, iNOS, nitrite and nitrate (breakdown products of NO), hexosamine (an index of gastric mucin) and adherent mucus were assayed in the gastric mucosa. 3. Pretreatment with L-arginine, but not D-arginine, protected against gastric mucosal lesions in rats subjected to WIR stress for 3 and 6 h in a dose-dependent manner. Pretreatment with L-arginine, but not D-arginine, attenuated decreases in hexosamine and adherent mucus concentrations and cNOS activity and increases in total NOS and iNOS activities and nitrite/nitrate concentration in the gastric mucosal tissue of rats subjected to WIR stress for 3 and 6 h in a dose-dependent manner. Both the protective effect of L-arginine against gastric mucosal lesions and the attenuating effect of the amino acid on the decreases in gastric mucosal hexosamine and adherent mucus concentrations and cNOS activity in rats subjected to WIR stress for 6 h were counteracted by cotreatment with L-NMMA, a nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, but not D-NMMA. 4. These results suggest that exogenously administered L-arginine exerts a protective effect against stress-induced gastric mucosal lesions in rats at least partly through preservation of gastric mucus synthesis and secretion by NO produced from the administered amino acid via cNOS in gastric mucosal tissue.

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