Abstract

The aim of the present study was to investigate the gender differences in the acute effects of 17beta-estradiol on the rat superior mesenteric artery. Isometric tension was measured in rings of mesenteric arteries from both male and female Sprague-Dawley rats. Relaxation to acetylcholine was not significantly different between arteries (with endothelium) from male and female rats in the absence or presence of 17beta-estradiol. After blockade of endothelium-dependent hyperpolarizations with apamin (0.3 microM) plus charybdotoxin (0.1 microM), acute exposure to 17beta-estradiol (1 nM) for 30 min resulted in enhancement of relaxation to acetylcholine in arteries from male but not female rats. After acute exposure to 17beta-estradiol, mesenteric arteries from male rats were more sensitive to sodium nitroprusside than arteries from female rats. Contractions of mesenteric arteries to phenylephrine and 9,11-dideoxy-11alpha,9alpha-epoxymethanoprostaglandin F(2alpha) (U46619) were greater in arteries from male rats than female rats. This difference was not detected after acute exposure to 17beta-estradiol. In preparations without endothelium, the enhancement of relaxation and reduction in contraction in arteries from male rats were preserved. These results suggest that there exists a gender difference in the response to the acute nongenomic modulatory effect of 17beta-estradiol in rat mesenteric arteries. Arteries from male rats seem to be more sensitive to the modulatory effects of 17beta-estradiol than arteries from female rats. The effect appears to be mainly at the level of the vascular smooth muscles.

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