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Endogenous nitric oxide attenuates beta-adrenoceptor-mediated relaxation in rat aorta

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 04:27 authored by Khong Kang, A Van Der Zypp, Henryk Majewski
1. Divergent evidence suggests that the intracellular signalling pathways for beta-adrenoceptor-mediated vascular relaxation involves either cAMP/protein kinase (PK) A or endothelial nitric oxide (NO) release and subsequent activation of cGMP/PKG. The present study identifies the relative roles of NO and cAMP, as well as dependence on the endothelium for beta-adrenoceptor-mediated relaxation of rat isolated aortas. 2. Cumulative concentration-response curves to isoprenaline (0.01-3 mu mol/L) in phenylephrine (0.1 mu mol/L)-preconstricted endothelium-intact and -denuded aortas were constructed. Isoprenaline-mediated relaxation was partially reduced by endothelium removal and the presence of the NO synthase inhibitor N-G-monomethyl-L-arginine (0.1 mmol/L), but not by the cAMP antagonist (Rp)-cyclic adenosine-3',5'-monophosphorothioate (Rp-cAMPS; 0.5 mmol/L). 3. In contrast, in endothelium-denuded aortas, the isoprenaline-mediated relaxation was inhibited by Rp-cAMPS and this inhibition was lost in the presence of the NO donor sodium nitroprusside (1 nmol/L).

History

Journal

Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology

Volume

34

Issue

1-2

Start page

95

End page

101

Total pages

7

Publisher

Blackwell Publishing

Place published

Oxford

Language

English

Copyright

© 2007 Blackwell Publishing Asia Pty Ltd

Former Identifier

2006005770

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2011-01-07

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