The question was addressed whether short-term (4 hour) NO deficiency, inducing an increase in blood pressure in anaesthetized dogs, does influence proteosynthesis in the myocardium and coronary arteries. A potentially positive answer was to be followed by the study of the supporting role of ornithine decarboxylase for the polyamines pathway. NG-nitro-L-arginine-methyl ester (L-NAME) (50 mg/kg per hour) was administered i.v. to inhibit NO synthase. After the first L-NAME dose diastolic blood pressure increased from 131.8 ±2.0 to 149.4 ±3.9 mm Hg (p< 0.001) and was maintained at about this level till the end of the experiment. Systolic blood pressure only increased after the first dose (from 150.8 ±1.1 to 175.0 ±5.8 mm Hg, p<0.01), returning thereafter to the control level. Similarly, the heart rate declined only after the first dose (from 190.4±5.3 to 147.6±4.5 beats/min, p<0.01). Total RNA concentrations increased in the left cardiac ventricle (LV), the left anterior descending coronary artery (LADCA) and left circumflex coronary artery (LCCA) by 15.9 ±0.7, 29.7 ±1.3 and 17.6 ±1.0%, p<0.05, respectively. The same applied to [14C]leucine incorporation (by 86.5 ±5.0, 33.5 ±2.6, 29.3±4.1 %, p<0.05, respectively). The above parameters indicated an increase of proteosynthesis in the LV myocardium and both coronary arteries LADCA and LCCA after short-term NO deficiency. Surprisingly, the ornithine decarboxylase activity in the LV myocardium decreased significantly by 40.2± 1.6 % (p<0.01) but the changes were not significant in the coronary arteries. This unexpected finding makes the role of polyamines in increasing proteosynthesis during a pressure overload due to NO deficiency questionable.
Angiogenesis is known to be triggered by various stimuli including hypertension. It was previously found that NO-deficient hypertension is accompanied by structural remodeling of the cardiac muscle and large coronary arteries. This study was aimed to examine the qualitative subcellular alterations of capillaries in the heart of the rats treated with L-NAME (40 mg/kg/day for 4 weeks). The results showed that long-lasting inhibition of NO production induced an apparent activation of fibroblast function. This was associated with enhancement of fibrozation as well as with the induction of angiogenesis. Accordingly, fibroblasts were frequently located in the vicinity of capillary pericytes, which was followed by their detachment and migration. Moreover, besides inactive or even injured capillaries, the other ones exhibited extensive proteosynthetic activity linked to capillary growth, proliferation and migration of endothelial cells. The results strongly indicate enhanced triggering of the angiogenesis in L-NAME-induced NO-deficient hypertension., Ľ. Okruhlicová, N. Tribulová, I. Bernátová, O. Pecháňová., and Obsahuje bibliografii