1 The mechanisms underlying vasodilator eect of nicotine on mesenteric resistance blood vessels and the role of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)-containing (CGRPergic) vasodilator nerves were studied in the rat. 2 Mesenteric vascular beds isolated from Wistar rats were perfused with Krebs solution, and perfusion pressure was measured with a pressure transducer. 3 In preparations with intact endothelium and contracted by perfusion with Krebs solution containing methoxamine, perfusion of nicotine (1 ± 100 mM) for 1 min caused a concentrationdependent vasodilator response without vasoconstriction. 4 The nicotine-induced vasodilation was markedly inhibited by hexamethonium (nicotinic cholinoceptor antagonist, 10 mM) and blocked by guanethidine (adrenergic neuron blocker, 5 mM). 5 Either denervation by cold storage (48C for 72 h) or adrenergic denervation by 6-hydroxydopamine (toxin for adrenergic neurons, 2 mM for 20 min incubation, twice) blocked the nicotine-induced vasodilation. 6 Neither endothelium removal with perfusion of sodium deoxycholate (1.80 mg ml 71 , for 30 s) nor treatment with N o -nitro-L-arginine (nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, 100 mM), atropine (muscarinic cholinoceptor antagonist, 10 nM) or propranolol (b-adrenoceptor antagonist, 100 nM) aected the nicotine-induced vasodilation. 7 In preparations without endothelium, treatment with capsaicin (depleting CGRP-containing sensory nerves, 1 mM) or human CGRP[8 ± 37] (CGRP receptor antagonist, 0.5 mM) markedly inhibited the nicotine-induced vasodilation. 8 These results suggest that, in the mesenteric resistance artery of the rat, nicotine induces vasodilation, which is independent of the function of the endothelium and is involved in activation of CGRPergic nerves. It is also suggested that nicotine stimulates presynaptic nicotinic cholinoceptors on adrenergic nerves to release adrenergic neurotransmitters, which then act on CGRPergic nerves to release endogenous CGRP from the nerve.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.