Elsevier

Neuroscience Letters

Volume 424, Issue 2, 7 September 2007, Pages 89-93
Neuroscience Letters

Nitric oxide synthase inhibition in rostral ventrolateral medulla attenuates pressor response to psychological stress in rabbits

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neulet.2007.07.007Get rights and content

Abstract

Nitric oxide (NO) has been critically implicated in the central regulation of autonomic function. We recently found, however, that acute (up to 30 min) blockade of NO synthase (NOS) in the rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM) inhibited sympathetic baroreflex transmission, without altering the cardiovascular response to psychological (air-jet) stress in rabbits. In the present study, we examined the effect of the later phase (1–3 h) of NOS inhibition in the RVLM on the pressor and sympathetic responses to air-jet stress in conscious rabbits. Air-jet evoked a sustained increase in blood pressure (+14 ± 2 mmHg), heart rate (+37 ± 9 beats/min) and renal sympathetic nerve activity (+52 ± 8%). Bilateral microinjection of a NOS inhibitor l-NAME (10 nmol) into RVLM did not affect resting parameters or stress responses during the first 30 min after injection. Conversely, in the later phase of NOS inhibition, the pressor, tachycardic and renal sympathetic responses to air-jet stress were reversibly attenuated by 48–72%. Microinjection of l-NAME outside the RVLM did not change stress responses. Microinjection of glutamate (3 nmol) into the RVLM induced similar pressor effects before and after l-NAME (+30 ± 6 mmHg and +26 ± 6 mmHg, respectively). Microinjection of d-NAME altered neither stress responses nor pressor response to glutamate. These results suggest that NOS inhibition in the RVLM has a dual effect on the autonomic response to psychological stress. In the early phase, NOS inhibition has little impact on this response. However, in the later phase, NOS inhibition attenuates the stress response, perhaps via indirect mechanisms such as altering the local redox state.

Section snippets

Acknowledgments

This work was in part supported by National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia Research Grant No. 225118. D.M. is a Fellow of the High Blood Pressure Research Foundation of Australia.

References (33)

  • F. Sanchez et al.

    Swim stress enhances the NADPH-diaphorase histochemical staining in the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus

    Brain Res.

    (1999)
  • J.J. Wang et al.

    Evidence that NMDA receptors mediate the responses of putative RVLM presympathetic neurons to vagal afferent stimulation in rats

    J. Auton. Nerv. Syst.

    (1998)
  • S. Amir et al.

    Blockers of nitric oxide synthase inhibit stress activation of c-fos expression in neurons of the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus in the rat

    Neuroscience

    (1997)
  • A. Bierhaus et al.

    A mechanism converting psychosocial stress into mononuclear cell activation

    Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A.

    (2003)
  • J.Y. Chan et al.

    Transcriptional upregulation of nitric oxide synthase II by nuclear factor-kappaB at rostral ventrolateral medulla in mevinphos intoxication model of brain stem death

    J. Physiol.

    (2007)
  • R.A.L. Dampney

    Functional organization of central pathways regulating the cardiovascular system

    Physiol. Rev.

    (1994)
  • Cited by (0)

    View full text