Abstract
The pulmonary artery pressure (PAP) response to hypoxia is characterized by an initial vasoconstriction followed by vasodilation. Pulmonary vessels can release endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF), which is considered to be nitric oxide (NO), but the role of EDRF in the regulation of normal and hypoxic pulmonary vascular tone is still uncertain. We designed this study to address the in vivo role of EDRF in vasodilation during sustained hypoxia. We studied the effects of an EDRF-synthesis inhibitor, Nomega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), on the pulmonary vascular response to sustained hypoxia (10% O2, 20 min) in normoxic (N) and chronically hypoxic (CH) rats. Biphasic PAP response was observed in N rats, whereas PAP was unchanged in CH rats during sustained hypoxic exposure. The L-NAME-induced PAP increase during normoxia was greater in CH than in N rats, suggesting that basal EDRF plays an important role in attenuating the severity of pulmonary hypertension in CH rats. Administration of L-NAME increased the initial increment in PAP by acute hypoxia and shifted the PAP response upward throughout sustained hypoxia, while still showing the biphasic pattern, in N rats. In contrast, PAP increased acutely and remained elevated with little recovery in the late phase in CH rats. The inducible NO synthase messenger RNA (mRNA) expression and protein showed greater increases in the lungs of CH than in N rats. These results suggest that EDRF release during sustained hypoxia may partly contribute to the roll-off in PAP response during sustained hypoxia in N rats, and that augmented EDRF may prevent a further increase in PAP during chronic hypoxia.
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