Low guanylyl cyclase activity in Weddell seals: implications for peripheral vasoconstriction and perfusion of the brain during diving

威德尔海豹的鸟苷酸环化酶活性低:对潜水期间外周血管收缩和大脑灌注的影响

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作者:Allyson G Hindle, Kaitlin N Allen, Annabelle J Batten, Luis A Hückstädt, Jason Turner-Maier, S Anne Schulberg, Jeremy Johnson, Elinor Karlsson, Kerstin Lindblad-Toh, Daniel P Costa, Donald B Bloch, Warren M Zapol, Emmanuel S Buys

Abstract

Nitric oxide (NO) is a potent vasodilator, which improves perfusion and oxygen delivery during tissue hypoxia in terrestrial animals. The vertebrate dive response involves vasoconstriction in select tissues, which persists despite profound hypoxia. Using tissues collected from Weddell seals at necropsy, we investigated whether vasoconstriction is aided by downregulation of local hypoxia signaling mechanisms. We focused on NO-soluble guanylyl cyclase (GC)-cGMP signaling, a well-known vasodilatory transduction pathway. Seals have a lower GC protein abundance, activity, and capacity to respond to NO stimulation than do terrestrial mammals. In seal lung homogenates, GC produced less cGMP (20.1 ± 3.7 pmol·mg protein-1·min-1) than the lungs of dogs (-80 ± 144 pmol·mg protein-1·min-1 less than seals), sheep (-472 ± 96), rats (-664 ± 104) or mice (-1,160 ± 104, P < 0.0001). Amino acid sequences of the GC enzyme α-subunits differed between seals and terrestrial mammals, potentially affecting their structure and function. Vasoconstriction in diving Weddell seals is not consistent across tissues; perfusion is maintained in the brain and heart but decreased in other organs such as the kidney. A NO donor increased median GC activity 49.5-fold in the seal brain but only 27.4-fold in the kidney, consistent with the priority of cerebral perfusion during diving. Nos3 expression was high in the seal brain, which could improve NO production and vasodilatory potential. Conversely, Pde5a expression was high in the seal renal artery, which may increase cGMP breakdown and vasoconstriction in the kidney. Taken together, the results of this study suggest that alterations in the NO-cGMP pathway facilitate the diving response.

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