Back to Search Start Over

Systemic site of action for pressor effect of angiotensin II injected into the fourth cerebral ventricle of rats?

Authors :
João Bosco Pesquero
Charles Julian Lindsey
Antonio C.M. Paiva
Antonio J. Merjan
Debora R. Fior-Chadi
Yunguo Yu
Source :
Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology. 80:431-439
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
Canadian Science Publishing, 2002.

Abstract

Angiotensin II (ANG II) causes a systemic pressor effect when injected into the cerebral ventricles. In the rat fourth ventricle, the effective doses for the ANG II pressor effect are over 100 times larger than in the systemic circulation. Considering the discrepancy of doses, the possibility that ANG II may reach the systemic circulation and promote pressor effects, following injection into the fourth ventricle, was investigated. The effects on blood pressure of different vasoactive peptides that produce pressor responses when injected into the central nervous system were compared. Dose–response curves were obtained for intravenous or fourth cerebroventricular injections of ANG II, lysyl-vasopressin (LVP), bradykinin (BK), or endothelin-1 (ET-1). The ED50 ratios for intracerebroventricular/intraveneous injections were 110 for ANG II, 109 for LVP, 0.01 for BK, and approximately 0.4 for ET-1. In cross-circulation preparations, pressor responses occurred in the donor rat following injection into the fourth cerebral ventricle of the recipient animal, showing that effective doses of ANG II, administered to the fourth cerebral, reach the systemic circulation. The same results were obtained for the microinjection of 4 nmol of LVP into the fourth cerebral ventricle of recipient animals. High-performance reverse-phase liquid chromatography analyses of arterial blood showed that approximately 1% of the [125I]ANG II injected into the fourth cerebral ventricle may be recovered from the systemic circulation a few seconds after the microinjection. The systemic administration of the ANG II receptor antagonist losartan blocked the response to ANG II injected into the fourth ventricle whereas antagonist administration in the same ventricle did not. Angiotensin injections into the lateral ventricle produced pressor responses that were reduced by antagonist administration to the same ventricle but not by systemic administration of the antagonist. The data suggest that the pressor effect resulting from ANG II or LVP injections into the fourth cerebral ventricle may be due to the action of this peptide in the systemic circulation. On the other hand, the pressor effect due to ANG II microinjection into the lateral ventricle apparently results from the direct stimulation of central periventricular structures.Key words: angiotensin, cerebral ventricles, pressor effect, systemic action.

Details

ISSN :
12057541 and 00084212
Volume :
80
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....51c76febc0e82bdaa35409ab7d8049aa
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1139/y02-062