Champion H C, Bivalacqua T J, Zadina J E, Kastin A J, Kadowitz P J
Department of Pharmacology, Tulane University School of Medicine, New Orleans, Louisiana 70112, USA.
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 1999;897:165-72. doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1999.tb07888.x.
The endomorphin peptides, endogenous ligands for the mu-opioid receptor, and nociceptin (orphanin FQ; OFQ), an endogenous ligand for the ORL1 receptor, have substantial vasodilator activity in the rat. The roles of nitric oxide, vasodilator prostaglandins, and the opening of K+ATP channels in mediating vasodilator responses to these novel agonists were investigated in the hindquarters vascular bed of the rat. Under constant-flow conditions, injections of the mu-selective agonists, endomorphin 1 and 2, PL017 ([N-MePhe3, D-Pro4]-morphiceptin), and DAMGO, and the ORL1 receptor agonist, nociceptin/OFQ, produced dose-dependent decreases in hindquarters perfusion pressure. Vasodilator responses to endomorphin 1, PL017, and DAMGO were attenuated by the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor L-NAME at a time when vasodilator responses to nociceptin/OFQ were not altered. Responses to endomorphin 1 and 2, PL017, DAMGO, and nociceptin/OFQ were not altered by the cyclooxygenase inhibitor sodium meclofenamate or the K+ATP channel blocker U-37883A. The results of these studies indicate that responses to endomorphin 1 and 2, PL017, and DAMGO are mediated in large part by the release of nitric oxide, while responses to nociceptin/OFQ are mediated by an L-NAME-insensitive mechanism. Moreover, these results demonstrate that responses to these peptides are not mediated by the release of vasodilator prostaglandins or K+ATP channel opening in the hindquarters vascular bed.