Estrogen-induced relaxation in bovine coronary arteries in vitro: evidence for a new mechanism.

Publication/Presentation Date

1-1-2000

Abstract

Numerous studies have shown estrogen to be vasoactive in various circulations. Our objective was to determine the effect of estrogen on isolated bovine coronary arteries and the possible mechanism. Bovine coronary arteries, precontracted with thromboxane mimetic U46619 were given doses (0.01-30 microM) of 17B-estradiol in the presence and absence of endothelium and these inhibitors: 10 microM indomethacin (cyclooxygenase inhibitor), 10 microM methylene blue (inhibits soluble guanylate cyclase), 100 microM nitro-L-arginine (inhibits nitric oxide synthesis), 100 microM isobutylmethylxanthine (phosphodiesterase inhibitor) and 30 microM mifepristone (Ru38486 steroid receptor antagonist). Our results indicated that, estrogen, in the highest concentration used (30 microM), elicited an acute dose-dependent relaxation of bovine coronary arteries from 4%-68% (n = 15). No major difference in relaxation was observed between coronary arteries with or without endothelium, indicating that the mechanism was endothelium-independent. Indomethacin, nitro-L-arginine and methylene blue did not alter this relaxation, suggesting that relaxant prostaglandins, l-arginine products and cGMP are not involved (n = 11-16), isobutylmethylxanthine enhanced relaxation from 20%-40% (n = 15 p < 0.01), suggests a role for cAMP. Furthermore, mifepristone reduced the relaxation by more than 50% (n = 15 p < 0.05) consistent with the role for estrogen receptors. Based on our study, estrogen causes a dose-dependent relaxation of bovine coronary arteries that does not appear to utilize endothelium, prostaglandins, cGMP or arginine products, but may involve cAMP and estrogen receptors. This study may help justify treating myocardial ischemia with estrogen.

Volume

96

Issue

6

First Page

617

Last Page

621

ISSN

0043-3284

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences | Pediatrics

PubMedID

11194093

Department(s)

Department of Pediatrics

Document Type

Article

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