Aging differentially modifies arterial sensitivity to endothelin-1 and 5-hydroxytryptamine: Studies in dog coronary arteries and rat arterial mesenteric bed

1994 
Abstract The influence of age on vascular reactivity to endothelin-1 (ET-1) and 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) was studied in coronary artery rings from dogs of 9 years of age or younger, and dogs older than 9 years. ET-1 caused concentration-dependent contractions that developed about 100% of the 70 m M KCl-induced tension in the younger dogs; those from older dogs did not generate more than 20%. In contrast, 5-HT developed only about 20% of the KCl-induced tension in rings from young dogs, whereas in the older animals, it developed up to 120% of the KCl tension. No significant difference in the tension developed by 70 m M KCl was noted between both groups of dogs. Mechanical denudation of the endothelial cell layer caused a modest, yet significant, leftward shift of the ET-1 and 5-HT concentration-response curves only in the younger dogs. Nω- Nitro- l -arginine (15 μM ) shifted the ET-1 concentration-response curves to the left in rings from both groups of dogs. Rings precontracted with 20 m M KCl relaxed in a concentration-dependent fashion with acetylcholine; its sensitivity was about threefold less in the older group of dogs. To validate the changes in vascular reactivity with age, a parallel study was performed perfusing the arterial mesenteric bed of rats of 3, 7, and 30 weeks of age. In this experimental model, the efficacy of ET-1 significantly decreased with age and that of 5-HT was significantly increased. The vasomotor reactivity of noradrenaline was modestly affected by aging, whereas the acetylcholine-induced vasorelaxation was significantly reduced with age.
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