Methods: Ultrasonic transit time flow probes were placed around the left anterior descending (LAD) artery in the anesthetized, open-chest pig (n=6). A catheter was placed into the proximal LAD. Intracoronary arterial bolus injections of IMD, adrenomedullin (hADM13-52) and calcitonin gene related peptide (CGRP) (1, 3, 10 μg) were performed and the changes in the velocity of coronary blood flows were continuously recorded.
Results: Intracoronary artery bolus injections of IMD, hADM13-52 and CGRP increased coronary blood flow in a dose-dependent manner. At the studied doses, IMD was more potent than CGRP and hADM13-52 and did not alter systemic arterial pressure, cardiac output and cardiac index. Intracoronary artery injection of NG-Nitro-Larginine- methyl ester (L-NAME) significantly decreased the coronary vasodilator response (CVR) to IMD.
Conclusion: The present data suggest that IMD possesses marked vasodilator activity in the pig coronary vascular bed. The present data further suggest that IMD acts on a receptor in the coronary vascular bed that is coupled to endothelial nitric oxide release. The degree of the CVR to IMD may serve as functional marker for the integrity of endothelial cells in resistance segments of the coronary circulation
Systemic and regional vascular responses to IMD have been reported in the conscious and anesthetized mouse and rat.[6,10-12] Intracerebrovascular administration of IMD increases systemic arterial pressure (SAP), whereas intravenous (i.v) administration of IMD decreases SAP.[6,10,13] Intrarenal infusion of IMD increases renal blood flow and decreases renal vascular resistance in vivo[7,9] whereas IMD does not relax porcine renal arterial conductance vessels. Moreover, IMD reduces myocardial injury in the ischemia-reperfused rat heart in vitro and relaxes isolated porcine coronary arterial rings.[14-16] Although studied in isolated porcine coronary artery (in vitro), the effects of IMD on the coronary vascular bed in vivo are unknown.
The purpose of the present study was undertaken to investigate the effects of IMD, an endogenous agonist for calcitonin-like calcitonin receptors (CRLR), on the pig coronary hemodynamics in vivo.
Materials
NG-Nitro-L-arginine-methyl ester (L-NAME) was
obtained from Sigma Chemical Co (St. Luis, MO, USA).
Intermedin, hADM13-52, and CGRP were purchased
from Bachem (Torrance, CA, USA). Peptides were
initially dissolved in distilled water to make a stock
solution and were subsequently with normal saline to
working solution on the day of use.
Open-chest pig experiment protocol
Porcine subjects of both sexes (n=6), mean weights
62±16 kg (ranging from 49-83) were premedicated with
ketamine (20 mg/kg intramuscularly; im), midazolam
(0.1 mg/kg im), and atropine (0.25 mg im) and placed
in the supine position. Anesthesia was induced with
midazolam, 0.1 mg/kg, plus sufentanil, 0.5 μg/kg, and
was maintained with intravenous infusions of sufentanil,
0.5 μg/kg/h, and midazolam, 0.15 mg/kg/h.
Muscle paralysis was achieved with vecuronium bromide
(1 mg/kg), and was maintained with an infusion of
vecuronium at 2 mg/kg/h. The lungs were mechanically
ventilated via a No. 9 cuffed endotracheal tube (Kendall
Curity Tracheal Tube, Tyco Healthcare, Switzerland)
with a Servo ventilator 900 C (Siemens, Elema, Sweden)
initially set to deliver forced inspiratory oxygen (FiO2)
of 0.4, tidal volume between 12 and 15 mL/kg, and
respiratory rate adjusted to maintain partial pressure of
carbon dioxide in arterial blood (PaCO2) in the range
of 35 to 40 mmHg. Positive end-expiratory pressure of
5 cmH2O was used to prevent atelectasis. Sevoflurane
was administered with a vaporizer adapted to the
ventilator. Inspired and expired fractions of oxygen,
carbon dioxide, and sevoflurane were measured with an
infrared spectrophotometer (Ultima II; Datex, Helsinki,
Finland; Fig. 1a-c).
Sodium chloride (0.9% at 10 mL/kg/h) was infused into the left internal jugular vein during surgery. Temperature was maintained at 38 °C to 39 °C with an electrical heating pad. An invasive arterial pressure monitoring line catheter was placed into the right common iliac artery for systemic arterial blood pressure and arterial blood sampling. A balloon-tipped flow-directed pulmonary artery catheter (Swan Ganz CCO/VIP; Edwards Lifesciences LLC, Irvine, CA, USA) was inserted through the right internal jugular vein and positioned under pressure control in a branch of the pulmonary artery for measurement of mean pulmonary arterial pressure (MPAP), central venous pressure (CVP), pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP), cardiac output (CO), cardiac index (CI), left ventricle end diastolic pressure (LVEDP), and systemic vascular resistance (SVR) index.
After exposure with a midline sternotomy, the heart was suspended in a pericardial cradle. Ultrasonic transit time flow probes were placed around the distal part the left anterior descending (LAD) artery. A catheter was placed into the proximal part of the LAD. Intracoronary arterial bolus (IAB) injections of IMD (1, 3, 10 μg), hADM13-52 and CGRP were performed and change in coronary blood flows continuously measured and recorded. Changes in the coronary blood flows were measured by ultrasonic flow device (Transonic systems Inc., NY, USA) as mL/min.
Between each injection, time was allowed to reestablish baseline coronary artery blood flow. In each pig, IMD, hADM13-52, and CGRP dosages were bolus injected in random sequence into the LAD coronary artery before and after intracoronary artery infusion of L-NAME.
Changes were recorded by a camcorder continuously during the whole experiment period. After the experimental period data were extracted from the recorded DVDs.
Statistical analysis
The relaxant responses were expressed as a percentage
of relaxation. Results are expressed as mean ± SEM and
n represents the number of animals. Data were analyzed
by one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) followed by
Student-Newman-Keuls post hoc test. A p-value of less
than 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
In order to determine if the coronary vasodilator response to IMD, hADM13-52 and CGRP is mediated by nitric oxide (NO), the effects of L-NAME on the coronary vascular responses to IMD, hADM13-52, and CGRP were investigated in additional series of experiments in the same animals and results of these studies are illustrated in figures 1a-c. When compared to the coronary vasodilator responses to IMD in control experiments, increases in coronary flow in response to intracoronary injection of IMD after premedication with L-NAME were significantly reduced (p<0.05; Fig 1a). L-NAME pretreatment also inhibited the increase in coronary blood flow in response to acetylcholine indicating L-NAME inhibited receptor dependent release of NO in the coronary artery.
Jia et al.[22] suggested that the intermedin receptor system was up-regulated in isoproterenol-induced myocardial ischemic injury and IMD1-53 might play a pivotal cardioprotective role in such injury. Dong et al.[20] suggested that IMD acutely augments cardiomyocyte contractile function through, at least in part, a protein kinase C- and protein kinase A-dependent mechanism. Pan et al.[23] showed that perfusion of isolated rat hearts in vitro with IMD8-47 (10(-8) and 10(-7) mol/L) resulted in lower left ventricle systolic pressure (LVSP), by 40 and 56% (p<0.01); lower +LVdp/dt (max), by 33 and 47% (p<0.01); lower -LVdp/dt (max), by 25 and 39% (p<0.01); but higher coronary perfusion flow, by 25% (p<0.05) and 33% (p<0.01), respectively, than controls. In this study although they perfused the rat hearts intravenously, they indicated that IMD resulted higher coronary perfusion flows. From this point of view, we can indicate that this is the first in vivo study demonstrating the effects of IMD on coronary vascular bed through direct injection. The present study suggests that all given peptides increased the coronary blood flow in a dose-dependent manner, but IMD caused the most potent increase in coronary blood flow.
In conclusion, as a conclusion, this study suggests that IMD possesses marked vasodilator activity in the pig coronary vascular bed. Furthermore the present data suggests the CVR to IMD in the pig is mediated by release of nitric oxide from endothelial CRLR. The degree of the CVR to IMD may serve as functional marker for the integrity of endothelial cells in resistance segments of the coronary circulation.
Acknowledgement
We want to thank anesthesia technicians Mr. Haluk
Armutcu and Mr. Mustafa Uçar for their valuable contribution
during the experimental period.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect
to the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
This study was supported by Gulhane Military Academy
of Medicine (Project number: AR-2006-20).
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