In the present study, we examined the possibility that the endothelium-dependent vasodilators acetylcholine and bradykinin release preformed pools of nitric oxide-containing factors. Successive injections of selected doses of acetylcholine (1.18 +/- 0.3 micrograms/kg IV) or bradykinin (5 micrograms/kg IV) caused reproducible hypotensive and vasodilator responses within sympathetically intact and sympathetically denervated hindlimbs of conscious rats. After administration of the nitric oxide synthesis inhibitor N omega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME, 25 mumol/kg IV), the first injection of acetylcholine or bradykinin produced pronounced depressor and vasodilator responses that, in the case of bradykinin, were greater than those observed before L-NAME administration. However, each successive injection of acetylcholine and bradykinin produced progressively smaller responses, such that the later injections elicited a markedly diminished hypotension and vasodilation. This "use-dependent" loss of endothelium-dependent vasodilation was not due to the diminished vasorelaxant potency of nitric oxide-containing factors because the vasodilator effects of the nitric oxide donor sodium nitroprusside (32 micrograms/kg IV) and the S-nitrosothiol compound S-nitro-socysteine (200 nmol/kg IV) were augmented in the presence of L-NAME. These results suggest that the use-dependent loss of the hemodynamic effects of acetylcholine and bradykinin in L-NAME-treated rats may be due to the release and subsequent depletion of a factor whose synthesis depends on the bioavailability of nitric oxide. Taken together, these results suggest that preformed pools of nitric oxide-containing factors exist within the endothelium of resistance vessels and that endothelium-dependent agonists exert their vasorelaxant effects at least in part by the mobilization of these performed pools.