We investigated the influence of oxygenation of in vitro lung preparation on the pulmonary vascular reactivity. Small pulmonary vessels isolated from adult male Wistar rats exposed for 4 days to hypoxia (FiO2 = 0.1, group CH) were compared with those of normoxic controls (group N). The bath in the chamber of small vessel myograph was saturated with gas mixture containing either 21 % or 95 % of O2 with 5 % CO2 and we measured the reactions of vessels to acute hypoxic challenge with 0 % O2 or to PGF2α. We did not observe any difference of the contractile responses between both groups when the normoxic conditions were set in the bath. When the bath oxygenation was increased to 95 % O2, the contractions induced by hypoxic challenge and PGF2α decreased in chronically hypoxic rats and did not change in normoxic controls. We hypothesize that reduced reactivity of vessels from hypoxic rats in hyperoxia results from the effect of chronic hypoxia on Ca2+ signaling in the vascular smooth muscle, which is modulated by increased free radical production during the exposure to chronic hypoxia and further hyperoxia., M. Žaloudíková, M. Vízek, J. Herget., and Obsahuje seznam literatury
Chronic hypoxia results in hypoxic pulmonary hypertension characterized by fibrotization and muscularization of the walls of peripheral pulmonary arteries. This vessel remodeling is accompanied by an increase in the amount of lung mast cells (LMC) and the presence of small collagen cleavage products in the vessel walls. We hypothesize that hypoxia activates LMC, which release matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) cleaving collagen and starting increased turnover of connective tissue proteins. This study was designed to determine whether in vitro hypoxia stimulates production of MMPs in rat LMC and increases their collagenolytic activity. The LMC were separated on the Percoll gradient and then were divided into two groups and cultivated for 24 h in 21 % O2 + 5 % CO2 or in 10 % O2 + 5 % CO2. Presence of the rat interstitial tissue collagenase (MMP-13) in LMC was visualized by immunohistological staining and confirmed by Western blot analysis. Total MMPs activity and tryptase activity were measured in both cultivation media and cellular extracts. Exposure to hypoxia in vitro increased the amount of cells positively labeled by anti-MMP-13 antibody as well as activities of all measured enzymes. The results therefore support the concept that LMC are an important source of increased collagenolytic activity in chronic hypoxia., H. Maxová, J. Novotná, L. Vajner, H. Tomášová, R. Vytášek, M. Vízek, L. Bačáková, V. Valoušková, T. Eliášová, J. Herget., and Obsahuje bibliografii a bibliografické odkazy
Photothrombotic model of ischemia (PT) is based on free radical-mediated endothelial dysfunction followed by thrombosis. Free radicals are also involved in hypoxic preconditioning. We tested the sensitivity of PT to preconditioning with hypobaric hypoxia and to pretreatment with melatonin. In adult Wistar rats, after intravenous application of Rose Bengal, a stereo-tactically defined spot on the denuded skull was irradiated by a laser for 9 min. The first experimental group underwent hypobaric hypoxia three days before irradiation. In the second experimental group, melatonin was applied intraperitoneally one hour before irradiation. Three days after irradiation, animals were sacrificed, the brains perfused, and stained with TTC. Ischemic lesions were divided into grades (I, II, III). In the control group (where no manipulation preceded photothrombosis), most animals displayed deep damage involving the striatum (grade III). The group pre-exposed to hypoxia showed similar results. Only 28.57 % of the melatonin pretreated animals exhibited grade III lesions, and in 57.14 % no signs of lesions were detected. Pre-exposure to hypoxia was not protective in our model. Pretreatment with melatonin lead to a significant reduction of the number of large ischemic lesions. This result is probably caused by protection of endothelial cells by melatonin., I. Matějovská, K. Bernášková, D. Krýsl, J. Mareš., and Obsahuje bibliografii a bibliografické odkazy
Important fetal and perinatal pathologies, especially intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR), are thought to stem from placental hypoxia-induced vasoconstriction of the fetoplacental vessels, leading to placental hypoperfusion and thus fetal undernutrition. However, the effects of hypoxia on the fetoplacental vessels have been surprisingly little studied. We review here available experimental data on acute hypoxic fetoplacental vasoconstriction (HFPV) and on chronic hypoxic elevation of fetoplacental vascular resistance. The mechanism of HFPV includes hypoxic inhibition of potassium channels in the plasma membrane of fetoplacental vascular smooth muscle and consequent membrane depolarization that activates voltage gated calcium channels. This in turn causes calcium influx and contractile apparatus activation. The mechanism of chronic hypoxic elevation of fetoplacental vascular resistance is virtually unknown except of signs of the involvement of morphological remodeling., V. Hampl, V. Jakoubek., and Obsahuje seznam literatury