Abstract
Evidence is mounting that NO plays a role in the cardiovascular and renal adaptation to the hemorrhagic shock secondary to major blood loss. Recently, we reported cardiac and renal NO-dependent protective mechanisms activated by the hypovolemic state that include stimulation of NO synthase (NOS) expression and activity. In the heart, an increase in endothelial NOS is an early response to regulate cardiac function after blood loss. Meanwhile, inducible NOS increases heart dysfunction in later stages of sustained hemorrhagic shock. Additionally, the hypovolemic state induced changes in water homeostasis associated with alterations in inner medullary aquaporin water channel type 2 (AQP2) protein expressions and subcellular localization. NO production is one of the causes of the age-associated response that modulates AQP2 expression/trafficking in the inner collecting duct principal cells in response to hemorrhage. The complex regulation of NOS in cardiovascular and renal physiology depends on the magnitude of hemorrhage and age. The adaptive enhancement of NO synthesis and availability activates or increases expression of other protective factors, including heat shock proteins, antioxidants and prostaglandins, making the protection more robust and sustained. The work with laboratory animals and experimental hemorrhagic shock identified mitochondria as a sensitive subcellular compartment involved in the NO-mediated response to hypovolemic state. In a separate line of research, mtNOS was probed as a likely pacemaker of mammalian aging. Finally, further research based on the participation of mtNOS and the relationships between NO and other modulators of heart and kidney function, as well as the impact of aging in tissue adaptation to hypovolemia, are new research lines and hypothetical therapeutic strategies for the prevention and early treatment of tissue dysfunction.
Keywords: Nitric oxide synthase, mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase, hypovolemia, heart, kidney