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1.
We have previously shown that p21-activated kinase, PAK, induces Ca(2+)-independent contraction of Triton-skinned smooth muscle with concomitant increase in phosphorylation of caldesmon and desmin but not myosin-regulatory light chain (Van Eyk, J. E., Arrell, D. K., Foster, D. B., Strauss, J. D., Heinonen, T. Y., Furmaniak-Kazmierczak, E., Cote, G. P., and Mak, A. S. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 23433-23439). In this study, we provide biochemical evidence implicating a role for PAK in Ca(2+)-independent contraction of smooth muscle via phosphorylation of caldesmon. Mass spectroscopy data show that stoichiometric phosphorylation occurs at Ser(657) and Ser(687) abutting the calmodulin-binding sites A and B of chicken gizzard caldesmon, respectively. Phosphorylation of Ser(657) and Ser(687) has an important functional impact on caldesmon. PAK-phosphorylation reduces binding of caldesmon to calmodulin by about 10-fold whereas binding of calmodulin to caldesmon partially inhibits PAK phosphorylation. Phosphorylated caldesmon displays a modest reduction in affinity for actin-tropomyosin but is significantly less effective in inhibiting actin-activated S1 ATPase activity in the presence of tropomyosin. We conclude that PAK-phosphorylation of caldesmon at the calmodulin-binding sites modulates caldesmon inhibition of actin-myosin ATPase activity and may, in concert with the actions of Rho-kinase, contribute to the regulation of Ca(2+) sensitivity of smooth muscle contraction.  相似文献   

2.
p21-activated kinase (PAK) and Rho-associated kinase (Rho-kinase) have been shown to induce Ca(2+)-independent contraction of smooth muscle. PAK-induced contraction of Triton-skinned smooth muscle correlates with increased phosphorylation of caldesmon and desmin, although the role of desmin phosphorylation has remained obscure. Here we report that desmin serves as an excellent substrate for PAK in vitro. PAK phosphorylated desmin in a GTP. Cdc42/Rac-dependent manner. Phosphorylation of desmin by PAK dramatically inhibited its filament-forming ability. PAK phosphorylated mainly serine residues of the head domain of desmin, and the major phosphorylation sites differed from those for Rho-kinase. These results suggest that different site-specific phosphorylation of desmin via two divergent protein kinases downstream of Rho family GTPases would seem to increase the regulatory potential for organization of desmin filaments.  相似文献   

3.
Ca(2+) sensitivity of smooth muscle contraction is modulated by several systems converging on myosin light chain phosphatase (MLCP). Rho-Rho kinase is considered to inhibit MLCP via phosphorylation, whereas protein kinase C (PKC) induced sensitization has been shown to be dependent on phosphorylation of the inhibitory protein CPI-17. We have explored the interaction of cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG) with Ca(2+) sensitization pathways using permeabilized mouse smooth muscle. Three conditions giving approximately 50% of maximal active force were compared in small intestinal preparations: 1). Ca(2+)-activated unsensitized muscle (pCa 5.9 with Rho kinase inhibitor Y27632); 2). Rho-Rho kinase-sensitized muscle (pCa 6.1 with guanosine 5'-3-O-(thio)triphosphate); and 3). PKC-sensitized muscle (pCa 6.0 with Y27632 and PKC activator phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate). 8-Br-cGMP relaxed the sensitized muscles but had marginal effects on unsensitized preparations, showing that PKG reverses both PKC and Rho-mediated Ca(2+) sensitization. CPI-17 was present in permeabilized intestinal tissue. In PKC-sensitized preparations, CPI-17 phosphorylation decreased in response to 8-Br-cGMP. The rate of PKC-mediated phosphorylation in the presence of the MLCP inhibitor microcystin-LR was not influenced by 8-Br-cGMP. PKC-induced Ca(2+) sensitization also was reversed in vascular smooth muscle tissues (portal vein and femoral artery). We conclude that actions downstream of cGMP/PKG can reverse PKC-mediated phosphorylation of CPI-17 and Ca(2+) sensitization in smooth muscle.  相似文献   

4.
Smooth muscle contraction is initiated by myosin light chain (MLC) phosphorylation catalyzed by the Ca(2+) dependent MLC kinase. However, many aspects of smooth muscle contraction cannot be accounted for by MLC phosphorylation. One hypothesis that has received experimental support involves the thin filament protein caldesmon. Caldesmon inhibits myosin ATPase activity; phosphorylation of caldesmon relieves this inhibitory effect. The primary candidates for catalysis of caldesmon phosphorylation are the p42/p44 ERK MAP kinases. However, we and others have shown that inhibition of the ERK MAP kinases has no effect on many smooth muscles. The goal of this study was to determine if evidence for a second endogenous caldesmon kinase may be obtained. We used Triton X-100 skinned and intact tissues of the swine carotid artery to address this goal. Caldesmon phosphorylation was evident in resting and Ca(2+) stimulated Triton X-100 skinned fibers. Ca(2+)-dependent caldesmon phosphorylation was partially sensitive to the ERK MAP kinase inhibitor PD98059, whereas all caldesmon phosphorylation was sensitive to the general kinase inhibitor, staurosporine. Histamine increased caldesmon phosphorylation levels in intact swine carotid artery, which was sensitive to both PD98059 and staurosporine. Histamine increased ERK MAP kinase activity, which was reversed by PD98059, staurosporine, and EGTA. Histamine-induced contractions were inhibited by staurosporine but not by PD98059. We interpret these results to suggest that although ERK MAP kinases catalyze caldesmon phosphorylation, a second staurosporine sensitive kinase is also important in caldesmon phosphorylation and it is this pathway that may be more important in contractile regulation.  相似文献   

5.
Smooth muscles are divided into slowly contracting tonic and relatively fast phasic muscles. In both cases Ca2+ is a key mediator of the contractile response. However, the appearance of a tonic component during sphincter or arterial muscle contraction and its absence in contracting visceral smooth muscle is characteristic of their difference. We have found that in chicken tissues phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate (PDBu) induces a sustained contraction in carotid arterial muscle, but provokes no contraction in phasic gizzard smooth muscle. Next we were aimed to find differences in PDBu-induced phosphorylation of the key proteins involved in regulation of smooth muscle contraction, i.e. caldesmon, myosin light chain kinase (MLCK), and the myosin light chain kinase-related protein (KRP, also known as telokin). Two correlative differences were observed. 1. PDBu stimulated phosphorylation of MLCK in tonic smooth muscle and had no effect on the level of MLCK phosphorylation in phasic muscle. Phosphopeptide mapping suggests the involvement of mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases in phosphorylation of MLCK in situ. 2. PDBu induced phosphorylation of MAP-kinase sites in caldesmon in both types of smooth muscle, but this phosphorylation had no significant effect on caldesmon functional activity in vitro. For the first time we have shown that in gizzard PDBu also stimulates a yet unknown transitory caldesmon-kinase different from protein kinase, C, Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinase II and casein kinase CK2. 3. No significant difference was found in the kinetics of PDBu-dependent phosphorylation of KRP in tonic and phasic smooth muscles. KRP was also demonstrated to be a major phosphoprotein in smooth muscle phosphorylated in vivo at several sites located within its N-terminal sequence. Protein kinases able to phosphorylate these sites were identified in vitro. Among them, MAP-kinase was suggested to phosphorylate a serine residue homologous to that phosphorylated in MLCK. 4. p42erk2 and p38 MAP-kinases were found in phasic and tonic smooth muscles. Both were responsive to PDBu in cultured chicken aortic smooth muscle cells, and their role in phosphorylation of MLCK and low molecular weight isoform of caldesmon was evaluated.  相似文献   

6.
Myosin light chain phosphatase (MLCP) plays a pivotal role in smooth muscle contraction by regulating Ca(2+) sensitivity of myosin light chain phosphorylation. A smooth muscle phosphoprotein called CPI-17 specifically and potently inhibits MLCP in vitro and in situ and is activated when phosphorylated at Thr-38, which increases its inhibitory potency 1000-fold. We produced a phosphospecific antibody for this site in CPI-17 and used it to study in situ phosphorylation of endogenous CPI-17 in arterial smooth muscle in response to agonist stimulation. In the intact femoral artery, CPI-17 phosphorylation was negligible at the resting state and was not increased during contraction induced by K(+) depolarization. The Ca(2+)-sensitizing agonists histamine and phenylephrine induced nearly equivalent contractions, but histamine generated significantly higher levels of CPI-17 phosphorylation. In alpha-toxin-permeabilized strips at pCa 6.7, contractile force and CPI-17 phosphorylation were proportional in response to histamine, guanosine 5'-O-(gamma-thiotriphosphate), and histamine plus guanyl-5'-yl thiophosphate, implying that histamine increased CPI-17 phosphorylation through activation of G proteins. Inhibitors of Rho-kinase (Y27632) and protein kinase C (PKC; GF109203X) reduced contraction and CPI-17 phosphorylation in parallel, suggesting that CPI-17 functions downstream of Rho kinases and PKC. The results show that agonists such as histamine signal through phosphorylation of CPI-17 to produce Ca(2+) sensitization of smooth muscle contraction.  相似文献   

7.
The Ca2+ sensitivities of tonic (pulmonary and femoral artery) and phasic (portal vein and ileum) smooth muscles and the effects of guanosine 5'-O-(gamma-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S) and norepinephrine on Ca2+ sensitivity of force development and myosin light chain (MLC20) phosphorylation were determined in permeabilized preparations that retained coupled receptors and endogenous calmodulin. The Ca2+ sensitivity of force was higher (approximately 3-fold) in the tonic than in the phasic smooth muscles. The nucleotide specificity of Ca2+ sensitization was: GTP gamma S much greater than GTP greater than ITP much greater than CTP = UTP. Baseline phosphorylation (7% at pCa greater than 8) and maximal phosphorylation (58% at pCa 5.0) were both lower in portal vein than in femoral artery (20 and 97%). Norepinephrine and GTP gamma S increased phosphorylation at constant [Ca2+] (pCa 7.0-6.5). MLC20 phosphorylation induced by norepinephrine was completely inhibited by guanosine 5'-O-(beta-thiodiphosphate) (GDP beta S). In portal vein at pCa 5, GTP gamma S increased phosphorylation from 58%, the maximal Ca2(+)-activated value, to 75%, and at pCa greater than 8, from 7 to 13%. In femoral artery at pCa 5, neither phosphorylation (97%) nor force was affected by GTP gamma S, while at pCa greater than 8, GTP gamma S caused an increase in force (16% of maximum) with a borderline increase in MLC20 phosphorylation (from 20 to 27%). MLC20 phosphorylation (up to 100%) was positively correlated with force. The major results support the hypothesis that the G-protein coupled Ca2(+)-sensitizing effect of agonists on force development is secondary to increased MLC20 phosphorylation.  相似文献   

8.
Coronary arterial tissues obtained from mammalian hearts are known to develop spontaneous phasic contractions. The aim of the present study was to investigate the vasodilatory effects of docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) on the rhythmic contractions of isolated human coronary arterial (HCA) preparations obtained from the recipient hearts of patients undergoing cardiac transplantation. Results from 8 hearts show that: (i) most HCA tissues displayed spontaneous rhythmic phasic contractions with a cycle length around 10 min in the absence or presence of PGF2alpha or elevated [K+]0 (20 mM); (ii) the rhythmic activity could be suppressed by a free fatty acid DHA (30 microM); (iii) high [K+]0 (20 and 80 mM) could induce sustained tonic contraction in addition to phasic contractions in HCA tissues, the tonic contraction could be antagonized by L-type Ca(2+) channel blockers or by DHA (depending on [K+]0); (iv) a digitalis substance ouabain also could induce tonic contraction and suppress phasic contraction; (v) in isolated HCA vascular smooth muscle cells, DHA increased the magnitude of outward voltage-gated K+ (IKV) currents and the inwardly rectifying IK1 currents. Enhancement of K+ currents could be related to vasorelaxation induced by DHA in HCA preparations. Further studies on the effects of DHA on various ionic currents and intracellular Ca(2+) transient are needed to clarify the Ca(2+)-dependent and the Ca(2+)-independent actions of DHA in HCA.  相似文献   

9.
Regulation of vascular smooth muscle tone by caldesmon.   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
Caldesmon is an actin-binding protein present in smooth muscle cells that also inhibits actin-activated myosin ATPase activity. To assess the possible role of caldesmon in the regulation of smooth contraction, we investigated the effects of synthetic peptides on force directly recorded from single hyperpermeable smooth muscle cells of ferret aorta and portal vein. GS17C, a peptide that contains the residues from Gly651 to Ser667 of the caldesmon sequence plus an added cysteine at the C terminus, binds calmodulin in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner and also binds to F-actin but does not inhibit actomyosin ATPase activity (Zhan, Q., Wong, S.S., and Wang, C.-L.A. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 21810-21814). In cells in which Ca2+ was clamped at pCa 7.0, GS17C induced a dose-dependent contraction (EC50 = 0.92 microM) in aorta cells, whereas it evoked little or no contraction in portal vein cells. The GS17C-induced contraction in aorta cells was inhibited at higher Ca2+ concentrations (above pCa 6.6) and by pretreatment with calmodulin. Another peptide, C16AA, which contains the residues from Ala594 to Ala609 and does not bind actin or calmodulin, did not induce contraction. Our results strongly suggest that GS17C induces contraction by the displacement of the inhibitory region of endogenous caldesmon and, furthermore, that caldesmon present in these smooth muscle cells regulates contraction by providing a basal resting inhibition of vascular tone.  相似文献   

10.
Smooth muscle contraction follows an increase in cytosolic Ca(2+) concentration, activation of myosin light chain kinase, and phosphorylation of the 20-kDa light chain of myosin at Ser(19). Several agonists acting via G protein-coupled receptors elicit a contraction without a change in [Ca(2+)](i) via inhibition of myosin light chain phosphatase and increased myosin phosphorylation. We showed that microcystin (phosphatase inhibitor)-induced contraction of skinned smooth muscle occurred in the absence of Ca(2+) and correlated with phosphorylation of myosin light chain at Ser(19) and Thr(18) by a kinase distinct from myosin light chain kinase. In this study, we identify this kinase as integrin-linked kinase. Chicken gizzard integrin-linked kinase cDNA was cloned, sequenced, expressed in E. coli, and shown to phosphorylate myosin light chain in the absence of Ca(2+) at Ser(19) and Thr(18). Subcellular fractionation revealed two distinct populations of integrin-linked kinase, including a Triton X-100-insoluble component that phosphorylates myosin in a Ca(2+)-independent manner. These results suggest a novel function for integrin-linked kinase in the regulation of smooth muscle contraction via Ca(2+)-independent phosphorylation of myosin, raise the possibility that integrin-linked kinase may also play a role in regulation of nonmuscle motility, and confirm that integrin-linked kinase is indeed a functional protein-serine/threonine kinase.  相似文献   

11.
Vascular tone, an important determinant of systemic vascular resistance and thus blood pressure, is affected by vascular smooth muscle (VSM) contraction. Key signaling pathways for VSM contraction converge on phosphorylation of the regulatory light chain (RLC) of smooth muscle myosin. This phosphorylation is mediated by Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) but Ca(2+)-independent kinases may also contribute, particularly in sustained contractions. Signaling through MLCK has been indirectly implicated in maintenance of basal blood pressure, whereas signaling through RhoA has been implicated in salt-induced hypertension. In this report, we analyzed mice with smooth muscle-specific knockout of MLCK. Mesenteric artery segments isolated from smooth muscle-specific MLCK knockout mice (MLCK(SMKO)) had a significantly reduced contractile response to KCl and vasoconstrictors. The kinase knockout also markedly reduced RLC phosphorylation and developed force. We suggest that MLCK and its phosphorylation of RLC are required for tonic VSM contraction. MLCK(SMKO) mice exhibit significantly lower basal blood pressure and weaker responses to vasopressors. The elevated blood pressure in salt-induced hypertension is reduced below normotensive levels after MLCK attenuation. These results suggest that MLCK is necessary for both physiological and pathological blood pressure. MLCK(SMKO) mice may be a useful model of vascular failure and hypotension.  相似文献   

12.
It has been demonstrated that CPI-17 provokes an inhibition of myosin light chain phosphatase to increase myosin light chain phosphorylaton and Ca(2+) sensitivity during contraction of vascular smooth muscle. However, expression and agonist-mediated regulation of CPI-17 in bronchial smooth muscle have not been documented. Thus, expression and phosphorylation of CPI-17 mediated by PKC and ROCK were investigated using rat bronchial preparations. Acetylcholine (ACh)-induced contraction and Ca(2+) sensitization were both attenuated by 10(-6) mol Y-27632 /L, a ROCK inhibitor, 10(-6) mol calphostin C/L, a PKC inhibitor, and their combination. A PKC activator, PDBu, induced a Ca(2+) sensitization in alpha-toxin-permeabilized bronchial smooth muscle. In this case, the Ca(2+) sensitizing effect was significantly inhibited by caphostin C but not by Y-27632. An immunoblot study demonstrated CPI-17 expression in the rat bronchial smooth muscle. Acetylcholine induced a phosphorylation of CPI-17 in a concentration-dependent manner, which was significantly inhibited by Y-27632 and calphostin C. In conclusion, these data suggest that both PKC and ROCK are involved in force development, Ca(2+) sensitization, and CPI-17 phosphorylation induced by ACh stimulation in rat bronchial smooth muscle. As such, RhoA/ROCK, PKC/CPI-17, and RhoA/ROCK/CPI pathways may play important roles in the ACh-induced Ca(2+) sensitization of bronchial smooth muscle contraction.  相似文献   

13.
An alteration in the handling of Ca2+ has been proposed as the pathogenic mechanism underlying the airway smooth muscle hyperresponsiveness of asthma. The present study tested the hypothesis that the altered responsiveness of receptor operated contraction to carbachol in allergic asthma results from a change in the phasic or tonic components. Using a kinetic approach, the phasic and tonic responses to 10 microM carbachol were quantitated in isolated epithelium-free trachea 21 days after guinea-pigs were sensitized with ovalbumin and aluminum hydroxide (as adjuvant) to generate preferentially IgE-like antibodies. Sensitization was confirmed by challenge of the isolated trachea with ovalbumin. The steady-state and kinetic characteristics of the phasic and tonic responses were the same from sensitized animals and animals treated with saline and aluminum hydroxide (control) and before and after challenge of the trachea from both groups of animals. The present results demonstrate that immunologic sensitization and challenge do not appear to elicit a defect in the phasic or tonic responses of receptor mediated contractions in airway smooth muscle and suggest there is no alteration in the handling of Ca2+ in smooth muscle from sensitized and challenged guinea-pig trachea.  相似文献   

14.
The mechanisms of Ca(2+) handling and sensitization were investigated in human small omental arteries exposed to norepinephrine (NE) and to the thromboxane A(2) analog U-46619. Contractions elicited by NE and U-46619 were associated with an increase in intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)), an increase in Ca(2+)-independent signaling pathways, or an enhancement of the sensitivity of the myofilaments to Ca(2+). The two latter pathways were abolished by protein kinase C (PKC), tyrosine kinase (TK), and Rho-associated protein kinase (ROK) inhibitors. In Ca(2+)-free medium, both NE and U-46619 elicited an increase in tension that was greatly reduced by PKC inhibitors and abolished by caffeine or ryanodine. After depletion of Ca(2+) stores with NE and U-46619 in Ca(2+)-free medium, addition of CaCl(2) in the continuous presence of the agonists produced increases in [Ca(2+)](i) and contractions that were inhibited by nitrendipine and TK inhibitors but not affected by PKC inhibitors. NE and U-46619 induced tyrosine phosphorylation of a 42- or a 58-kDa protein, respectively. These results indicate that the mechanisms leading to contraction elicited by NE and U-46619 in human small omental arteries are composed of Ca(2+) release from ryanodine-sensitive stores, Ca(2+) influx through nitrendipine-sensitive channels, and Ca(2+) sensitization and/or Ca(2+)-independent pathways. They also show that the TK pathway is involved in the tonic contraction associated with Ca(2+) entry, whereas TK, PKC, and ROK mechanisms regulate Ca(2+)-independent signaling pathways or Ca(2+) sensitization.  相似文献   

15.
This review describes the main ultrastructural features, molecular organization and regulation of smooth muscle contractile machinery. Possible molecular mechanisms of smooth muscle sensitization to Ca2+, Ca(2+)-independent contraction and latch state are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of eugenol on the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) and contractile apparatus of chemically skinned skeletal muscle fibers of the frog Rana catesbeiana were investigated. In saponin-skinned fibers, eugenol (5 mmol/L) induced muscle contractions, probably by releasing Ca(2+) from the SR. The Ca(2+)-induced Ca(2+) release blocker ruthenium red (10 micromol/L) inhibited both caffeine- and eugenol-induced muscle contractions. Ryanodine (200 micromol/L), a specific ryanodine receptor/Ca(2+) release channel blocker, promoted complete inhibition of the contractions induced by caffeine, but only partially blocked the contractions induced by eugenol. Heparin (2.5 mg/mL), an inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (InsP3) receptor blocker, strongly inhibited the contractions induced by eugenol but had only a small effect on the caffeine-induced contractions. Eugenol neither altered the Ca(2+) sensitivity nor the maximal force in Triton X-100 skinned muscle fibers. These data suggest that muscle contraction induced by eugenol involves at least 2 mechanisms of Ca(2+) release from the SR: one related to the activation of the ryanodine receptors and another through a heparin-sensitive pathway.  相似文献   

17.
Cardiac myosin-binding protein C (cMyBP-C) is involved in the regulation of cardiac myofilament contraction. Recent evidence showed that protein kinase D (PKD) is one of the kinases that phosphorylate cMyBP-C. However, the mechanism by which PKD-induced cMyBP-C phosphorylation affects cardiac contractile responses is not known. Using immunoprecipitation, we showed that, in contracting cardiomyocytes, PKD binds to cMyBP-C and phosphorylates it at Ser(315). The effect of PKD-mediated phosphorylation of cMyBP-C on cardiac myofilament function was investigated in permeabilized ventricular myocytes, isolated from wild-type (WT) and from cMyBP-C knockout (KO) mice, incubated in the presence of full-length active PKD. In WT myocytes, PKD increased both myofilament Ca(2+) sensitivity (pCa(50)) and maximal Ca(2+)-activated tension of contraction (T(max)). In cMyBP-C KO skinned myocytes, PKD increased pCa(50) but did not alter T(max). This suggests that cMyBP-C is not involved in PKD-mediated sensitization of myofilaments to Ca(2+) but is essential for PKD-induced increase in T(max). Furthermore, the phosphorylation of both PKD-Ser(916) and cMyBP-C-Ser(315) was contraction frequency-dependent, suggesting that PKD-mediated cMyBP-C phosphorylation is operational primarily during periods of increased contractile activity. Thus, during high contraction frequency, PKD facilitates contraction of cardiomyocytes by increasing Ca(2+) sensitivity and by an increased T(max) through phosphorylation of cMyBP-C.  相似文献   

18.
Ritter O  Haase H  Morano I 《FEBS letters》1999,446(2-3):233-235
Skeletal muscle contraction of Limulus polyphemus, the horseshoe crab, seemed to be regulated in a dual manner, namely Ca2+ binding to the troponin complex as well phosphorylation of the myosin light chains (MLC) by a Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent myosin light chain kinase. We investigated muscle contraction in Limulus skinned fibers in the presence of Ca2+ and of Ca2+/calmodulin to find out which of the two mechanisms prevails in Limulus skeletal muscle contraction. Although skinned fibers revealed high basal MLC mono- and biphosphorylation levels (0.48 mol phosphate/mol 31 kDa MLC; 0.52 mol phosphate/mol 21 kDa MLC), the muscle fibers were fully relaxed at pCa 8. Upon C2+ or Ca2+/calmodulin activation, the fibers developed force (357+/-78.7 mN/mm2; 338+/-69.7 mN/mm2, respectively) while the MLC phosphorylation remained essentially unchanged. We conclude that Ca2+ activation is the dominant regulatory mechanism in Limulus skeletal muscle contraction.  相似文献   

19.
The human saphenous vein (HSV) is the most widely used graft in coronary artery revascularization procedures and is susceptible to spasm perioperatively. The aim of this study is to elucidate the mechanism(s) of agonist-induced excitation-contraction coupling in this vessel. Isometric contraction experiments were combined with in situ smooth muscle intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) imaging by confocal microscopy of intact undistended HSV segments during activation with phenylephrine (PE; 50 microM). Stimulation with PE produced a sustained contraction. Preincubation with 5 microM nifedipine, a blocker of the L-type voltage-operated Ca(2+) channel, or 50 microM SKF-96365, a blocker of both the voltage- and receptor-operated channels, reduced force generation by 25-30%. Ca(2+) imaging revealed that PE elicited only a transient rise in [Ca(2+)](i), suggesting that Ca(2+) plays only a minor role. However, a requirement for basal Ca(2+) levels was demonstrated when PE contractions could not be maintained in Ca(2+)-free medium. In light of the transient Ca(2+) response, it appears that signals other than Ca(2+) must maintain the tonic contraction elicited by PE, such as those that sensitize the myofilaments to Ca(2+). Application of HA-1077 (a Rho kinase inhibitor) at the peak of the contraction completely abolished the plateau phase of the response, whereas application of genistein (a tyrosine kinase inhibitor) reduced this phase by approximately 50%. The foregoing results suggest that, whereas the transient Ca(2+) signal can contribute to the development of force, maintenance of the plateau phase of the PE contraction in the HSV is the result of myofilament Ca(2+) sensitization by Rho kinase and tyrosine phosphorylation. The elucidation of the mechanisms of excitation-contraction coupling in the HSV may be useful for the development of therapeutic strategies for the alleviation of vein graft spasm.  相似文献   

20.
In alpha-toxin-permeabilized guinea-pig ileum smooth muscle, a step increase in Ca2+ caused a rapid rise in force and myosin light chain (LC20) phosphorylation, followed by their spontaneous decline to a low steady level even though Ca2+ remained constant. Carbachol resensitized the muscles to Ca2+, causing an increase in both the steady state force and LC20 phosphorylation at constant Ca2+. In beta-escin permeabilized preparations, calmodulin and okadaic acid converted the phasic responses to Ca2+ to more tonic ones. We conclude that Ca2(+)-sensitivity of force is modulated through changes in LC20 kinase/phosphatase activity ratio by Ca2+ itself (desensitization) and by agonists (sensitization).  相似文献   

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