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Circulation Research. 1995;76:935-941

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(Circulation Research. 1995;76:935-941.)
© 1995 American Heart Association, Inc.


Articles

Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide Mediates Acetylcholine-Induced Endothelium-Independent Vasodilation in Mesenteric Resistance Blood Vessels of the Rat

Makoto Takenaga, Hiromu Kawasaki, Akihiko Wada, Tanenao Eto

From the First Department of Internal Medicine (M.T., T.E.) and the Department of Pharmacology (A.W.), Miyazaki (Japan) Medical College, and the Department of Hospital Pharmacy (H.K.), Okayama (Japan) University Medical School.

Correspondence to Hiromu Kawasaki, PhD, Department of Hospital Pharmacy, Okayama University Medical School, 2-5-1 Shikata-Cho, Okayama 700, Japan.

Abstract The role of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)–containing vasodilator nerves in acetylcholine chloride (ACh)–induced vasodilation was studied in the perfused mesenteric vascular bed isolated from the rat. Bolus infusions of ACh at smaller doses (0.1 and 1 nmol) produced rapid and short-lived vasodilation. However, larger doses (10 and 100 nmol) of ACh caused a rapid and subsequent long-lasting vasodilator response in which the duration of vasodilation was prolonged in a concentration-dependent manner. Pretreatment with capsaicin (1 µmol/L for 20 minutes) significantly shortened the duration of vasodilator response to ACh but did not affect the initial rapid phase of ACh-induced vasodilation. Chemical removal of the vascular endothelium by perfusion with sodium deoxycholate (1.75 to 1.80 mg/mL) for 30 seconds and subsequent treatment with N{omega}-nitro-L-arginine (100 µmol/L) to inhibit nitric oxide synthesis abolished the initial rapid vasodilator action of ACh at any given concentration. However, in the same preparation, increasing concentrations (from 1 to 1000 nmol) of ACh produced only the long-lasting vasodilator responses in a concentration-dependent manner. This long-lasting vasodilator response to ACh infusion was abolished by capsaicin pretreatment (1 µmol/L), human CGRP[8-37] (CGRP receptor antagonist, 1 µmol/L), and atropine (muscarinic ACh receptor antagonist, 1, 10, and 100 nmol/L) but not by hexamethonium (nicotinic ACh receptor antagonist, 1 and 10 µmol/L). In the preparations without endothelium, the bolus infusion of ACh (300 nmol for 30 seconds) evoked a long-lasting vasodilation and release of CGRP-like immunoreactivities into the perfusate. These results suggest that the ACh-induced vasorelaxation consists of two elements: an initial transient endothelium-dependent component and a secondary long-lasting endothelium-independent component. Moreover, ACh activates muscarinic receptors located on CGRP-containing neurons to release CGRP, which then acts at CGRP receptors on vascular smooth muscles to cause the endothelium-independent vasodilation.


Key Words: acetylcholine • endothelium-independent vasodilation • calcitonin gene-related peptide • muscarinic receptor • rat mesenteric vascular bed




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