Administration of tumor necrosis factor-alpha in vivo depresses endothelium-dependent relaxation

P Wang, ZF Ba, IH Chaudry - American Journal of …, 1994 - journals.physiology.org
American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology, 1994journals.physiology.org
Although depressed endothelium-dependent relaxation occurs during early sepsis, the
precise mechanism responsible for this remains unknown. Because the elevated levels of
plasma tumor necrosis factor (TNF) play a major role in the pathophysiology of sepsis, we
investigated whether TNF-alpha administration alters endothelium-dependent relaxation. To
study this, recombinant TNF-alpha (1.2 x 10 (7) U/mg) was infused intravenously (0.25
mg/kg body wt) for 0.5 h in normal rats, and mean arterial pressure was monitored. At 1 h …
Although depressed endothelium-dependent relaxation occurs during early sepsis, the precise mechanism responsible for this remains unknown. Because the elevated levels of plasma tumor necrosis factor (TNF) play a major role in the pathophysiology of sepsis, we investigated whether TNF-alpha administration alters endothelium-dependent relaxation. To study this, recombinant TNF-alpha (1.2 x 10(7) U/mg) was infused intravenously (0.25 mg/kg body wt) for 0.5 h in normal rats, and mean arterial pressure was monitored. At 1 h after the completion of TNF-alpha or vehicle infusion, the aorta and a pulmonary artery were isolated, cut into 2.5-mm rings, and placed in organ chambers. Norepinephrine (2 x 10(-7) M) was applied to achieve near-maximal contraction, and dose responses for an endothelium-dependent vasodilator, acetylcholine, and an endothelium-independent vasodilator, nitroglycerine, were determined. In additional studies, aortic rings from normal animals were incubated with TNF-alpha for 2 h in vitro, and vascular reactivity was determined. The results indicate that TNF-alpha administration significantly reduced acetylcholine-induced vascular relaxation both in vivo and in vitro. Such a reduction was sustained at least 80 min after the completion of 2-h incubation with TNF-alpha. In contrast, TNF did not alter nitroglycerine-induced vascular relaxation. Thus TNF-alpha depresses endothelium-dependent relaxation in vitro as well as in vivo. Because TNF-alpha infusion increases plasma TNF levels without decreasing mean arterial pressure, the depressed endothelium-dependent relaxation observed during early sepsis may be due to the elevated circulating levels of TNF.
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