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Vol. 289, Issue 1, 398-404, April 1999
Department of Pharmacology, Southern Illinois University, School of
Medicine, Springfield, Illinois
The innervation pattern and the vasomotor response of the potential
transmitters in the porcine pial veins were investigated morphologically and pharmacologically. The porcine pial veins were more
densely innervated by vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP)- and
neuropeptide Y-immunoreactive (I) fibers than were calcitonin
gene-related peptide (CGRP)-I, choline acetyltransferase-I, Substance P
(SP)-I, and NADPH diaphorase fibers. Serotonin (5-HT)-I fibers, which
were not detected in normal control pial veins, were observed in
isolated pial veins after incubation with 5-HT (1 µM). 5-HT-I fibers,
however, were not observed when incubation with 5-HT was performed in
the presence of guanethidine (1 µM), suggesting that 5-HT was taken
up into the sympathetic nerves. In vitro tissue bath studies
demonstrated that porcine pial veins in the presence of active muscle
tone relaxed on applications of exogenous 5-HT, CGRP, SP, VIP, and
sodium nitroprusside, whereas exogenous norepinephrine and neuropeptide
Y induced only constrictions. Transmural nerve stimulation (TNS) did
not elicit any response in pial veins in the absence of active muscle
tone. However, in the presence of active muscle tone, pial veins
relaxed exclusively on TNS. This tetrodotoxin-sensitive relaxation was
not affected by receptor antagonists for VIP, CGRP, 5-HT, or SP but was
blocked by L-glutamine (1 mM) and abolished by
N
-nitro-L-arginine (10 µM)
and N
-nitro-L-arginine methyl
ester (10 µM). The inhibition by L-glutamine, N
-nitro-L-arginine, and
N
-nitro-L-arginine methyl
ester was reversed by L-arginine and L-citrulline but not by their D-enantiomers.
These results demonstrate that the vasomotor effect of all potential
transmitters except 5-HT in the pial veins examined resembles that in
cerebral arteries. Although porcine pial veins receive vasodilator and
constrictor nerves, a lack of constriction on TNS suggests that the
dilator nerves that release nitric oxide may play a predominant role in regulating porcine pial venous tone.
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