Teaching practicals for receptor physiology/pharmacology in medical and veterinary schools have involved the use of in vitro experiments using tissues from laboratory animals, which have been killed for isolated vascular strip or ring preparations. However, the use of scavenged tissues has been advocated to reduce animal use. Utilising discarded tissues from routine surgical procedures, such as canine neutering, has not previously been investigated. Canine testicular and uterine tissues (discarded tissues) were obtained from routine neutering procedures performed by the veterinary team at a local animal neutering clinic for stray dogs. Rings of uterine and testicular artery were dissected and mounted on a Mulvany-Halpern wire myograph in order to characterize the adrenergic and serotonergic receptors mediating vasoconstriction. Cumulative contractile concentration-response curves were constructed for the alpha adrenoceptor agonists epinephrine (α 1 and α 2 receptors), phenylephrine (α 1 selective) and UK14304 (α 2 selective). Pre-treatment with the α 1 -selective antagonist, prazosin, was also investigated. The response to serotonin (5-HT) receptor agonists were also investigated, including 5-HT (acting at both 5-HT 1 and 5-HT 2 receptors), 5carboxamidotryptamine (5-CT; 5-HT 1 selective) and α-methyl 5-HT (5-HT 2 selective). A contractile response was observed in both canine uterine and testicular arteries to epinephrine and phenylephrine, and prazosin caused a dose-dependent parallel rightward shift in the phenylephrine dose-response curve (pA 2 values of 7.97 and 8.39, respectively). UK14304 caused a contractile response in canine testicular arteries but very little appreciable contractile response in uterine arteries. The maximum responses produced by the uterine arteries to 5-HT was significantly lower than those of the testicular arteries. In the testicular artery, the 5-HT 2 receptor selective agonist, α-methyl 5-HT, produced a similar contractile response to 5-HT but the administration of 5-CT failed to produce a response in either the testicular or uterine artery segments. These results validate the use of discarded tissue from routine canine neutering procedures as a useful source of vascular tissue for
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