NO plays an important role in the compensatory increase in coronary flow conductance against
myocardial ischemia, and NO bioavailability is impaired in various diseases. We tested the hypothesis that, when NO production is inhibited,
vasoconstrictor signals from the ischemic myocardium are unmasked. We investigated the involvement of
endothelin type A (ETA) receptors in the transduction of the constrictor signal. To detect coronary vasoactive signals derived from ischemic myocardium, we used a bioassay system in which an isolated rabbit coronary microvessel (detector vessel, DV) was placed on beating myocardium perfused by the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) of an anesthetized open-chest dog (n = 38). The DV was pressurized to 60 cmH2O throughout the experiment and observed with an intravital microscope equipped with a floating objective. After the intrinsic tone of the DV was established, vehicle (n = 7), Nomega-nitro-
L-arginine (L-NNA, 100 micromol/l; n = 13), L-NNA +
BQ-123 (a selective ETA receptor blocker, 1 micromol/l; n = 7), or
BQ-123 alone (1 micromol/l; n = 7) was superfused onto the DV. Thereafter, the LAD of the beating heart was occluded.
Coronary occlusion produced significant dilation of the DV by 10 +/- 4%. When L-NNA was applied, the DV significantly constricted by 12 +/- 5% in response to LAD occlusion, and
BQ-123 abolished the vasoconstriction. Pretreatment with
BQ-123 alone produced an enhancement of the
ischemia-induced dilation. We conclude that ischemic myocardium releases transferable vasomotor signals that produce coronary microvascular constriction during the blockade of NO production and the constrictor signal is mediated by ETA receptors.