LOSS OF SELECTIVE ENDOTHELIAL-CELL VASOACTIVE FUNCTIONS CAUSED BY HYPERCHOLESTEROLEMIA IN PIG CORONARY-ARTERIES

被引:281
作者
COHEN, RA
ZITNAY, KM
HAUDENSCHILD, CC
CUNNINGHAM, LD
机构
[1] BOSTON UNIV, MED CTR, ROBERT DAWSON EVANS DEPT CLIN RES, BOSTON, MA 02215 USA
[2] BOSTON UNIV, MED CTR, MALLORY INST PATHOL, BOSTON, MA 02215 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1161/01.RES.63.5.903
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
The influence of hypercholesterolemia on the reactivity of coronary arteries was investigated after feeding a high-cholesterol diet to pigs for 9 weeks. After this duration of hypercholesterolemia, the fatty or intimal proliferative changes of atherosclerosis were not yet evident in the coronary arteries by light or electron microscopy. Changes in isometric tension were compared in isolated ring segments of coronary arteries from normal and hypercholesterolemic animals. The endothelium failed to inhibit contractions caused by 5-hydroxytryptamine in coronary arteries from hypercholesterolemic animals, but it did so in normal vessels. In contracted arteries, endothelium-dependent relaxations caused by 5-hydroxytryptamine and substance P were reduced by hypercholesterolemia. In contrast, endothelium-dependent relaxations mediated by norepinephrine acting at .alpha.2-adrenoceptors and those caused by the calcium ionophore A23187 were unaffected. Endothelium-independent .beta.-adrenergic relaxations caused by norepinephrine, as well as those caused by nitroprusside, and papaverine also were unaffected by hypercholesterolemia. The loss of selective endothelial cell receptor-mediated relaxation suggests that it is not the ability of the coronary artery endothelium to elaborate vasodilators, but the initiation of the coronary artery endothelial cell response to 5-hydroxytryptamine and substance P that is affected by hypercholesterolemia. Thus, during hypercholesterolemia, selective endothelial cell dysfunction giving rise to abnormal coronary artery reactivity precedes the onset of coronary artery atherosclerosis.
引用
收藏
页码:903 / 910
页数:8
相关论文
共 28 条
  • [1] LOW-DENSITY LIPOPROTEINS INHIBIT ENDOTHELIUM-DEPENDENT RELAXATION IN RABBIT AORTA
    ANDREWS, HE
    BRUCKDORFER, KR
    DUNN, RC
    JACOBS, M
    [J]. NATURE, 1987, 327 (6119) : 237 - 239
  • [2] ALPHA-2-ADRENOCEPTORS AND ENDOTHELIUM-DEPENDENT RELAXATION IN CANINE LARGE ARTERIES
    ANGUS, JA
    COCKS, TM
    SATOH, K
    [J]. BRITISH JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY, 1986, 88 (04) : 767 - 777
  • [3] CHANGES IN THE LEVELS OF INOSITOL PHOSPHATES AFTER AGONIST-DEPENDENT HYDROLYSIS OF MEMBRANE PHOSPHOINOSITIDES
    BERRIDGE, MJ
    DAWSON, RMC
    DOWNES, CP
    HESLOP, JP
    IRVINE, RF
    [J]. BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL, 1983, 212 (02) : 473 - 482
  • [4] LOW-DENSITY LIPOPROTEIN CAUSES GENERAL CELLULAR ACTIVATION WITH INCREASED PHOSPHATIDYLINOSITOL TURNOVER AND LIPOPROTEIN CATABOLISM
    BLOCK, LH
    KNORR, M
    VOGT, E
    LOCHER, R
    VETTER, W
    GROSCURTH, P
    QIAO, BY
    POMETTA, D
    JAMES, R
    REGENASS, M
    PLETSCHER, A
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1988, 85 (03) : 885 - 889
  • [5] IMPAIRED MUSCARINIC ENDOTHELIUM-DEPENDENT RELAXATION AND CYCLIC GUANOSINE 5'-MONOPHOSPHATE FORMATION IN ATHEROSCLEROTIC HUMAN CORONARY-ARTERY AND RABBIT AORTA
    BOSSALLER, C
    HABIB, GB
    YAMAMOTO, H
    WILLIAMS, C
    WELLS, S
    HENRY, PD
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION, 1987, 79 (01) : 170 - 174
  • [6] ENDOTHELIUM-DEPENDENT RELAXATION OF CORONARY-ARTERIES BY NORADRENALINE AND SEROTONIN
    COCKS, TM
    ANGUS, JA
    [J]. NATURE, 1983, 305 (5935) : 627 - 630
  • [7] ENDOTHELIUM AND ASYMMETRICAL RESPONSES OF THE CORONARY ARTERIAL-WALL
    COHEN, RA
    SHEPHERD, JT
    VANHOUTTE, PM
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, 1984, 247 (03): : H403 - H408
  • [8] COHEN RA, 1983, AM J PHYSIOL, V245, P1077
  • [9] COHEN RA, 1988, J PHARMACOL EXP THER, V244, P550
  • [10] BIOCHEMICAL-CHARACTERIZATION OF SEROTONIN STIMULATED PHOSPHOINOSITIDE TURNOVER
    CONN, PJ
    SANDERSBUSH, E
    [J]. LIFE SCIENCES, 1986, 38 (07) : 663 - 669