|
|
||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
NEUROHUMORAL CONTROL OF CARDIOVASCULAR FUNCTION
1Department of Physiology, Universidade Federal de São Paulo-Escola Paulista de Medicina, São Paulo; and 2Department of Pathology and Physiology, Universidade Estadual de São Paulo, Araraquara, Brazil
Submitted 2 March 2005 ; accepted in final form 26 December 2005
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) in the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) of conscious rats causes hypertension, bradycardia, and vasoconstriction in the renal, mesenteric, and hindquarter vascular beds. In the hindquarter, the initial vasoconstriction is followed by vasodilation with AMPA doses >5 pmol/100 nl. To test the hypothesis that this vasodilation is caused by activation of a nitroxidergic pathway in the NTS, we examined the effect of pretreatment with the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME, 10 nmol/100 nl, microinjected into the NTS) on changes in mean arterial pressure, heart rate, and regional vascular conductance (VC) induced by microinjection of AMPA (10 pmol/100 nl in the NTS) in conscious rats. AMPA increased hindquarter VC by 18 ± 4%, but after pretreatment with L-NAME, AMPA reduced hindquarter VC by 16 ± 7% and 17 ± 9% (5 and 15 min after pretreatment, P < 0.05 compared with before pretreatment). Pretreatment with L-NAME reduced AMPA-induced bradycardia from 122 ± 40 to 92 ± 32 beats/min but did not alter the hypertension induced by AMPA (35 ± 5 mmHg before pretreatment, 43 ± 6 mmHg after pretreatment). Control injections with D-NAME did not affect resting values or the response to AMPA. The present study shows that stimulation of AMPA receptors in the NTS activates both vasodilatatory and vasoconstrictor mechanisms and that the vasodilatatory mechanism depends on production of nitric oxide in the NTS. nitric oxide synthase; regional vascular conductance; cardiovascular regulation
-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) receptors in the NTS (9). The vasodilation produced by microinjection of glutamate in the NTS can be reduced by systemic administration of prazosin and NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) (4). The origin and pathway involved in this neurogenic vasodilation is still unclear (4), but it was suggested that this vasodilation is caused by peripheral release of preformed nitrosyl factors during sympathetic stimulation (6, 7). Interactions between nitric oxide (NO) and glutamatergic transmission within the NTS on cardiovascular regulation have been shown by anatomic and physiological studies (24, 25, 27, 29, 34, 36, 41). All of the substrates necessary for NO production are present in the NTS. Activation of glutamatergic receptors in the NTS stimulates the production and release of NO and other nitrosyl substances with neurotransmitter/neuromodulator properties (11, 34). Microinjection of inhibitors of the enzyme for synthesis of NO, nitric oxide synthase (NOS), reduces the basal glutamate level (24). On the other hand, NO donors, L-arginine, and L-glutamate cause hypotension and bradycardia when microinjected into the NTS of anesthetized rats (32, 33, 42).
L-glutamate and NOS are colocalized in nerve terminals and neurons in the NTS (13, 1719, 23, 25), and NOS immunoreactivity is found in other neurons in the medulla oblongata that project to the NTS (2, 13, 37). Centrally released NO has been considered as a retrograde messenger that modulates long-term potentiation or depression (40). Long-term potentiation involves the activation of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) and AMPA receptors (12). Brain NO synthesis seems to be regulated by the influx of calcium through receptor-dependent channels, particularly glutamate receptors located in the postsynaptic membrane (3, 12, 15). NO diffuses from the nerve terminals and may act on adjacent cells (2, 13).
The neuromodulatory effect of NO in the central nervous system (CNS) has been widely investigated. We previously showed that iontophoresis of L-NAME on NTS neurons receiving vagal afferent inputs did not alter spontaneous discharge but significantly decreased the number of action potentials evoked by iontophoretic application of AMPA (8). In addition, iontophoresis of the NO donor PAPANONOate enhanced spontaneous discharge and the number of action potentials elicited by AMPA, suggesting that NO could be facilitating AMPA-mediated neuronal transmission within the NTS (8). Furthermore, the changes in renal sympathetic discharge during activation of baroreceptors and cardiopulmonary receptors involve activation of AMPA and NMDA receptors in the NTS (10, 38), and these responses are attenuated by microinjection of L-NAME in the NTS (10). Cardiovascular responses elicited by application of NO in the NTS are closely similar to those obtained after activation of vagal afferent inputs, and L-glutamate is the main neurotransmitter of vagal afferent fibers (23). The presence of NOS, including the protein nNOS (neuronal NOS) and its mRNA, in vagal afferent terminals (17, 22, 28) in the NTS and nodose ganglion cells suggests that NO can act on glutamatergic transmission. Therefore, we sought to investigate whether NO plays a neuromodulatory role in cardiovascular regulation through regional hemodynamic changes elicited by AMPA receptor stimulation within the NTS of nonanesthetized rats.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Surgical procedures. All surgical procedures, including implantation of guide cannulas, blood flow probes, and femoral arterial catheters, were performed as described previously by Dias et al. (9). Briefly, 5 days before the experiments, rats were anesthetized with ketamine (50 mg/kg ip; Holliday-Scott, Buenos Aires, Argentina) and placed in a stereotaxic frame (model 1940; David Kopf Instruments) with the incisor bar fixed at 3.5 mm. Guide cannulas aimed at the NTS were implanted bilaterally at the following stereotaxic coordinates: 14.5 mm caudal to bregma, 0.5 mm lateral to the midline, and 5.5 mm below the skull surface at the level of bregma. The guide cannula was fixed with methacrylate to the skull and to watch screws inserted in the skull. An occluder closed the cannula until the start of the experiments. The animals were allowed to recover fully from anesthesia and were kept in their home cages for 35 days. Forty-eight hours before the experiments were performed, rats were anesthetized with a mixture of halothane (2%) in oxygen (100%), and a cannula (PE-10 connected to PE-50; Clay Adams, Parsippany, NJ) was implanted in the femoral artery for measurement of pulsatile arterial blood pressure (PAP), mean arterial pressure (MAP), and heart rate (HR). After catheterization, a midline laparotomy was performed, and miniature pulsed Doppler flow probes (Iowa Doppler Products, Iowa City, IA) were placed around the lower abdominal aorta (1.3 mm of lumen), superior mesenteric artery (1.0 mm of lumen), and left renal artery (0.8 mm of lumen) for measurement of hindquarter, mesenteric, and renal blood flow, respectively. The probes were sutured in place, the leads and the catheter were tunneled subcutaneously and exteriorized between the scapulae, and the wounds were closed. To protect the probe wires and the polyethylene tubing while allowing the animal unrestricted movement, we passed the free ends of the catheters and the Doppler leads through a stainless steel skin button connected to a spring and swivel assembly. The assembly was mounted to a ring stand clamp and suspended above the cage. The skin button was attached to the skin incision in the scapular region with stainless steel sutures. To avoid contamination and minimize postoperative pain, we performed all procedures with sterile tools and solutions. Animals that seemed to show distress or pain after surgeries were euthanized.
Drug administration. The arterial catheter was connected to a Statham P23Db transducer and to a ETH-200 Bridge amplifier (CB Sciences). Flow probe leads were connected to a Doppler flowmeter (Department of Bioengineering, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA). PAP (mmHg), MAP (mmHg), HR (beats/min), and hindquarter, renal, and mesenteric regional blood flows (kHz) were recorded in conscious animals after recovery from instrumentation (48 h). Signals were obtained using a digital data acquisition system (PowerLab with Chart version 3.4s; AD Instruments) and monitored on a Macintosh computer (G3; Apple). Drug microinjections into the NTS were made with a needle (33-gauge) that protruded 1.5 mm beyond the tip of the guide cannula. The needle was connected with PE-10 tubing to a 1-µl syringe (Hamilton, Reno, NV). Microinjections of AMPA hydrobromide (AMPA HBr, a glutamatergic ionotropic agonist; RBI) and NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME, an NOS inhibitor; Sigma) or NG-nitro-D-arginine methyl ester (D-NAME, the inactive enantiomer of L-NAME; Sigma) were made unilaterally after baseline hemodynamic values were established.
Protocols. Hemodynamic effects produced by AMPA injections in the NTS (10 pmol/100 nl) were determined before (control) and 5, 15, and between 30 and 45 min after microinjection of L-NAME or D-NAME (10 nmol/100 nl) into the NTS. L-NAME or D-NAME was injected 20 min after the AMPA control microinjection. The volume of all injections was 100 nl. The dose of AMPA used in this study (10 pmol) consistently induced hindquarter vasodilation in a previous study (9). The dose of L-NAME used in this study is considerably less than that used to block NOS peripherally. We have shown before that microinjection of 10 nmol/100 nl into the NTS does not change resting blood pressure, heart rate, regional blood flow, renal sympathetic nerve activity (10), or resting neuronal discharge of vagus nerve-evoked NTS neurons (8).
Histology. After the experiments, methylene blue (100 nl of a 2% solution) was microinjected in the same NTS site for histological analysis. Animals were anesthetized with pentobarbital sodium (1g/kg iv) and perfused transcardially with saline (0.9%) followed by 10% formalin solution. The brain was removed and stored in buffered formalin for at least 2 days. Coronal sections (40 µm) were cut on a microtome and stained using the Nissl method (16). Only rats whose microinjection sites were located in the intermediate NTS were used for data analysis (Fig. 1).
|
| RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
MAP control: 16 ± 11 mmHg) followed by a longer lasting period of hypertension (phase II,
MAP control: 35 ± 5 mmHg, P < 0.05). Phase III is defined by the peak of hindquarter vasodilation. By this time, MAP was still elevated (
MAP control: 19 ± 4 mmHg, P < 0.05) but was falling back to baseline (Figs. 2 and 3A). The initial hypotension caused by AMPA (phase I) is the result of intense bradycardia (
HR control: 122 ± 40 beats/min, P < 0.05; Fig. 3B) that may decrease cardiac output. This response can be abolished with intravenous methylatropine treatment, as we previously reported (9). The large variation in AMPA-mediated hypotension can be related to the variability in HR fall, considering that experiments were performed on nonanesthetized, freely moving rats.
|
|
MAP before L-NAME: 35 ± 5 mmHg; phase II,
MAP 15 min after L-NAME: 43 ± 6 mmHg; Fig. 3A). Microinjection of L-NAME in the NTS did not significantly alter the bradycardia induced by AMPA (phase I,
HR before L-NAME: 122 ± 40 beats/min; phase I,
HR 5 min after L-NAME: 163 ± 55 beats/min; phase I,
HR 15 min after L-NAME: 92 ± 32 beats/min; Fig. 3B).
Effects of central NOS inhibition on regional vascular conductance responses to NTS microinjection of AMPA.
The ratio of Doppler shift (blood flow) and MAP was used to calculate relative HVC, RVC, and MVC. In the absence of L-NAME, microinjection of AMPA (10 pmol/100 nl) in the NTS reduced HVC (vasoconstriction) in phase I (phase I,
HVC control: 21 ± 10%). Phase II is the period of maximal blood pressure, but with respect to blood flow it is a transitional phase in which vascular conductance is still reduced (phase II,
HVC control: 11 ± 8%) but returning to baseline. Vasodilation is observed in the hindquarter bed in phase III (phase III,
HVC control: 18 ± 4%, P < 0.05) (Fig. 3C).
After microinjection of L-NAME into the NTS, the maximum vasoconstriction induced by AMPA first obtained in phase I shifted to phase II (phase II,
HVC control: 11 ± 8%; phase II,
HVC 5 min after L-NAME: 61 ± 7%; phase II,
HVC 15 min after L-NAME: 30 ± 7%; and phase II,
HVC 45 min after L-NAME: 39 ± 9%, P < 0.05, n = 6). Vasodilation observed in phase III was abolished in AMPA microinjections performed 5 and 15 min after L-NAME (phase III,
HVC control: 18 ± 4%; phase III,
HVC 5 min after L-NAME: 16 ± 7%; and phase III,
HVC 15 min after L-NAME: 17 ± 9%, P < 0.05, n = 6). The response to AMPA began to recover by 45 min after L-NAME (phase III,
HVC 45 min after L-NAME: 3 ± 6%). Changes in HVC caused by AMPA at 5, 15, and 45 min after L-NAME are shown in Fig. 3C.
AMPA (10 pmol/100 nl) microinjected into the NTS caused significant vasoconstriction in the renal and mesenteric beds during phase II (phase II,
RVC control: 35 ± 8%; phase II,
MVC control: 36 ± 6%, P < 0.05, n = 5). Vasoconstriction appeared attenuated 15 min after L-NAME (phase II,
RVC 15 min after L-NAME: 26 ± 10%; phase II,
MVC 15 min after L-NAME: 17 ± 5%, n = 5), but this difference was not statistically significant (Fig. 3, D and E).
As a control for nonspecific effects of L-NAME, we injected the same amount of D-NAME (10 nmol) in a second group of animals (n = 5, baseline MAP: 109 ± 7 mmHg; baseline HR: 322 ± 17 beats/min). Microinjection of D-NAME by itself did not cause any significant change in baseline values (MAP before D-NAME: 108 ± 6 mmHg vs. MAP after D-NAME: 109 ± 7 mmHg; HR before D-NAME: 340 ± 16 beats/min vs. HR after D-NAME: 352 ± 16 beats/min). D-NAME also did not affect the changes in MAP, HR, and regional vascular conductance elicited by AMPA microinjection. Thus the hindquarter vasodilation observed in phase III with AMPA microinjection (phase III,
HVC control: 17 ± 6%) remained after pretreatment with D-NAME (phase III,
HVC 5 min after D-NAME: 23 ± 10%; phase III,
HVC 15 min after D-NAME: 19 ± 12%; and phase III,
HVC 45 min after D-NAME: 30 ± 13%, n = 5).
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Activation of the AMPA receptor in the NTS of conscious rats induces an initial reduction in hindquarter blood flow that is followed by a large increase (9). Increased blood flow is due to hindquarter vasodilation. The origin and pathway of this vasodilation was not clear, but studies of Davisson et al. (6, 7) suggested a neurogenic hindquarter vasodilation mediated by release of preformed stores of nitrosyl factors after sympathetic stimulation. Colombari et al. (4) showed a hindquarter vasodilation elicited by activation of glutamatergic receptors in the NTS that was abolished after systemic L-NAME administration. The systemic administration of L-NAME probably blocked NOS in endothelial cells and nerve terminals in the vasculature and anywhere else NOS was present.
In the present study, we observed that hindquarter blood flow changes elicited by AMPA stimulation were modified after L-NAME microinjection within the NTS. Our group (10) recently reported that inhibition of NOS in the NTS of anesthetized rats attenuates baroreflex and cardiopulmonary reflex inhibition of renal nerve discharge, which suggests that NO can be functionally important in modulation of cardiovascular reflexes through the CNS. The pool of preformed NO present within the NTS neurons and that formed and/or released by stimulation of glutamatergic receptors would, in some way, activate a system to cause vasodilation and an increase in hindquarter blood flow. The response observed at the hindquarter bed combines AMPA stimulation response (initial vasoconstriction) and vasodilatatory system activation: 1) quick and accentuated fall in blood flow that returns to basal levels when blood pressure increases, and 2) vasodilation of the hindquarter bed that becomes "visible" when vasoconstriction is finished. In the same way, when the NO-mediated pathway is inhibited (NOS inhibition), the hindquarter vasoconstrictor effect of AMPA lasts longer and is enhanced in magnitude, as noticed, because blood pressure level is increased.
L-NAME is a potent in vitro and in vivo NOS inhibitor that competes with L-arginine for the substrate-binding site at the enzyme (39). Blockade of NOS activity by injection of L-NAME in the NTS seems to be dose related (18), because in high concentration, L-NAME is more selective to endothelial NOS and local vasoconstriction can cause cell damage. The dose used in our studies did not change baseline blood pressure, heart rate, regional blood flow, or renal nerve activity (10). NO present and synthesized in NTS neurons has inter- and intracellular effects. We do not know whether the results observed in the present study during NOS inhibition can be attributed to postsynaptic modulation, because all of the drugs were microinjected. Our group's previous single-unit study (8) showed that iontophoresis of L-NAME does not alter spontaneous discharge but significantly decreases the number of action potentials evoked by iontophoretic application of AMPA in NTS neurons receiving vagal afferents inputs, suggesting that NO facilitates glutamate transmission through AMPA receptors within the NTS neurons.
In addition to our previous studies by our group (8, 10) and other findings in the literature, the present study suggests that NO formed and released within the NTS may modulate the response elicited by glutamatergic transmission, including the effects observed on the hindquarter limb. NO was first characterized in the CNS as an intercellular messenger responsible for the increase in cGMP levels after activation of glutamatergic receptors (14). It is known that central NO is produced by NOS, which is activated by Ca2+ through calmodulin. NO activates soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC), stimulating the production of cGMP. The anatomic relationship among sGC immunoreactivity, nNOS, glutamate, and glutamate receptors suggests that NO and glutamate interactions in the NTS involve sGC (31). The evidence that central NO is involved in peripheral functions has been growing. NO can influence brain development, memory, synaptic plasticity, and modulation of neuroendocrine responses (12). Anatomic and other studies in the last decade support the idea that NO modulates NTS function once nNOS is found in cell bodies, terminals, and fibers of the NTS (2, 21, 26, 28, 30).
We propose a NO-mediated vasodilatatory system (nitroxidergic pathway) within the NTS responsible for the modulation of the sympathetic outflow (vasoconstrictor response) when glutamatergic afferents are activated. The integrated response observed with AMPA microinjection into the NTS would be a result of the activation of both systems: vasoconstrictor and vasodilatatory. If one system is blocked, what we see is only the cardiovascular effect of one system (vasoconstrictor) without the modulatory influence of the other (vasodilatatory).
The exact pathway of central formed NO in modulating glutamatergic receptor-mediated responses in NTS is not fully understood. Increases in extracellular NO levels have been shown to induce glutamate release (24), and microinjections of AMPA and NMDA have been shown to increase NO release (24, 33). It was recently shown that the distribution of NTS neurons that project to the pressor area of rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM) is similar to that containing nNOS neurons, suggesting that NO within the NTS may influence cardiovascular function through the NTS-RVLM pathway (20).
We think there are two distinct mechanisms leading to production/release of NO. The first one (see "1" in Fig. 4) involves intracellular production and release of NO by AMPA receptor stimulation within NTS neurons. The pool of NO that is formed facilitates glutamatergic transmission and activates the pathway (see "2" in Fig. 4) that will cause vasodilatatory response by release of NO at the sympathetic nerve terminals in the hindquarter vascular bed. The exact interaction of NTS and other medullary sites resulting in the activation and/or deactivation of this pathway is still unclear.
|
Overall, the present data show that centrally formed NO can affect glutamatergic transmission within the NTS to modulate cardiovascular responses. The specific function or mechanism of this interaction remains to be elucidated, but it could also involve the action of NO in controlling release of other neurotransmitters.
| GRANTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
| FOOTNOTES |
|---|
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
| REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
L. G. da Silva, A. C. R. Dias, E. Furlan, and E. Colombari Nitric oxide modulates the cardiovascular effects elicited by acetylcholine in the NTS of awake rats Am J Physiol Regulatory Integrative Comp Physiol, December 1, 2008; 295(6): R1774 - R1781. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| Visit Other APS Journals Online |