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  • Vasodilation of swimbladder vessels in the european eel (Anguilla anguilla) induced by vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, nitric oxide, adenosine and protons

Vasodilation of swimbladder vessels in the european eel (Anguilla anguilla) induced by vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, nitric oxide, adenosine and protons

The Journal of experimental biology (1999-03-23)
Schwerte, Holmgren, Pelster
ABSTRACT

The effects of &bgr;-adrenergic stimulation, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), adenosine, the nitric oxide (NO)-releasing agent sodium nitroprusside and of metabolic end-products of gas gland cell metabolism on swimbladder blood flow were investigated using saline- or blood-perfused swimbladder preparations of the freshwater European eel Anguilla anguilla. While &bgr;-adrenergic vasodilation was not detectable, a bolus injection of adenosine (100 microl, 10(-)7 mol l-1) and application of VIP (10(-)7 mol kg-1) caused a significant decrease in perfusion pressure in saline-perfused swimbladder preparations. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed the presence of VIP-immunoreactive nerve fibres in the swimbladder artery and in the swimbladder vein (seawater-adapted eels were used for immunohistochemical studies). Application of sodium nitroprusside also elicited a small, but significant, decrease in perfusion pressure in saline-perfused swimbladder preparations, while preincubation of swimbladder tissue with N(&ohgr;)nitro-l-arginine, a non-selective inhibitor of nitric oxide synthase, significantly enhanced the flow-induced increase in perfusion pressure. Lactate, the major metabolic end-product of gas gland cell metabolism, had no effect on perfusion pressure. In contrast, an increase in proton concentration in both saline- and blood-perfused preparations induced a vasodilation, as indicated by a significant decrease in perfusion pressure. The results demonstrate that VIP, NO, adenosine and protons may induce a vasodilation of swimbladder blood vessels. None of these effects, however, compares in time span with the previously described immediate, short-lasting vasodilation of swimbladder vessels elicited by pulse stimulation of the vagus nerve.