The purpose from this study was to investigate the consequences of sensory neurocompensation to carotid balloon injury in diabetic rats on angiotensin II-induced contraction and basal blood flow in contralateral carotid. Concentration-response curves for angiotensin II and blood flow were obtained in contralateral carotid from non-treated or capsaicin-treated streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats that underwent carotid balloon injury. Diabetes increased angiotensin II-induced contraction and impaired the blood flow in non-operated rat carotid. In diabetic rats, balloon injury led to neointima formation, which reduced the blood flow in ipsilateral carotid. Carotid balloon injury in diabetic rats reduced angiotensin II-induced contraction and restored the blood flow in contralateral carotid when compared to diabetic non-operated rat carotid. Capsaicin inhibited the effects evoked by carotid balloon injury on diabetic rat contralateral carotid. Endothelium removal, PEG-catalase (hydrogen peroxide scavenger) or l-NPA (neuronal nitric oxide synthase, nNOS, inhibitor) increased angiotensin II-induced contraction in contralateral carotid from diabetic operated rats to the levels observed in diabetic non-operated rat carotid. Our findings suggest that carotid balloon injury in diabetic rats elicits a neurocompensation that attenuates the diabetic hyperreactivity to angiotensin II in contralateral carotid by a sensory nerves-dependent mechanism mediated by hydrogen peroxide derived from endothelial nNOS. This sensory mechanism also restored the blood flow in this vessel, compensating the impaired blood flow in diabetic rat ipsilateral carotid. Thus, our major conclusions are that Diabetes confers a vasoprotective significance to the neurocompensation to carotid balloon injury in preventing further damage at carotid cerebral irrigation after angioplasty in diabetic subjects.
We hypothesized that endothelial AT1-activated NAD(P)H oxidase-driven generation of reactive oxygen species during type I-diabetes impairs carotid ACE2-angiotensin-(1–7)-Mas axis functionality, which accounts for the impaired carotid flow in diabetic rats. We also hypothesized that angiotensin-(1–7) chronic treatment of diabetic rats restores carotid ACE2-angiotensin-(1–7)-Mas axis functionality and carotid flow. Relaxant curves for angiotensin II or angiotensin-(1–7) were obtained in carotid from streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. Superoxide or hydrogen peroxide levels were measured by flow cytometry in carotid endothelial cells. Carotid flow was also determined. We found that endothelial AT1-activated NAD(P)H oxidase-driven generation of superoxide and hydrogen peroxide in diabetic rat carotid impairs ACE2-angiotensin-(1–7)-Mas axis functionality, which reduces carotid flow. In this mechanism, hydrogen peroxide derived from superoxide dismutation inhibits ACE2 activity in generating angiotensin-(1–7) seemingly by activating I
Cl,SWELL, while superoxide inhibits the nitrergic Mas-mediated vasorelaxation evoked by angiotensin-(1–7). Angiotensin-(1–7) treatment of diabetic rats restored carotid ACE2-angiotensin-(1–7)-Mas axis functionality by triggering a positive feedback played by endothelial Mas receptors, that blunts endothelial AT1-activated NAD(P)H oxidase-driven generation of reactive oxygen species. Mas-mediated antioxidant effects also restored diabetic rat carotid flow, pointing to the contribution of ACE2-angiotensin-(1–7)-Mas axis in maintaining carotid flow.
The major new finding from this study is that HHcy induced a marked increase in PE-induced contraction in rat corpus cavernosum by a mechanism that involves increased O2(-) generation and it could play a role in the pathogenesis of erectile dysfunction associated with HHcy.
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