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Vol. 289, Issue 3, 1313-1322, June 1999
Unidad de Regulación Neurohumoral, Departamento de Ciencias Fisiológicas, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, P. Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile (V.C., M.V.D., N.B., R.F., C.L., J.P.H.-T.); and Université du Québec, Institut National Reserche Scientifique-Santé, Pointe Claire, Montreal, Canada (A.F.)
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Abstract |
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Although abundant literature supports the notion that neuropeptide Y
(NPY) synergizes in vivo and in vitro, the vasomotor activity elicited
by norepinephrine (NE), the converse interaction (i.e., the adrenergic
modulation of the NPY vasomotor response) has been less characterized.
To assess whether NE synergizes the vasomotor effect of NPY, the rat
arterial mesenteric bed was chosen as a model experimental system.
Mesenteries were precontracted with NE and few minutes later were
perfused with exogenous NPY. Under these conditions, NPY contracted the
arterial mesenteric bed with an EC50 value of 0.72 ± 0.06 nM. NPY was unable to contract this vascular territory without an
agonist-induced precontraction. Other agonists, such as endothelin-1, a
synthetic analog of prostaglandin F2
, or
5-hydroxytryptamine, also were effective primers because in their
presence, NPY was a potent vasoconstrictor. In contrast, mesenteries
precontracted with KCl failed to evidence the NPY-induced rise in
perfusion pressure. Two structural analogs of NPY, PYY and
[Leu31,Pro34]NPY, mimicked the activity of
NPY. The NPY fragment 13-36 did not elicit such a response. All NPY
analogs exhibited less efficacy and potency relative to NPY. The NPY-
and related structural analog-induced vasoconstriction was
competitively and reversibly antagonized by BIBP 3226; the
pA2 of the NPY interaction was 7.0. The application of 0.1 to 1 µM BIBP 3226 or 0.1 to 10 nM prazosin at the peak of the NPY
vasomotor response elicited a gradual blockade of the vasoconstriction.
Although BIBP 3226 blocked the increase in perfusion pressure elicited
by NPY, leaving unaffected the NE-induced tone, 10 nM prazosin blocked
the full response, including the NE-induced component. Tissue
preincubation with 200 nM nifedipine abolished the NPY-induced
vasoconstriction; likewise, the acute application of 10 to 100 nM
nifedipine blocked gradually the maximal NPY-induced contraction.
Removal of the mesenteric endothelial layer increased the potency of
NPY by 2-fold; it also slightly potentiated the antagonist activity of
BIBP 3226. The synergism between NPY and NE backs the principle of
sympathetic cotransmission.
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Introduction |
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The
abundance of immunoreactive neuropeptide Y (NPY) surrounding blood
vessels (Ekblad et al., 1984
; Lundberg et al., 1989
; Donoso et al.,
1997a
) and the observation that exogenous NPY increases blood pressure
(Tatemoto et al., 1982
; Edvinsson et al., 1983
; Mabe et al., 1985
) were
crucial in hypothesizing the involvement of NPY in vascular control.
Furthermore, the finding that most immunoreactive NPY nerve fibers
costore norepinephrine (NE; Ekblad et al., 1984
; Fried et al., 1986
;
Lundberg, 1996
) indicated the stimulation of the sympathetic
neuroeffector junction might be a physiological mechanism for NPY.
Three independent mechanisms have been invoked to explain the increase
in blood pressure caused by the administration of exogenous NPY. The
first involves direct contraction of the smooth muscles in specific
vascular territories. In intact rings of most of the middle-sized
peripheral blood vessels, perfusion with NPY does not elicit a direct
contractile effect, except in cerebral arterial rings, such as the
basilar, pial, or cerebral medial vessels of mammals, including humans
(Edvinsson et al., 1983
; Edvinsson, 1985
; Abounader et al., 1995
).
Boric et al. (1995)
observed in the hamster cheek microcirculation a direct contraction evoked by NPY mediated by a mixture of
Y1 and Y2 NPY receptors. In
support of this mechanism, binding experiments demonstrate the presence
of a mixed population of Y1 and
Y2 NPY receptors in several isolated blood
vessels (Zukowska-Grojec and Wahlestedt, 1993
). The second mechanism is
related to the potentiation of the vasomotor activity of several
endogenous vasoconstrictor agents such as NE, 5-hydroxytryptamine
(5-HT), or angiotensin II (Edvinsson et al., 1984
; Wahlestedt et al.,
1985
; López et al., 1989
). By far the most thoroughly examined of
NPY vascular effects is its ability to potentiate the activity of
several vasoconstrictors or to inhibit vasorelaxatory responses such as
those induced by acetylcholine (Gulbenkian et al., 1992
). This effect
has been demonstrated in practically all the blood vessels examined,
including in vivo studies with nonanesthetized experimental animals
(López et al., 1989
; for a review, see Potter, 1991
). A third
physiological explanation involves a presynaptic mechanism, mediated by
neuronal Y2 NPY autoreceptors that reduce the
release of NE (Lundberg and Stjärne, 1984
; Westfall et al., 1987
;
Lundberg et al., 1989
).
The recent development of potent and highly selective NPY antagonists
has opened new avenues to the understanding of the involvement of NPY
in the physiology of the autonomic nervous system, particularly its
involvement in the control of the vascular tone. The best studied of
the NPY receptor antagonists is BIBP 3226, a competitive nonpeptide
molecule that is characterized by its high affinity and specificity for
the NPY Y1 receptor (Rudolf et al., 1994
; Doods
et al., 1995
). In several in vitro assays, BIBP 3226 has an affinity
ranging between 0.5 and 5 nM (Rudolf et al., 1994
) and displays a
pA2 of 8.5 (Abounader et al., 1995
). Although
BIBP 3226 does not essentially modify peripheral blood pressure, it significantly reduces the NPY vasopressor response (Doods et al., 1995
;
Mezzano et al., 1998
) and that elicited by electrical stimulation of
perivascular sympathetic nerves (Lundberg and Modin, 1995
; Malmström and Lundberg, 1995
; Racchi et al., 1997
).
Based on the fact that NPY nonspecifically potentiates several
vasoconstrictors, Itoi at al. (1986)
and Zukowska-Grojec and Vaz (1988)
made the original contribution that after the infusion of NE to rats,
the i.v. administration of NPY caused a markedly potentiated pressor
response. These observations were confirmed by Wahlestedt et al.
(1990b)
using isolated pulmonary artery rings. To expand on these
observations, our aim in the current study was to characterize the NPY
receptors and to explore the mechanism by which NE, and eventually
other phospholipase C-coupled vasoconstrictors, synergize the vascular
smooth muscle to the vasomotor action of NPY. The rat arterial
mesenteric bed seemed an appropriate model system for this project
because this vascular territory is essentially refractile to the sole
application of NPY (Donoso et al., 1993
, 1997b
). The NE-NPY cooperation
highlights cotransmission and is consistent with the notion that both
neurochemicals are coreleased from peripheral sympathetic nerve
terminals (Donoso et al., 1997a
). The present data emphasize the role
of NPY in the regulation of the peripheral sympathetic vascular tone.
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Materials and Methods |
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Perfusion of Isolated Rat Mesenteric Bed
At least 150 adult male Sprague-Dawley rats (250-280 g), bred
in our Animal Reproduction Laboratories, were anesthetized with 50 mg/kg sodium pentobarbital. The abdominal cavity was incised at the
midline, and the superior mesenteric artery was cannulated with
polyethylene tubing. Perfusion with Krebs-Ringer buffer, bubbled with
95% O2/5% CO2 and warmed
to 37°C, was performed using a peristaltic pump operating at a flow
of 2 ml/min, as detailed by Donoso et al. (1996)
. A pressure transducer
was placed close to the entrance of the artery (McGregor, 1965
); any
fluctuations in the recorded perfusion pressure were interpreted as
changes in the resistance of the mesenteric bed. The basal perfusion
pressure of the preparations oscillated between 10 and 30 mm Hg, with a mean value of 23.7 ± 5 mm Hg (n = 67). All
experiments were initiated with a 3- to 4-min perfusion with 70 mM KCl.
The preparations that did not respond to the KCl challenge with an
increase in the perfusion pressure of 30 to 60 mm Hg were discarded.
Next, the tissues were perfused with 3 µM NE to raise the vascular
tone before initiation of NPY perfusions.
Quantification of Results
Concentration-response experiments were routinely performed with
NPY and NPY structural analogs NE, endothelin (ET)-1, 5-HT, and
9,11-dideoxy-9
,11
-epoxymethano-prostaglandin
F2
(PGF2
). In most
cases, the potency of each agonist was expressed as the EC50 value, as calculated by interpolation from
the respective concentration-response curve. The
pA2 value was calculated according to the method
developed by Arunlakshana and Schild (1959)
. In some experiments, the
concentration of the antagonist required to reduce the vasomotor effect
of 10 nM NPY by one half was likewise obtained by interpolation from
each concentration-response experiment.
Determination of Agonist Potencies
NPY and Related Structural Analogs. To estimate the potency of NPY, mesenteric preparations were primed with 3 µM NE, a concentration of the catecholamine that was added to the buffer simultaneously with 0.1, 1, 10, 30, or, occasionally, 100 nM NPY or with the structurally related analogs of the peptide. Each peptide was tested in separate mesenteric preparations. In a parallel series of experiments, the potency of NPY alone was compared with that achieved by the equimolar mixture of [Leu31,Pro34]NPY, an NPY Y1 receptor agonist, and NPY 13-36, an NPY Y2 agonist.
Other Vasoconstrictors. NE, ET-1, 5-HT, and KCl evoke increases in perfusion pressure without the need of a precontraction; therefore, concentration-response experiments were performed without precontracting the mesenteries. In one series of experiments, two consecutive NE concentration-response experiments were performed in a same preparation. The first NE concentration-response curve was performed without a prior tone; 30 min later, the NE concentration-response curve was repeated after tissue precontraction with 3 µM NE.
Specificity of Several Agonists to Precontract Mesenteries
Protocols were performed in which the rat arterial mesenteric
was precontracted with the following vasomotor agents: 2 to 10 nM ET-1,
10 µM 5-HT, 4 µM PGF2
, and 35 to 70 mM
KCl. Each of these compounds was perfused for 10 min before challenging the mesenteries with 0.1, 1, and 10 nM NPY. Separate preparations were
used to evaluate the effect of each vasoconstrictor. Care was taken to
choose agonist concentrations that raised the basal pressure 15 to 25 mm Hg and to ensure that the tone was well maintained. To evaluate the
influence of KCl on the NE responses, separate series of paired NE
concentration-response protocols were performed with and without a
precontraction with 50 mM KCl.
Antagonism by BIBP 3226, an NPY Y1-Selective Receptor-Blocking Agent
NPY concentration-response experiments were performed before and after 30 min of tissue perfusion with 0.1, 0.3, or 1 µM BIBP 3226. The antagonist was maintained in the buffer system while the second NPY concentration-response protocol was performed. Each preparation was used to study the effect of a single antagonist concentration. All NPY concentration-response experiments were performed in mesenteries precontracted with 3 µM NE. To test the specificity of the antagonist, in a parallel set of experiments, NE concentration-response experiments were performed before and 30 min after mesentery pretreatment with 1 µM BIBP 3226. Similar protocols were designed to test whether BIBP 3226 antagonized the vasomotor responses elicited by the structural analogs of NPY.
Acute Blockade of NPY-Induced Vasoconstriction by Several Drugs
BIBP 3226. Mesenteries were contracted with 10 nM NPY; once the maximal response developed, the preparation was perfused with media that contained 10 nM NPY plus 0.01 µM BIBP 3226. After a stable and notorious BIBP 3226 response ensued, the antagonist concentration in the perfusion media was gradually increased from 0.01 to 10 µM. The buffer maintained 10 nM NPY during the performance of the full protocol. At the end of each experiment, the mesenteries were perfused with drug-free Krebs-Ringer to determine the reversibility of the interaction and whether BIBP 3226 had completely blocked the 10 nM NPY-induced vasomotor response.
Prazosin.
To assess whether part of the NPY-induced
vasomotor response is due to the activation of an
1-adrenoceptor mechanism, separate preparations were contracted with 10 nM NPY as detailed above. Once the
maximal NPY response was attained, tissues were perfused with graded
concentrations of prazosin (0.1, 1, and 10 nM). At the end of each
protocol, all preparations were additionally perfused with Krebs-Ringer
buffer to determine the existence of a prazosin-resistant vasomotor component.
Nifedipine. To investigate the participation of L-type calcium channels, in the 10 nM NPY-induced vasoconstriction, tissues were perfused with 1, 10, and 50 nM nifedipine as detailed above. Nifedipine stock solution (10 mM) was prepared in ethanol and dissolved thereafter in Krebs-Ringer buffer. Parallel experiments with vehicle determined that ethanol did not interfere with the NPY vasomotor activity or with the nifedipine-induced blockade.
Antagonism of NPY-Induced Vasomotor Response by Nifedipine
For this protocol, preparations were perfused for 30 min with 200 nM nifedipine before the performance of an NPY concentration-response protocol. Because the NE-induced constriction is sensitive to nifedipine, 10 µM NE was used to precontract the mesenteries by 20 to 30 mm Hg.
Removal of Endothelial Cell Layer
To assess the influence of the endothelial cell layer on the
potency of NPY and BIBP 3226, experiments were conducted in
preparations with and without the endothelial cell layer. The
endothelium was removed after tissue perfusion with buffer containing
0.1% saponin for 55 s. This procedure has been previously used to
remove or destroy, at least partially, the endothelial cells (Donoso et al., 1996
). To visualize microscopically the destruction of the cell
layer after perfusion with saponin, preparations were fixed with
Bouin's solution for 24 h, dehydrated with alcohol, and embedded in paraplast. Tissue slices (5 µm thick) were obtained from control and endothelium-denuded preparations that had been stained with hematoxilin and eosin for light microscopy examination.
Parallel protocols were designed to evaluate the functional implications of the removal of the endothelial cell layer. Intact and endothelium-denuded mesenteries were precontracted with 3 to 10 µM NE and dilated after perfusion with 0.1 or 1 µM acetylcholine.
Potency of NE and NPY. NE concentration-response protocols were performed in endothelium-denuded preparations to study the magnitude of the NE sensitization created by endothelium removal. NPY concentration-response experiments were performed in tissues primed with either 0.5 or 1 µM NE; otherwise, the NPY determination proceeded as usual.
BIBP 3226. Endothelium-denuded preparations were contracted with 10 nM NPY as detailed above; tissues were next perfused with buffer containing the NPY plus either 0.1, 0.3, or 1 µM BIBP 3226. The protocol was identical to that outlined in tissues with intact endothelium.
Peptides and Drug Sources
Porcine NPY and some of its structural analogs, such as PYY,
[Leu31,Pro34]NPY, and NPY
13-36, were synthesized using solid phase by A. Fournier
(INRS-Santé); ET-1 and some batches of NPY were purchased from
Peninsula Laboratories Inc. (Belmont, CA). NE, 5-HT,
PGF2
, prazosin, nifedipine, saponin, and other
reagents were purchased from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO). BIBP
3226 was kindly provided by Dr. K. Rudolf (Thomae GmbH, Germany). All
drugs and peptides were dissolved in distilled water and diluted
accordingly in Krebs-Ringer buffer. Analytic-grade chemicals from Merck
(Darmstadt, Germany) were used to prepare buffer solutions.
Statistical Analysis
ANCOVA was used to study the significance of the displacement of concentration-response curves caused by several drug treatments or endothelial cell removal. In all cases a value of P < .05 was considered statistically significant. The Dunnett's tables for multiple comparisons with a common control were used when appropriate.
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Results |
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Potency of NPY and Structurally Related Peptides
NPY and Related Structural Analogs.
NPY and related peptide
analogs evoked concentration-dependent increases in perfusion pressure
in mesenteries precontracted with NE. In the absence of an
agonist-induced vasomotor tone, NPY failed to increase the perfusion
pressure (Fig. 1). The
EC50 value of NPY was 0.72 ± 0.06 nM
(n = 25); 10 nM NPY elicited a sustained rise of
approximately 100 mm Hg, equivalent to that attained with 10 µM NE.
Perfusion with 3 µM NE caused a well sustained increase in perfusion
pressure of about 30 mm Hg as long as the catecholamine is present in
the perfusion buffer (Fig. 1B). On abruptly changing of the perfusion
medium to a buffer containing only 10 nM NPY, the pressure immediately
dropped to its basal level (Fig. 1D). The readdition of NE to the
perfusion buffer caused an immediate restoration of the perfusion
pressure to that attained by NPY before the withdrawal of NE from the
perfusion medium. Most of the protocols were performed in mesenteries
precontracted with 3 µM NE; larger concentrations of the
catecholamine were avoided because an excessive rise in the perfusion
pressure will introduce undesirable variables.
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Other Vasocontractile Agents.
In contrast to NPY, agents such
as ET-1, 5-HT, and eicosanoids do not require a precontraction to
elicit vasomotor activity. In the particular case of NPY, provided the
mesenteries are precontracted, the peptide is as potent as ET-1 and
1000-fold more potent than NE (Fig. 3).
The efficacy of NPY is about 50% less than that attained with either
ET-1 or NE.
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Specificity of Precontracting Agonist.
The nature of the
precontraction required to elicit the vasomotor effect of NPY is not
receptor specific because several agonists, including ET-1,
PGF2
, and 5-HT, mimicked the ability of NE to
synergize the NPY response (Table 1 and
Fig. 4). Although NE acted as the best
agent, the effect of PGF2
was also
significant; ET-1 and 5-HT were less active.
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Magnitude of NE Precontraction. During the summer months, the 3 µM NE-induced vasomotor response exhibited variability. The responses ranged from 8 to 80 mm Hg, with a mean increase of 32 ± 4 mm Hg (n = 33). The responses demonstrated, however, a normal, gaussian distribution. We used these data to assess whether the magnitude of the rise in tone elicited by this agent influenced the 10 nM NPY response. For this purpose, these results were divided into four arbitrary categories. The mean increase in perfusion pressure averaged around 10 mm Hg for group I, 20 mm Hg for group II, 40 mm Hg for group III, and 75 mm Hg for group IV (Table 2). It is evident that in all groups, the effect of NPY is concentration dependent; however, the magnitude of the rise in perfusion pressure caused by the primer was not paralleled by a proportional increase in the vasomotor effect elicited by NPY.
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Antagonism by BIBP 3226
BIBP 3226 caused a parallel, concentration-dependent rightward
displacement of the NPY concentration-response curve (Fig. 5). The pA2 of the
interaction was 7.0; the slope of the plot was 1.52. The antagonism was
partially reversible, as demonstrated by the finding that at 30 to 60 min after perfusion with drug-free buffer, 60% to 80% recovery of the
NPY responses was observed.
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As with NPY, BIBP 3226 also blocked the increase in perfusion pressure
elicited by NPY structural analogs. The mean increase in perfusion
pressure elicited by applications of 30 nM NPY, 100 nM PYY, 100 nM
[Leu31,Pro34]NPY, and an
equimolar mixture of 30 nM
[Leu31,Pro34]NPY plus NPY
13-36 was 101.0 ± 11.8, 55.0 ± 8.6, 58.7± 14.6, and
55.0 ± 27 mm Hg, respectively. In the presence of 0.1 µM BIBP, these values were reduced to 35 ± 6.7, 0 ± 0,
10 ± 7.6, and 6.3 ± 4.7 mm Hg, respectively. Perfusion with 1 µM
BIBP 3226 further antagonized the responses; these values were 3.3 ± 1, 0 ± 0,
8 ± 0, and 0 ± 0 mm Hg, respectively.
The BIBP 3226 antagonism was specific for NPY because it did not affect the NE-induced vasoconstriction. The NE EC50 value in a control group of rats was 5.4 ± 1.2 µM, a value that did not differ significantly from the value of 3.0 ± 0.4 µM (n = 5) obtained in mesenteries exposed to 1 µM BIBP 3226 for 30 min.
Blockade of NPY-Induced Increase in Motor Tone
Mesenteries contracted with 10 nM NPY generally experienced a rise in perfusion pressure that averaged 100 to 120 mm Hg. Under these experimental conditions, the vasomotor effect elicited by 10 nM NPY could be antagonized by the following drugs.
BIBP 3226.
This nonpeptide NPY Y1
receptor antagonist blocked, in a concentration-dependent manner, the
increase in perfusion pressure elicited by NPY demonstrating a stepwise
recording (see tracing in Fig. 5). Consistent with the competitive
nature of the antagonism and consonant with its
pA2, 100 nM BIBP 3226 reduced by one half the
vasomotor effect elicited by NPY (Fig.
6). Larger concentrations caused a
proportional effect. Experiments demonstrated, however, a component
resistant even to 10 µM BIBP 3226, which likely is related to the NE
precontraction tone.
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Prazosin.
This
1-adrenoceptor
antagonist fully blocked the increase in perfusion pressure evoked by
NPY, also eliciting a stepwise polygraphic recording. Consistent with
its high affinity for
1-adrenoceptors, the
prazosin concentration-response curve was parallel to that of BIBP 3226 but displaced to the left at least 100-fold (Fig. 6). In contrast to
BIBP 3226, prazosin obliterated the NPY response, suggesting that in
the absence of an NE tone, NPY is unable to contract the mesentery.
Prazosin failed to block the NPY increase in mesenteric pressure in
tissues precontracted with PGF2
(Fig. 6), an
indication that the prazosin blockade of the NPY vasoconstriction is
indirect and likely due only to its
1-adrenoceptor-blocking properties. Prazosin
did not block the effect of NPY in mesenteries precontracted with 10 nM
ET-1 (n = 2, data not shown), suggesting that in the
absence of
1-adrenoceptor activation,
prazosin is unable to modify NPY receptor activity.
Nifedipine.
This L-type calcium channel blocker reduced the
NPY response in a stepwise, concentration-dependent fashion (Fig.
7) with a potency intermediate between
that of prazosin and BIBP 3226 (Fig. 6). The relaxant action of
nifedipine developed slower than that developed by prazosin or BIBP
3226 and apparently did not affect basal perfusion pressure within 15 min. The vehicle alone did not interfere with the NPY-induced
contraction or modify the nifedipine-induced vasorelaxation.
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Nifedipine Antagonism
Preincubation of the mesenteries with nifedipine obliterated the NPY-induced vasomotor response displacing the NPY concentration-response curve downward, suggestive of a noncompetitive interaction (Fig. 7). In the presence of nifedipine, the concentration of NE was raised to 10 µM to elicit a rise in perfusion pressure of 32.5 ± 5 mm Hg (n = 4) approximating that obtained with 3 µM NE in control mesenteric preparations.
Vasomotor Response of NPY in Endothelium-Denuded Mesenteries; Potency of BIBP 3226 to Block NPY-Induced Contractions
The lack of the endothelium significantly augmented the vasomotor
response of NE. In endothelium-denuded mesenteric beds, the NE
concentration-response curve was displaced to the left, decreasing the
EC50 value compared with intact preparations
(0.69 ± 0.3 versus 2.25 ± 0.56 µM, n = 4, P < .01). The concentration of NE required to
precontract the mesenteries was reduced 3-fold to elicit an equivalent
tone (Fig. 8). The NPY
EC50 value in the endothelium-denuded
preparations was 0.44 ± 0.04 nM (n = 4), a value
that is statistically different from that attained in intact preparations (0.72 ± 0.06, P < .05). In the
absence of the endothelial cell layer, 100 nM BIBP 3226 completely
blocked the vasoconstriction induced by 10 nM NPY. A 10-fold larger
concentration of BIBP 3226 was required to evoke the same effect as in
intact preparations (Fig. 8).
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Endothelium denudation after perfusion with saponin caused a transient increase in the perfusion pressure (see recording in Fig. 8) and a significant degree of endothelium destruction as demonstrated by light microscopy examination. In separate but parallel protocols, we observed that on the removal of the endothelial cells, the 0.1 µM acetylcholine-induced vasorelaxation decreased significantly from 42 ± 5% in control tissues to 10 ± 2% (P < .01). Likewise in the same tissues, 1 µM acetylcholine-induced vasorelaxation decreased from 73 ± 4% in intact tissues to 29 ± 2% (P < .01, n = 4) in the endothelium-denuded preparations.
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Discussion |
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In contrast to other agonists, NPY requires a tone to contract the
rat arterial mesenteric bed. Provided the mesenteries are precontracted
with receptor agonists linked to phospholipase C, NPY behaves as a
potent constrictor of the arterial mesenteric territory. Among the
primers tested, we focused on NE, recognizing that NPY is commonly
found costored with the catecholamine. At the light of sympathetic
cotransmission (Burnstock, 1990
), NE seemed to be a precontracting
agent of physiological relevance.
Although the NE EC50 value was essentially
unaltered by its own precontraction, indicating that the affinity of
the tissue for this ligand is unchanged by its preexposure, this is not
the case with NPY. This peptide is unable to elicit per se a vasomotor effect unless the mesenteric bed is precontracted with a ligand coupled
to a G protein-linked receptor. The present findings favor the notion
of a pharmacodynamic synergism, implying cooperation between the
actions of both ligands. The synergism is short lived, lasting
essentially the time both ligands are simultaneously in contact with
the mesentery. The precontraction requires a threshold, which in the
case of NE, oscillates between 5 and 8 mm Hg, rather than being a
concentration-dependent process. The intracellular signaling mechanism
elicited by the
1-adrenoceptor precontraction probably suffices to trigger the physiological conditions that allow
the NPY vasomotor effect to occur. A precontraction causing a larger
increase in the perfusion pressure was avoided because it may limit the
physiological capacity of the vascular bed to contract with NPY. It
appears that the need of precontraction to evoke NPY contractions is
not an isolated observation. Leite et al. (1997)
recently documented
that angiotensin II also requires a precontraction to elicit its
characteristic vasomotor action in the rat arterial mesenteric bed.
This result illuminates a mechanistic link between NPY and angiotensin
II, a peptide with an accepted role in vascular homeostasis. In the
case of both peptides, the precontraction must trigger a mechanism that
facilitates or initiates the intracellular machinery dealing with
muscle contraction.
The NE-induced precontraction shows seasonal variability that markedly
changes the magnitude of the 3 µM NE-induced precontraction. Efforts
were made to reduce experimental variations by controlling the duration
of the NE precontraction, time between the precontraction and the
application of NPY, the age of the animal, and other factors. In this
regard, Michel et al. (1992)
reported that in SK-N-MC cells, NPY
elevates intracellular calcium, an effect that was augmented by
isoproterenol in a time-dependent fashion. Our results are apparently
independent of the duration of the NE precontraction and of the
interval between NE tone and NPY application because in all cases, NPY
was applied after a 5- to 15-min period of mesenteric precontraction
induced by NE and other vasoconstrictors.
It is surprising to find that KCl, although promoting a reasonable
precontractile tone, was unable to synergize the NPY response. Instead,
vasoconstrictors as diverse as PGF2
, ET-1, and
5-HT are all able to replace, to varying degrees, the ability of NE to
synergize NPY. All the agonists examined in the mesentery
precontraction act at specific ligand-activated receptors and are all
coupled to phospholipase C. Thereby, they must all release
intracellular calcium via the activation of the inositol trisphosphate
pathway and stimulate protein kinase C activity. It is therefore likely that it is not the rise in intracellular calcium that facilitates the
NPY effect but rather the activation of protein kinase C by diacylglycerol. Otherwise, KCl should promote the synergism.
Zukowska-Grojec and Wahlestedt (1993)
suggested the role of
postreceptor transduction pathways, possibly phospholipase C, to
explain the in vivo and in vitro sensitization of NPY elicited by NE.
The present results further emphasize the involvement of L-type calcium
channels, which are likely opened after the release of a fraction of
the intracellular calcium stores. Future studies will examine whether protein kinase C inhibition prevents the primary effect of NE and
therefore abolish the NPY vasoconstriction. We are in the process of
examining whether the NE-induced NPY facilitation occurs in isolated
rings of the rat mesenteric artery, a model system that would greatly
facilitate biochemical controls, necessary for the development
of this crucial protocol.
Considering that NE may act as a physiological cotransmitter together
with NPY, the experiments using prazosin were aimed at revealing the
influence of the
1-adrenoceptor in the
interaction. Prazosin not only blocked the precontraction tone induced
by NE but also completely blocked, in a graded fashion, the NPY-induced vasoconstriction. To assess whether prazosin elicits its antagonism by
abolishing the NE-induced precontraction or by directly modifying the
NPY component of the response, experiments were designed to dissociate
these two components of the response. In mesenteries precontracted with
4 µM PGF2
or 10 nM ET-1, the NPY-induced vasoconstriction was not blocked by prazosin. These results clearly support the notion that prazosin may act essentially by abolishing the
tone elicited by NE rather than directly blocking the motor activity of
NPY. This interpretation validates the intrinsic adrenergic nature of
the synergism, backing the importance of the cooperation between
adrenergic and NPYergic mechanisms (Wahlestedt et al., 1990b
) in the
physiology of sympathetic neurotransmission. It becomes impossible to
dissociate whether NE sensitizes NPY or NPY synergizes NE. Both
interactions likely operate, highlighting the physiological cooperation
between this two cotransmitters in the vascular sympathetic
neuroeffector junction.
This research opens an interesting opportunity to clarify the NPY
receptor subtype involved in the synergism with NE and other contractile agonists. A simplistic analysis would argue that the response is mediated by an NPY Y1 receptor
because the response is blocked in a competitive fashion by BIBP 3226, the most selective Y1 antagonist available, and
mimicked by several NPY structural analogs with affinity for this
receptor. However, several findings suggest a more complex situation.
First, the pA2 value of BIBP 3226 is
significantly smaller than that reported for the competitive antagonism
of direct NPY vasoconstriction in human cerebral blood vessels
(Abounader et al., 1995
). Furthermore, the efficacy of PYY and
[Leu31,Pro34]NPY was
significantly lower than that of NPY, contrasting markedly with the
typical activity of NPY Y1 receptor agonists.
Third, it is clear that the rat mesenteric bed does not significantly express Y2 receptors because the alleged NPY
Y2 receptor agonist, NPY 13-36, is completely
inactive. In contrast to observations in the dog saphenous vein, a
blood vessel that essentially contains Y2
receptors (Modin et al., 1991
; Pheng et al., 1997
), the rat arterial
mesenteric bed appears to be completely devoid of a
Y2 receptor population. Other vessels, such as
the rat cava vein, appear to express a mixed population of
Y1 and Y2 NPY receptors (Zukowska-Grojec et al., 1992
). Fourth, coperfusion with the
Y1 agonist
[Leu31,Pro34]NPY and the
Y2 agonist NPY 13-36 did not produce a
concentration-response curve that would mimic more precisely that
evoked by NPY, justifying the possible participation of other NPY
receptor subtypes. We are aware that the ligand specificity is limited
because [Leu31,Pro34]NPY
does activate Y3 and Y5
receptors, but so do NPY and PYY. In sum, our tentative conclusion does
not favor the idea that the sole activation of Y1
receptors accounts for the above-cited observations.
Although it is possible that a nonrecognized NPY receptor mechanism may
be at work, various explanations could account for the observed
effects. The receptors involved may either belong to a subclass of the
NPY Y1 receptor or correspond to a receptor subtype not fully characterized, perhaps one of the other four identified NPY receptor subtypes (Gerald et al., 1996
; Gregor et al.,
1996
). The future availability of selective ligands for the NPY
receptor subtypes will clarify this issue. An alternative explanative
based on multiple receptors may also be invoked. Based on the studies
by Wahlestedt et al. (1990a)
and of Grundemar et al. (1993)
, it is also
possible to hypothesize that multiple NPY receptors may be present in
the rat arterial mesenteric bed. McAuley and Westfall (1992)
have
offered support for this notion. We have not ignored that the
intracellular coupling mechanism of the NPY Y1
receptor may differ from territory to territory. Herzog et al. (1992)
documented that the NPY Y1 receptor can be
coupled to two different intracellular signaling systems. In view of
the lack of pharmacological tools to more precisely elucidate the identity of the given NPY receptor in this territory, we conservatively interpreted the present findings suggesting a nonclassic
Y1 NPY receptor in the arterial mesenteric bed of
the rat.
The NPY vasomotor response may have characteristics similar to those
displayed in isolated blood vessels, particularly those present in the
cerebral circulation, which are known to contract in response to NPY.
We next investigated the importance of extracellular calcium. The
current literature expresses conflicting views on the role of L-type
calcium channels in the NPY pressor effect. In whole animals and in
isolated blood vessels from the cerebral circulatory system, the
contractile effect of NPY is reduced in the presence of
dihydropyridines (Edvinsson, 1985
; Mabe et al., 1985
). However, there
is no general agreement regarding the involvement of calcium channel
sensitive to dihydropyridine in the NPY potentiation of the NE
vasocontractile action (Potter, 1991
). Present results clearly indicate
that in this model system, nifedipine antagonizes and blocks
noncompetitively the NPY effect. Parallel experiments using isolated
rings from the dog basilar and middle cerebral arteries demonstrate
that the direct contractile action of NPY was antagonized
noncompetitively by nifedipine (R. Valenzuela and J. P. Huidobro-Toro, in preparation). These results lend support to our
proposal that the vascular NPY receptors present in the mesenteric
territory are linked, directly or indirectly, to L-type calcium channel activation.
The role of the endothelium in the NPY vasoconstriction was examined to
fulfill two objectives. First, we sought to more definitively localize
the NPY Y1 receptors to the vascular smooth
muscle. Second, we deemed it necessary to rule out the influence of the
endothelial cell layer on the vasomotor activity of NPY. Hieble et al.
(1988)
reported that the contractile effect of NPY required undamaged endothelial cells, whereas other investigators have argued to the
contrary (Huidobro-Toro et al., 1990
; Potter, 1991
). In an attempt to
clarify the controversy, we compared the influence of the endothelial
cell layer in the vasomotor activity of both NE and NPY in mesenteric
preparations with and without the endothelium. Results conclusively
demonstrate that the potency of both agents is increased 2- to 4-fold
in the absence of the endothelial cell layer. A previous study from our
laboratory had similarly shown supersensitivity to NE in this vascular
bed after excision of the endothelium (Donoso et al., 1996
). We
hypothesized that nitric oxide or other endothelial vasodilatation
factors may be responsible for this vasomotor modulation, both in vivo
as well as in isolated vessels. We are, however, aware that the removal
of the endothelial cell layer may simply provide more auspicious
pharmacokinetic conditions favoring the transport of both the NPY and
BIBP 3226 into the biophase or diminishing their metabolic degradation.
Recently, the activity of ATP in the physiology of sympathetic
cotransmission was detailed in human blood vessels (Racchi et al.,
1999
). Because NPY requires the blood vessels to be precontracted and
NE acts a model agonist, it is of physiological significance that the
sympathetic perivascular nerves costore and corelease NE and NPY,
providing a physiological scenario for sympathetic cotransmission
(Burnstock, 1990
; Wahlestedt et al., 1990b
). Because the mesenteric bed
is notoriously vasodilated under the present experimental conditions,
the agonist-induced precontraction, with the exception of potassium,
recreates a physiological tone, favorable for the ensuing NPY
contractile event.
In sum, the present findings add further support to the notion that the sympathetic nervous system requires the coordinated action of NE and NPY. Our results demonstrate the need of a physiological precontractile tone triggered by receptor ligand activation linked to phospholipase C activity. Once a threshold level is attained, NPY receptor activation sets off a series of intracellular mechanisms, among which the activity of protein kinase C would seem to be crucial for vasocontraction. The elucidation of the precise characteristics of the NPY receptors involved remains to be thoroughly investigated once the appropriate pharmacological tools become available.
| |
Acknowledgments |
|---|
We thank Dr. K. Rudolf (K. Thomae GmbH) for providing a sample of BIBP 3226, R. Miranda for the graphic material, and Drs. A. Schliem and C. F. Valenzuela for editorial assistance.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Accepted for publication December 30, 1998.
Received for publication August 12, 1997.
1 This work was supported by Cátedra Presidencial en Ciencias 1995 (to J.P.H.-T.) and Fondo Nacional de Investigación Científica y Tecnologica Grant 1960502. V.C. was supported by a grant from CIM, Centro de Investigaciones Médicas, Facultad de Medicina. V.C., N.B., R.F., and C.L. were supported by intramural grants while residents at the Department of Physiology during their training as medical students.
Send reprint requests to: Dr. J. Pablo Huidobro-Toro, Unidad de Regulación Neurohumoral, Departamento de Ciencias Fisiológicas, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, P. Universidad Católica de Chile, Casilla 114-D, Santiago, Chile. E-mail: jphuid{at}genes.bio.puc.cl
| |
Abbreviations |
|---|
NPY, neuropeptide Y;
PYY, peptide YY;
NE, norepinephrine;
PGF2
, 9,11-dideoxy-9
,11
-epoxymethano-prostaglandin F2
;
BIBP 3226, (R)-N2-(diphenacetyl)-N-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-methyl-D-arginine
amide;
ET-1, endothelin-1;
5-HT, 5-hydroxytryptamine;
EC50, median effective concentration.
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