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Mechanisms of vasodilation in the dorsal aorta of the elephant fish, Callorhinchus milii (Chimaeriformes: Holocephali)

journal contribution
posted on 2007-07-01, 00:00 authored by Brett Jennings, Justin Bell, S Hyodo, Marie-Therese Toop, John DonaldJohn Donald
This study investigated vasodilator mechanisms in the dorsal aorta of the elephant fish, Callorhinchus milii, using anatomical and physiological approaches. Nitric oxide synthase could only be located in the perivascular nerve fibres and not the endothelium of the dorsal aorta, using NADPH histochemistry and immunohistochemistry. In vitro organ bath experiments demonstrated that a NO/soluble guanylyl cyclase (GC) system appeared to be absent in the vascular smooth muscle, since the NO donors SNP (10−4 mol l−1) and SIN-1 (10−5 mol l−1) were without effect. Nicotine (3 × 10−4 mol l−1) mediated a vasodilation that was not affected by ODQ (10−5 mol l−1), l-NNA (10−4 mol l−1), indomethacin (10−5 mol l−1), or removal of the endothelium. In contrast, the voltage-gated sodium channel inhibitor, tetrodotoxin (10−5 mol l−1), significantly decreased the dilation induced by nicotine, suggesting that it contained a neural component. Pre-incubation of the dorsal aorta with the calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) receptor antagonist, CGRP8–37 (10−6 mol l  1) also caused a significant decrease in the nicotine-induced dilation. We propose that nicotine is mediating a neurally-derived vasodilation in the dorsal aorta that is independent of NO, prostaglandins and the endothelium, and partly mediated by CGRP.

History

Journal

Journal of comparative physiology B

Volume

177

Pagination

557 - 567

Location

Heidelberg, Germany

ISSN

0174-1578

eISSN

1432-136X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2007, Springer