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J Appl Physiol 97: 1814-1822, 2004. First published July 16, 2004; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00193.2004
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Intratracheal adenoviral-mediated delivery of iNOS decreases pulmonary vasoconstrictor responses in rats

Louis G. Chicoine,1 Edith Tzeng,2 Rebekah Bryan,1 Steven Saenz,1 Michael L. Paffett,3 Joelle Jones,1 C. Richard Lyons,4 Thomas C. Resta,3 Leif D. Nelin,1 and Benjimen R. Walker3

Departments of 1Pediatrics, 3Cell Biology and Physiology, and 4Internal Medicine, University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87131; and 2Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261

Submitted 24 February 2004 ; accepted in final form 12 July 2004

We hypothesized that adenovirus-mediated inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) gene transduction of the lung would result in time-dependent iNOS overexpression and attenuate the vascular constrictor responses to a thromboxane mimetic, U-46619. Rats were treated via the trachea with surfactant alone (sham), surfactant containing an adenoviral construct with a cytomegalovirus promoter-regulated human iNOS gene (Adeno-iNOS), or an adenoviral construct without a gene insert (Adeno-Control). Adeno-iNOS-transduced rats demonstrated human iNOS mRNA and increased iNOS protein levels only in the lungs. Immunohistochemistry of lungs from Adeno-iNOS-treated animals demonstrated transgene expression in alveolar wall cells. In the lungs from Adeno-iNOS-transduced rats, the expression of iNOS protein and exhaled nitric oxide concentrations were increased on days 1–4 and 7 but returned to baseline values by day 14. The administration of the selective iNOS inhibitor L-N6-(1-iminoethyl)lysine dihydrochloride (L-NIL) decreased exhaled nitric oxide concentrations to levels found in Adeno-Control-transduced lungs. In a second group of rats, the segmental vasoconstrictor responses to U-46619 were determined in isolated, perfused lungs 3 days after transduction. Lungs from rats transduced with Adeno-iNOS had reduced total, arterial, and venous vasoconstrictor responses to U-46619 compared with sham, Adeno-Control, and control groups. In a third set of experiments, the response to 400 nM U-46619 in the presence of 10 µM L-NIL was not different in the isolated lungs from Adeno-Control- and Adeno-iNOS-transduced rats. We conclude that adenovirus-mediated iNOS gene transduction of the lung results in time-dependent iNOS overexpression, which attenuates the vascular constrictor responses to the thromboxane mimetic U-46619.

pulmonary hypertension; double occlusion technique; gene therapy; pulmonary vascular resistance; isolated lungs



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: L. G. Chicoine, Center for Gene Therapy, Columbus Children's Research Institute, 700 Children's Dr., Rm. WA3021, Columbus, OH 43205 (E-mail: chicoinl{at}pediatrics.ohio-state.edu).




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