2000
DOI: 10.1097/00004647-200002000-00011
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Muscarinic—but Not Nicotinic—Acetylcholine Receptors Mediate a Nitric Oxide-Dependent Dilation in Brain Cortical Arterioles: A Possible Role for the M5 Receptor Subtype

Abstract: Increases in cortical cerebral blood flow are induced by stimulation of basal forebrain cholinergic neurons. This response is mediated in part by nitric oxide (NO) and reportedly involves both nicotinic and muscarinic receptors, some of which are possibly located in the vessel wall. In the present study, the vasomotor response(s) elicited by acetylcholine (ACh) on isolated and pressurized bovine and/or human intracortical penetrating arterioles were investigated, and pharmacological characterization of the rec… Show more

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Cited by 114 publications
(86 citation statements)
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“…L-NA elicited a gradual constriction in isolated, perfused bovine and human intracortical penetrating arterioles, indicating the presence of constitutive NO release (Elhusseiny and Hamel, 2000). In isolated rat middle cerebral arteries, blocking the basal release of NO by L-NA or guanylyl cyclase inhibition by ODQ induced vasomotion, which was enhanced and became irregular after UTP administration; the thromboxane receptor antagonist ICI 192,605 attenuated the vasomotion induced by L-NA and UTP, suggesting that the lack of NO in cerebral vessels provokes vulnerability to chaotic vasomotion that is mediated by activation of thromboxane receptors (Lacza et al, 2001).…”
Section: Basal Release Of Nitric Oxidementioning
confidence: 89%
“…L-NA elicited a gradual constriction in isolated, perfused bovine and human intracortical penetrating arterioles, indicating the presence of constitutive NO release (Elhusseiny and Hamel, 2000). In isolated rat middle cerebral arteries, blocking the basal release of NO by L-NA or guanylyl cyclase inhibition by ODQ induced vasomotion, which was enhanced and became irregular after UTP administration; the thromboxane receptor antagonist ICI 192,605 attenuated the vasomotion induced by L-NA and UTP, suggesting that the lack of NO in cerebral vessels provokes vulnerability to chaotic vasomotion that is mediated by activation of thromboxane receptors (Lacza et al, 2001).…”
Section: Basal Release Of Nitric Oxidementioning
confidence: 89%
“…Together with the c-Fos studies, these pharmacologic findings pointed to blockade of ACh receptor-mediated activation of cholinoceptive GABA interneurons contributing to the decreased neurovascular coupling response. This is notwithstanding additional blocking effects of scopolamine on mAChR-activated pyramidal cells (McCormick and Prince, 1986), m5AChR-mediated dilatation of cortical microvessels (Elhusseiny and Hamel, 2000), or astroglial cell responses to cholinergic activation (Seigneur et al, 2006).…”
Section: Acetylcholine and C-aminobutyric Acid As Mediators Of The Nementioning
confidence: 98%
“…Additionally, basal forebrain-induced increase in cortical blood flow is not only sensitive to muscarinic and nicotinic blockade but also to NO synthase inhibition (for review, see Hamel, 2004). NOS interneurons, via muscarinic activation (Moro et al, 1995), may modulate perivascular release of NO, which then either directly dilates microvessels or assists in the relaxing effect of ACh on cortical microarterioles (Elhusseiny and Hamel, 2000;Hamel, 2004). Similarly, the changes in cortical perfusion elicited by dorsal raphe stimulation could involve 5-HT3 receptor-mediated activation of VIP interneurons (Ferezou et al, 2002) as well as other serotonin-responsive interneurons (Foehring et al, 2002) equally contacted by 5-HT terminals (Paspalas and Papadopoulos, 2001; our study).…”
Section: Afferent Inputs To Different Subsets Of Gaba Neurons and Funmentioning
confidence: 99%