Cyclosporin A (CyA) is an efficient immunosuppressive agent, which, however, causes functional and structural alterations in endothelial cells. The aim of the present study was to examine the mechanisms of CyA-induced endothelial disfunction. CyA administration (Wistar rats, 25 mg/kg per day for 15 days) induced a significant inhibition of endothelium-dependent relaxation to acetylcholine on isolated femoral arteries. No changes with CyA were detected in the relaxation response to the endothelium-independent agent (sodium nitroprusside) or the endothelium-dependent receptor-independent agent (Ca2+ ionophore). The addition of L-arginine (10(-5) mol/L) shifted to the left the acetylcholine-mediated vasorelaxing response in CyA-treated segments, an effect that was accompanied by a marked increase of cGMP. 45Ca2+ uptake was higher in CyA-treated segments with respect to control segments but became normalized after incubation with L-arginine or sodium nitroprusside. De-endothelialization or incubation with the L-arginine competitive analogue N omega-nitro-L-arginine (NwNLA) increased 45Ca2+ uptake in control segments but not in CyA-treated segments. In conclusion, in isolated rat arteries, chronic CyA therapy affects endothelial function by uncoupling the acetylcholine-mediated relaxation and interfering with an endothelium-mediated pathway that regulates 45Ca2+ uptake by a mechanism reversed by an L-arginine-dependent cGMP generation.
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