Artigo Revisado por pares

Involvement of L-arginine-nitric oxide pathways in neural relaxation of the sphincter of Oddi

1993; Elsevier BV; Volume: 232; Issue: 2-3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/0014-2999(93)90783-e

ISSN

1879-0712

Autores

Jürgen Pauletzki, Keith A. Sharkey, Joseph S. Davison, Arieh Bomzon, Eldon A. Shaffer,

Tópico(s)

Liver Disease and Transplantation

Resumo

To evaluate if L-arginine-nitric oxide-pathways are involved in the neural relaxation of the sphincter of Oddi, we studied the effect of nitric oxide synthase inhibition on electrical field stimulation-induced relaxation of the sphincter of Oddi in the guinea pig in vitro. After incubation with atropine (1 μM), phentolamine (1 μM) and propranolol (1 μM), histamine (50 μM) and cholecystokinin-octapeptide (25 nM) produced similar increases in sphincter tone. Subsequent field stimulation induced sphincteric relaxation, that was significantly greater when the initial tone had been raised by cholecystokinin (5 Hz, 59 ± 9%; 10 Hz, 79 ± 9%) compared to histamine (5 Hz, 27 ± 3%; 10 Hz, 40 ± 7%). N-ω-Nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME, 100 μM), which competitively inhibits nitric oxide synthase, markedly suppressed this relaxation. The subsequent addition of L-arginine (1 mM), but not D-arginine (1 mM), restored the relaxation. Hexamethonium (100 μM) did not affect the relaxation, but tetrodotoxin (1 μM) completely abolished it. Sodium nitroprusside caused a dose-dependent relaxation of the sphincter (ED50 13 nM), which was unaffected by L-NAME. In conclusion, endogenous nitric oxide synthase products represent a major transmitter of non-adrenergic non-cholinergic relaxation of the sphincter of Oddi in the guinea pig. This relaxation is partially facilitated by cholecystokinin.

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