抄録
The relaxant effects of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) on the 3rd branches of renal arteries obtained from stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRSP), and Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY) were investigated in vitro. CGRP elicited concentration-dependent relaxation, and the relaxant response was not affected by the mechanical removal of endothelium in either SHRSP or WKY. The CGRP-induced relaxant response was markedly greater in SHRSP than in WKY, whereas there was no significant difference in acetylcholine-induced relaxation, which was endothelium-dependent, between the two groups. Additionally, significantly enhanced reactivity to CGRP was also shown in sponta-neously hypertensive rats compared to WKY; however, this reactivity was less than that observed in SHRSP.There were also no significant differences between WKY and SHRSP in the relaxation induced by forskolin, dibutyryl cyclic AMP, and 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX). CGRP-induced relaxation was significantly potentiated in similar manner by the pretreatment with IBMX in both WKY and SHRSP.Incubation with glibenclamide (10-6 M) had no effect on CGRP-induced relaxation in either group, the WKY or the SHRSP. These results suggest that CGRP produces endothelium-independent relaxation in the small renal arteries in the rat, and that the increased CGRP-induced relaxant response found in SHRSP may not be associated with the altered vasodilation mediated by cyclic AMP, or with functional changes in ATP-sensitive potassium channels.