Cardiovascular effects of CDP-choline and its metabolites: Involvement of peripheral autonomic nervous system

Date

2007-12-22

Authors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier Science

Abstract

Intraperitoneal administration of CDP-choline (200-900 mu mol/kg) increased blood pressure and decreased heart rate of rats in a dose- and time-dependent manner. These responses were accompanied by elevated serum concentrations of CDP-choline and its metabolites phosphocholine, choline, cytidine monophosphate and cytidine. Blood pressure increased by intraperitoneal phosphocholine (200-900 mu mol/ kg), while it decreased by choline (200-600 mu mol/kg) administration; phosphocholine or choline administration (up to 600 mu mol/kg) decreased heart rate. Intraperitoneal cytidine monophosphate (200-600 mu mol/kg) or cytidine (200-600 mu mol/kg) increased blood pressure without affecting heart rate. Pressor responses to CDP-choline, phosphocholine, cytidine monophosphate or cytidine were not altered by pretreatment with atropine methyl nitrate or hexamethonium while hypotensive effect of choline was reversed to pressor effect by these pretreatments. Pretreatment with atropine plus hexamethonium attenuated or blocked pressor response to CDP-choline or phosphocholine, respectively. Heart rate responses to CDP-choline, phospbocholine and choline were blocked by atropine and reversed by hexamethonium. Cardiovascular responses to CDP-choline, phosphocholine and choline, but not cytidine monophosphate or cytidine, were associated with elevated plasma catecholamines concentrations. Blockade of alpha-adrenoceptors by prazosin or yohimbine attenuated pressor response to CDP-choline while these antagonists blocked pressor responses to phosphocholine or choline. Neither bilateral adrenalectomy nor chemical sympathectomy altered cardiovascular responses to CDPcholine, choline, cytidine monophosphate or cytidine. Sympathectomy attenuated pressor response to phosphocholine. Results show that intraperitoneal administration of CDP-choline and its metabolites alter cardiovascular parameters and suggest that peripheral cholinergic and adrenergic receptors are involved in these responses.

Description

Keywords

Cardiovascular, Reverses hypotension, Muscarinic receptors, Blood-pressure, Acetylcholine, Release, Rat, stroke, Citicoline, Mice, Dog, CDP-choline, Choline, Cytidine, Phosphocholine

Citation

Cansev, M. vd. (2007). "Cardiovascular effects of CDP-choline and its metabolites: Involvement of peripheral autonomic nervous system". European Journal of Pharmacology, 577(1-3), 129-142.