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1Department of Anesthesiology and 2Section of Pediatric Critical Care, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas; and 3Department of Medical Pharmacology and Physiology, School of Medicine, University of Missouri-Columbia, Columbia, Missouri
Submitted 13 January 2006 ; accepted in final form 12 February 2006
Carbon monoxide (CO) has been postulated to be a signaling molecule in many tissues, including the vasculature. We examined vasomotor responses of adult rat and mouse cerebral arteries to both exogenously applied and endogenously produced CO. The diameter of isolated, pressurized, and perfused rat middle cerebral arteries (MCAs) was not altered by authentic CO (106 to 104 M). Mouse MCAs, however, dilated by 21 ± 10% at 104 M CO. Authentic nitric oxide (NO·, 1010 to 107 M) dilated both rat and mouse MCAs. At 108 M NO·, rat vessels dilated by 84 ± 4%, and at 107 M NO·, mouse vessels dilated by 59 ± 9%. Stimulation of endogenous CO production through heme oxygenase (HO) with the heme precursor
-aminolevulinic acid (1010 to 104 M) did not dilate the MCAs of either species. The metalloporphyrin HO inhibitor chromium mesoporphyrin IX (CrMP) caused profound constriction of the rat MCA (44 ± 2% at 3 x 105 M). Importantly, this constriction was unaltered by exogenous CO (104 M) or CO plus 105 M biliverdine (both HO products). In contrast, exogenous CO (104 M) reversed CrMP-induced constriction in rat gracilis arterioles. Control mouse MCAs constricted by only 3 ± 1% in response to 105 M CrMP. Magnesium protoporphyrin IX (105 M), a weak HO inhibitor used to control for nonspecific effects of metalloporphyrins, also constricted the rat MCA to a similar extent as CrMP. We conclude that, at physiological concentrations, CO is not a dilator of adult rodent cerebral arteries and that metalloporphyrin HO inhibitors have nonspecific constrictor effects in rat cerebral arteries.
cerebral arteries; chromium mesoporphyrin; endothelium-derived hyperpolarization factor; gracilis arteriole
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