Nitric oxide controls arteriolar tone in the retina of the miniature pig
Experimental evidence indicates that the retinal microcirculation is mainly controlled by factors released from the tissue surrounding the arterioles. This study explores whether nitric oxide (NO), a possible factor, is released in the retina and controls the arteriolar tone. Using a NO microprobe,...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Investigative ophthalmology & visual science 1995-10, Vol.36 (11), p.2228-2237 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Experimental evidence indicates that the retinal microcirculation is mainly controlled by factors released from the tissue surrounding the arterioles. This study explores whether nitric oxide (NO), a possible factor, is released in the retina and controls the arteriolar tone.
Using a NO microprobe, the authors measured [NO] in the preretinal vitreous of miniature pigs as a function of distance from the retinal surface. Additionally, the NO-synthase inhibitor nitro-L-arginine was pressure injected. Finally, the retinal pool size of arginine and its biosynthesis from 14C(U)-glucose were biochemically assessed on retinal tissue and acutely isolated Müller cells.
At the retinal surface, [NO] measured 6 to 9 microM, and, in the vitreous, it fell to zero approximately 180 microns away from the retina. Therefore, NO is degraded faster in the vitreous (65 to 80 microM.minute-1) than in aqueous solution. Light flicker stimulation of the dark-adapted retina induced a reversible increase of [NO] (approximately 1.6 microM). Preretinal juxta-arteriolar microinjections of nitro-L-arginine (0.6 mM) induced a segmental and reversible arteriolar vasoconstriction of 45%; in contrast, intravenous infusion of nitro-L-arginine had no measurable effect on arteriolar diameter. The retinal pool size of arginine was small (< or = 200 microM), but there was an important rate of arginine biosynthesis in Müller cells.
These results strongly suggest that cells in the retina, other than endothelial cells, produce and release NO, which in turn controls the basal dilating arteriolar tone in the inner retina. |
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ISSN: | 0146-0404 1552-5783 |