Angiotensin II and cardiovascular regulation in a freshwater teleost, Anguilla rostrata LeSueur.
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Cardiac output (CO), dorsal aortic blood flow (BFDA) and blood pressure (PDA), and heart rate (HR) were recorded simultaneously in conscious freshwater eels. Physiological doses of [Asn1,Val5]angiotensin II (ANG II; 25-150 ng/kg iv) were used to investigate its effects on the blood flow [CO, BFDA, and estimated branchial shunting (BS)] and systemic vascular resistance (RSys) components of the pressor response and possible mechanism(s) of action. CO was increased mainly by an elevated stroke volume (SV) due to positive inotropy and/or Frank-Starling principle in a dose-related manner. An intact baroreceptor reflex attenuated the blood flow increase by 25% via the inhibitory cardiac vagal innervation. The elevation in estimated BS was a passive response to the increased CO, since the proportion of CO perfusing the pathway remained constant. PDA showed a similar dose-dependent increase in response to ANG II but the peak PDA preceded the peak CO responses at all doses; RSys was only transiently elevated at peak PDA. The increase in blood flow was an important contributor to the vasopressor responses. Alpha-Adrenergic blockade partially inhibited the pressor effect of ANG II (100 ng/kg) primarily by attenuating the increase in blood flow (50-70%). The data provide evidence for an ANG II-mediated cardiovascular control in teleosts directly and indirectly via catecholamine release.