Title of article :
Fetal growth retardation in rats may result from apoptosis: Role of peroxynitrite
Author/Authors :
M. J. S. Miller، نويسنده , , C. A. Voelker، نويسنده , , S. Olister، نويسنده , , J. H. Thompson، نويسنده , , X-J. Zhang، نويسنده , , D. Rivera، نويسنده , , S. Eloby-childress، نويسنده , , X. Liu، نويسنده , , D. A. Clark، نويسنده , , M. R. Pierce، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1996
Abstract :
Administration of the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) inhibitor NG-nitro-image-arginine methyl ester (image-NAME) results in fetal growth retardation. This study was designed to further examine the influence of NO on fetal growth, specifically, the potential role of inducible NOS and to evaluate the possibility that apoptosis contributed to utero-placental dysfunction. image-NAME administration caused a paradoxical increase in NO synthesis determined by direct detection of NO by electrochemistry, nitrite accumulation, and cGMP levels, indicating that a lack of NO was not the cause of the fetal growth retardation. Additionally, supplemental image-arginine or NO donors failed to reverse the effects of image-NAME on fetal and placental size. Administration of low dose endotoxin (30μg/kg IP daily for 6 d) also caused significant reductions in fetal and placental size and increased NO synthesis comparable to that seen with image-NAME. Inducible NOS was constitutively expressed in the pregnant uterus (smooth muscle and epithelia) and placenta (sinusoids and macrophages) but was absent in the nonpregnant state as determined by RT-PCR and immunohistochemistry. Neither image-NAME nor endotoxin modified the expression of iNOS. In situ evidence for apoptosis (DNA fragmentation) was minimal to absent in control pregnant rats, but markedly evident in the placenta (decidua) and uterus of rats treated with image-NAME or endotoxin. Immunohistochemical evidence for nitrotyrosine, a marker for peroxynitrite formation, was absent in control rats but colocalized with apoptosis in the image-NAME and LPS groups. We conclude that image-NAME-induced fetal growth retardation is not due to a lack of NO, but as for endotoxin, results from a net reduction in cellular proliferation due to the induction of apoptosis, possibly in response to peroxynitrite formation.
Keywords :
Fetal Growth , nitric oxide , endotoxin , placenta , free radicals , Apoptosis
Journal title :
Free Radical Biology and Medicine
Journal title :
Free Radical Biology and Medicine