Abstract

The present experiments were designed to determine whether or not endogenous nitric oxide (NO) modifies the contractile response to chicken motilin (ch-MT) in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract (proventriculus and small intestine) of the chicken. ch-MT (1 nmol L(-1)-1 micromol L(-1)) caused contractions of longitudinal muscle strips of the proventriculus through both myogenic and neurogenic (mostly cholinergic) mechanisms. On the other hand, ch-MT (0.1 nmol L(-1)-100 nmol L(-1)) contracted the small intestine (duodenum, jejunum and ileum) only through a myogenic mechanism. L-Nitroarginine methylester (L-NAME) potentiated, and L-arginine inhibited, the ch-MT- induced contraction without affecting the responsiveness of acetylcholine (ACh) or 5-hydroxytryptamine in the proventriculus. Electrical field stimulation (EFS)- and 1,1-dimethyl-4-phenylpiperazinium (DMPP)- induced contractions were also potentiated by L-NAME. The potentiation by L-NAME was prevented by L-arginine but not by D-arginine. However, in the presence of atropine or tetrodotoxin, neither L-NAME nor L-arginine modified the responses to ch-MT and DMPP. In contrast to the proventriculus, L-NAME and L-arginine were both ineffective in modifying the ch-MT-induced contraction in the small intestine. These results indicate that NO synthase inhibition potentiates the contractile response of ch-MT, EFS and DMPP in the chicken proventriculus through reduction of endogenous NO-mediated presynaptic inhibition on neural ACh release. However, NOS inhibition did not modify the myogenic (direct) action of ch-MT in gastric and intestinal smooth muscles of the chicken.

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