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Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2N 4N1
This study set out to examine the
vasomotor effects of the opioid-like peptide nociceptin on knee joint
capsular blood flow in urethane-anaesthetized rats. Topical application
of nociceptin (10
15-10
8 mol) caused a
progressive fall in joint perfusion that was significantly inhibited by
the specific nociceptin receptor antagonist
[Phe1-(CH2-NH)-Gly2]
Nociceptin(1-13)-NH2 as well as the
nonspecific opioid antagonist naloxone. To test whether this
constrictor response was sympathetically mediated, we administered
nociceptin in animals treated with guanethidine to produce sympathetic
blockade or in the presence of the
-adrenoceptor antagonist
phentolamine. Both guanethidine treatment and phentolamine coadministration attenuated the constrictor response to nociceptin. Inhibition of nociceptin-mediated vasoconstriction revealed a supplementary hyperemic response that persisted in animals whose knee
joints were treated with 1% capsaicin to destroy the articular unmyelinated nerve supply. These results show that, in the rat knee,
peripheral administration of nociceptin primarily causes a
sympathetically mediated vasoconstriction. In addition, high-dose nociceptin produces a vasodilatatory response that is likely due to the
direct action of nociceptin on vascular smooth muscle and not by a
neurogenic mechanism.
neuropeptides; neurogenic inflammation; orphanin FQ; sympathetic nervous system
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