W. Paul et al., CUTANEOUS PERMEABILITY RESPONSES TO BRADYKININ AND HISTAMINE IN THE GUINEA-PIG - POSSIBLE DIFFERENCES IN THEIR MECHANISM OF ACTION, British Journal of Pharmacology, 111(1), 1994, pp. 159-164
1 Plasma protein extravasation (PPE) responses in guinea-pig skin have
been measured using accumulation of intravenously injected I-125-labe
lled human serum albumin (I-125-HSA). 2 The nitric oxide (NO) synthase
inhibitor, N-G-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME; 0.1 mu mol/site
) significantly reduced responses to bradykinin (BK; 0.5 nmol/site) or
histamine (4.5 nmol/site) when co-injected with the inflammatory medi
ators. D-NAME (0.1 mu mol/site) had no significant effect. 3 L-NAME (0
.01-0.1 mu mol/site) appeared to produce greater shifts of the dose-re
sponse curve to BK (0.1-3 nmol/site) than of that to histamine (2.3-27
nmol/site). Both 0.01 and 0.1 mu mol L-NAME/site significantly reduce
d the response to BK (0.5 nmol/site) whereas only the higher dose of L
-NAME produced a significant reduction in the response to histamine (4
.5 nmol/site). 4 The inhibitory effect of L-NAME (0.1 mu mol/site) on
the response to BK but not on that to histamine was significantly reve
rsed by L-arginine (L-Arg; 10 mu mol/site). D-arginine (D-Arg; 10 mu m
ol/site) had no significant effect in either case. 5 L-Arg (10 mu mol/
site) significantly enhanced the response to BK but inhibited that to
histamine. D-Arg (10 mu mol/site) had no significant effect on BK but
significantly inhibited histamine. L-Lysine (L-Lys: 10 mu mol/site) ha
d no significant effect on the response to either BK or histamine. 6 L
-Arg (100 mM) had a significant inhibitory effect on isometric contrac
tions to histamine, but not BK in guinea-pig ileum in vitro. D-Arg (10
0 mM) also significantly inhibited histamine responses whereas L-Lys (
100 mM) had no effect. 7 The alpha-adrenoceptor agonist, phenylephrine
(0.3 or 6 nmol/site) inhibited matched responses to BK (0.5 nmol/site
) or histamine (5.4 nmol/site) to comparable degrees, but gave signifi
cant inhibition only at the higher dose. 8 The beta-adrenoceptor agoni
st, isoprenaline (0.5 or 10 nmol/site) had a significant inhibitory ef
fect on the response to histamine (5.4 nmol/site) whereas a comparable
response to BK (0.5 nmol/site) was significantly reduced by the highe
r:dose only. 9 Our results with L-NAME suggest that local production o
f NO is involved in the modulation of mediator-induced vascular permea
bility. It is possible that NO may play a greater role in the extravas
ation response to BK than to that induced by histamine. 10 The differe
ntial effects of L-NAME and isoprenaline on BK- and histamine-induced
PPE raise the possibility that BK and histamine may induce vascular pe
rmeability via different mechanisms in guinea-pig skin.