共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 11 毫秒
1.
Jarajapu YP Knot HJ 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2005,289(5):H1917-H1922
Arterial smooth muscle constriction in response to pressure, i.e., myogenic tone, may involve calcium-dependent and calcium-sensitization mechanisms. Calcium sensitization in vascular smooth muscle is regulated by kinases such as PKC and Rho kinase, and activity of these kinases is known to be altered in cardiovascular disorders. In the present study, we evaluated the relative contribution of PKC and Rho kinase to myogenic tone in cerebral arteries in hypertension. Myogenic tone and arterial wall calcium in Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats and spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) were measured simultaneously, and the effect of PKC and Rho kinase inhibitors on myogenic tone was evaluated. SHR arteries showed significantly greater myogenic tone than WKY arteries. Pressure/wall tension-arterial wall calcium curves showed a hyperbolic relation in WKY rats, but the curves for SHR arteries were parabolic. Myogenic tone was decreased by the Rho kinase inhibitors Y-27632 and HA-1077, with a significantly greater effect in SHR than in WKY arteries. Reduction in myogenic tone produced by the PKC inhibitor bisindolylmaleimide I in WKY and SHR arteries was significantly less than that produced by Rho kinase inhibition. The pressure-dependent increase in myogenic tone was significantly decreased by Y-27632, and the decrease was markedly greater than that produced by bisindolylmaleimide I in SHR arteries. In WKY arteries, the pressure-dependent increase in myogenic tone was decreased to a similar extent by Y-27632 and bisindolylmaleimide I. These results suggest greater myogenic tone with increased calcium sensitization in SHR arteries, largely because of Rho kinase activation, with a minor contribution of PKC activation. 相似文献
2.
Schubert R Kalentchuk VU Krien U 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2002,283(6):H2288-H2295
The hypothesis that Rho kinase is involved in myogenic reactivity was investigated in pressurized rat tail small arteries using videomicroscopic diameter determination and calcium fluorimetry. The potent Rho kinase inhibitor Y-27632 reversibly increased vessel diameter at 80 mmHg without changing the intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca](i)) shifting the relationship between diameter change and [Ca](i) to higher calcium levels. Neither endothelium removal nor inhibition of neural transmission affected the Y-27632-induced effect. Y-27632 at 3 x 10(-6) mol/l attenuated the myogenic response in the pressure range from 10 to 120 mmHg, shifting the relationship between vessel tone and [Ca](i) to higher calcium levels. In addition, the Y-27632-induced shift of the relationship between vessel tone and [Ca](i) was larger at 80 than at 10 mmHg. These results suggest that smooth muscle cell Rho kinase in rat tail small arteries 1) is in an active state partly determining the level of the myogenic tone, and 2) alters the strength of the myogenic response by changing calcium sensitivity, probably caused by the pressure-induced activation of the kinase. 相似文献
3.
Moien-Afshari F Skarsgard PL McManus BM Laher I 《Canadian journal of physiology and pharmacology》2004,82(10):840-848
Transplantation is an effective treatment for end-stage heart disease; however, most grafts eventually fail by progressive cardiac failure. Primarily, failure is ischemic due to the occlusive nature of transplant vascular disease (TVD). Early after transplantation and preceding TVD, alterations in coronary physiology such as reduced vascular myogenic tone occur. Resistance arteries possess an inherent ability to constrict in response to transmural pressure; this constrictive response (myogenic tone) is important in fluid homeostasis. Recent evidence suggests that a decline in myogenic tone leads to deficits in cardiac contractility. Factors that reduce myogenic tone in transplantation include constitutive nitric oxide synthase and inducible nitric oxide synthase catalyzed, NO-mediated vasodilation as well as deficits in arterial contractile function. Reduced myogenic tone in allograft resistance arteries increases coronary blood flow such that hydrostatic pressure surpasses oncotic pressure, causing cardiac interstitial edema. This generalized edema decreases ventricular compliance leading to heart failure during the course of acute immune rejection of the graft. Cyclosporine A treatment reduces immune mediated dysregulation of myogenic tone, resulting in reduced interstitial edema and improved cardiac function. In this review, we discuss aspects of TVD and myogenic tone signaling mechanisms and how aberrations in myogenic regulation of arterial tone contribute to functional changes observed in cardiac transplant. 相似文献
4.
Brekke JF Gokina NI Osol G 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2002,283(6):H2210-H2216
Although the level of myogenic tone (MT) varies considerably from vessel to vessel, the regulatory mechanisms through which the actual diameter set point is determined are not known. We hypothesized that a unifying principle may be the equalization of active force at the contractile filament level, which would be reflected in a normalization of wall stress or, more specifically, media stress. Branched segments of rat cerebral arteries ranging from <50 microm to >200 microm in diameter were cannulated and held at 60 mmHg with the objectives of: 1) evaluating the relationship between arterial diameter and the extent of myogenic tone, 2) determining whether differences in MT correlate with changes in cytosolic calcium ([Ca(2+)](i)), and 3) testing the hypothesis that a normalization of wall or media stress occurs during the process of tone development. The level of MT increased significantly as vessel size decreased. At 60 mmHg, vascular smooth muscle [Ca(2+)](i) concentrations were similar in all vessels studied (averaging 230 +/- 9.2 nM) and not correlated with vessel size or the extent of tone. Wall tension increased with increasing arterial size, but wall stress and media stress were similar in large versus small arteries. Media stress, in particular, was quite uniform in all vessels studied. Both morphological and calcium data support the concept of equalization of media stress (and, hence, vascular smooth muscle cell stress and force) as an underlying mechanism in determining the level of tone present in any particular vessel. The equalization of active (vascular smooth muscle cell) stress may thus explain differences in MT observed in the different-sized vessels constituting the arterial network and provide a link between arterial structure and function, in both short- and long-term (hypertension) pressure adaptation. 相似文献
5.
Broughton BR Walker BR Resta TC 《American journal of physiology. Lung cellular and molecular physiology》2008,294(4):L797-L806
Myogenic tone in the pulmonary vasculature of normoxic adult animals is minimal or nonexistent. Whereas chronic hypoxia (CH) increases basal tone in pulmonary arteries, it is unclear if a portion of this elevated tone is due to development of myogenicity. Since basal arterial RhoA activity and Rho kinase (ROK) expression are augmented by CH, we hypothesized that CH elicits myogenic reactivity in pulmonary arteries through ROK-dependent vascular smooth muscle (VSM) Ca(2+) sensitization. To test this hypothesis, we assessed the contribution of ROK to basal tone and pressure-induced vasoconstriction in endothelium-disrupted pulmonary arteries [50-300 microm inner diameter (ID)] from control and CH [4 wk at 0.5 atmosphere (atm)] rats. Arteries were loaded with fura-2 AM to continuously monitor VSM intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)). Basal VSM [Ca(2+)](i) was not different between groups. The ROK inhibitor, HA-1077 (100 nM to 30 microM), caused a concentration-dependent reduction of basal tone in CH arteries but had no effect in control vessels. In contrast, PKC inhibition with GF109203X (1 microM) did not alter basal tone. Furthermore, significant vasoconstriction in response to stepwise increases in intraluminal pressure (5-45 mmHg) was observed at 12, 15, 25, and 35 mmHg in arteries (50-200 microm ID) from CH rats. This myogenic reactivity was abolished by HA-1077 (10 microM) but not by GF109203X. VSM [Ca(2+)](i) was unaltered by HA-1077, GF109203X, or increases in pressure in either group. Myogenicity was not observed in larger vessels (200-300 microm ID). We conclude that CH induces myogenic tone in small pulmonary arteries through ROK-dependent myofilament Ca(2+) sensitization. 相似文献
6.
Ito I Jarajapu YP Grant MB Knot HJ 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2007,292(1):H360-H368
The pressure-induced constriction in the rat ophthalmic artery was characterized. Ophthalmic arteries were isolated, cannulated in an arteriograph, and pressurized. Arteries developed 25% constriction at 70 mmHg of intraluminal pressure. Arteries maintained almost similar diameter over the range of pressures 50-210 mmHg, and forced dilatation was observed at pressures >210 mmHg. Denudation of endothelium increased the sensitivity of arteries to pressure-induced constriction, and significantly higher myogenic tone was observed in the pressure range of 10-100 mmHg. Indomethacin and cyclooxygenase-2 inhibition by SC-236 decreased myogenic tone, whereas cyclooxygenase-1 inhibition by SC-560 potentiated myogenic tone in a lower concentration range and decreased at a higher concentration. Pressure-induced constriction was completely blocked by 1 microM nifedipine. Phospholipase C inhibition by 6 microM U-73122 decreased myogenic tone by 39%, whereas PKC inhibitor GF-109203X (3 microM) had no effect. Constriction to phenylephrine was significantly decreased by U-73122 (1 microM) and GF-109203X (3 microM) at an intraluminal pressure of 10 mmHg. Rho-kinase inhibition by Y-27632 (30 microM) and HA-1077 (30 microM) decreased myogenic tone by 75% and 73%, respectively, and 1 microM Y-27632 significantly decreased myogenic tone developed in response to graded increases in pressure. These results suggest that rat ophthalmic artery has an efficient pressure-dependent autoregulatory function that is modulated by endothelium. Contribution of phospholipase C-activation to myogenic tone is minimal, whereas Rho-kinase activation plays a predominant role in the myogenic reactivity in this artery. 相似文献
7.
Geary Greg G.; Krause Diana N.; Purdy Ralph E.; Duckles Sue P. 《Journal of applied physiology》1998,85(5):1615-1621
Adaptation ofthe cerebral circulation to microgravity was investigated in rat middlecerebral arteries after 20 days of hindlimb unweighting (HU). Myogenicresponses were measured in isolated, pressurized arteries from HU andcontrol animals. Maximal passive lumen diameters, obtained in theabsence of extracellular Ca2+ plusEDTA, were not significantly different between groups (249 vs. 258 µm). In physiological salt solution, arteries from both HU andcontrol animals maintained a constant lumen diameter when subjected toincremental increases in transmural pressure (20-80 mmHg).However, the diameter of arteries from HU animals was significantly smaller than that of arteries from control animals at all pressures; this difference could be eliminated by exposure to the nitric oxidesynthase inhibitorNG-nitro-L-argininemethyl ester. After HU treatment, transient distensibility of theartery wall in response to pressure was also significantly decreased,whereas the frequency and amplitude of vasomotion were increased. Thelatter changes were not affected byNG-nitro-L-argininemethyl ester. Thus simulated microgravity increases cerebral arterymyogenic tone through both nitric oxide synthase-dependent and-independent mechanisms. 相似文献
8.
Lagaud G Karicheti V Knot HJ Christ GJ Laher I 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2002,283(6):H2177-H2186
The effects of two structurally distinct inhibitors of gap junction communication were studied by using three different forms of vasoconstriction in pressurized rat middle cerebral arteries. The sensitivity of myogenic tone (at 60 mmHg), vasopressin-induced tone (10 nM, at 20 mmHg), and depolarizing solution-induced tone (80 mM K(+), at 20 mmHg) to inhibition by heptanol (1.0 microM to 3.0 mM) or 18alpha-glycyrrhetinic acid (18alpha-GA, 1.0 to 50 microM) were determined. Pressure-induced myogenic tone was inhibited by heptanol (IC(50) = 0.75 +/- 0.09 mM) and 18alpha-GA ( approximately 30 microM). Vasopressin-induced vasoconstriction was also inhibited by heptanol (IC(50) = 0.4 +/- 0.3 mM) and 18alpha-GA (>1 microM). Depolarizing solution-induced vasoconstriction was less sensitive to inhibition by heptanol compared to vasopressin (P < 0.01) or pressure-induced constriction (P < 0.05). However, 18alpha-GA did not inhibit depolarization-induced constriction. Sharp microelectrode experiments on isolated arteries revealed stable membrane potentials, with no detectable effect of heptanol (1 mM) or 18alpha-GA (20-30 microM) on the average membrane potential at 20 mmHg. However, approximately 20% of impaled cells (5 of 28) exhibited uncharacteristic oscillations in membrane potential after pharmacological uncoupling. At 60 mmHg a approximately 7- to 9-mV hyperpolarization and corresponding vasodilation (approximately 50%) was observed, and the frequency of membrane potential oscillations doubled (9 of 23 cells). These data indicate that gap junctions play an important role in the maintenance and modulation of membrane potential and tone in cerebral resistance arteries. 相似文献
9.
The inner diameter and wall thickness of rat middle cerebral arteries (MCAs) were measured in vitro in both a pressure-induced, myogenically-active state and a drug-induced, passive state to quantify active and passive mechanical behavior. Elasticity parameters from the literature (stiffness derived from an exponential pressure-diameter relationship, beta, and elasticity in response to an increment in pressure, Einc-p) and a novel elasticity parameter in response to smooth muscle cell (SMC) activation, Einc-a, were calculated. beta for all passive MCAs was 9.11 +/- 1.07 but could not be calculated for active vessels. The incremental stiffness increased significantly with pressure in passive vessels; Einc-p (10(6) dynes/cm2) increased from 5.6 +/- 0.5 at 75 mmHg to 14.7 +/- 2.4 at 125 mmHg, (p < 0.05). In active vessels, Einc-p (10(6) dynes/cm2) remained relatively constant (5.5 +/- 2.4 at 75 mmHg and 6.2 +/- 1.0 at 125 mmHg). Einc-a (10(6) dynes/cm2) increased significantly with pressure (from 15.1 +/- 2.3 at 75 mmHg to 49.4 +/- 12.6 at 125 mmHg, p < 0.001), indicating a greater contribution of SMC activity to vessel wall stiffness at higher pressures. 相似文献
10.
Nagaoka T Morio Y Casanova N Bauer N Gebb S McMurtry I Oka M 《American journal of physiology. Lung cellular and molecular physiology》2004,287(4):L665-L672
Recent evidence suggests that Rho/Rho kinase signaling plays an important role in the sustained vasoconstriction induced by many agonists and is involved in the pathogenesis of systemic vascular diseases. However, little is known about its role in increased vascular tone in hypoxic pulmonary hypertension (PH). The purpose of this study was to examine whether Rho/Rho kinase-mediated Ca2+ sensitization contributed to sustained vasoconstriction and increased vasoreactivity in hypoxic PH in rats. Acute intravenous administration of Y-27632, a Rho kinase inhibitor, nearly normalized the high pulmonary arterial blood pressure and total pulmonary resistance in chronically hypoxic rats. In contrast to nifedipine, Y-27632 also markedly decreased elevated basal vascular tone in hypertensive blood-perfused lungs and isolated pulmonary arteries. Y-27632 and another Rho kinase inhibitor, HA-1077, completely reversed nitro-L-arginine-induced vasoconstriction in physiological salt solution-perfused hypertensive lungs, whereas inhibitors of myosin light chain kinase (ML-9), protein kinase C (GF-109203X), phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (LY-294002), and tyrosine kinase (tyrphostin A23) caused only partial or no reversal of the vasoconstriction. Vasoconstrictor responses to KCl were augmented in hypertensive physiological salt solution-perfused lungs and pulmonary arteries, and the augmentation was eliminated by Y-27632. These results suggest that Rho/Rho kinase-mediated Ca2+ sensitization plays a central role in mediating sustained vasoconstriction and increased vasoreactivity in hypoxic PH. 相似文献
11.
Slish DF Welsh DG Brayden JE 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2002,283(6):H2196-H2201
The smooth muscle cells of resistance arteries depolarize and contract when intravascular pressure is elevated. This is a central characteristic of myogenic tone, which plays an important role in regulation of blood flow in many vascular beds. Pressure-induced vascular smooth muscle depolarization depends in part on the activation of cation channels. Here, we show that activation of these smooth muscle cation channels and pressure-induced depolarization are mediated by protein kinase C in cerebral resistance arteries. Diacylglycerol, phorbol myristate acetate, and cell swelling activate a cation current that we have previously shown is mediated by transient receptor potential channels. These currents, as well as the smooth muscle cell depolarizations of intact arteries induced by diacylglycerol, phorbol ester, and elevation of intravascular pressure, are nearly eliminated by protein kinase C inhibitors. These results suggest a major mechanism of myogenic tone involves mechanotransduction through phospholipase C, diacylglycerol production, and protein kinase C activation, which increase cation channel activity. The associated depolarization activates L-type calcium channels, leading to increased intracellular calcium and vasoconstriction. 相似文献
12.
Aims
The goal of the current study was to determine whether the sphingosine kinase 1 (SK1)/sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) pathway is involved in myogenic vasoconstriction under normal physiological conditions. In the present study, we assessed whether endogenous S1P generated by pressure participates in myogenic vasoconstriction and which signaling pathways are involved in SK1/S1P-induced myogenic response under normal physiological conditions.Methods and Results
We measured pressure-induced myogenic response, Ca2+ concentration, and 20 kDa myosin light chain phosphorylation (MLC20) in rabbit posterior cerebral arteries (PCAs). SK1 was expressed and activated by elevated transmural pressure in rabbit PCAs. Translocation of SK1 by pressure elevation was blocked in the absence of external Ca2+ and in the presence of mechanosensitive ion channel and voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channel blockers. Pressure-induced myogenic tone was inhibited in rabbit PCAs treated with sphingosine kinase inhibitor (SKI), but was augmented by treatment with NaF, which is an inhibitor of sphingosine-1-phosphate phosphohydrolase. Exogenous S1P further augmented pressure-induced myogenic responses. Pressure induced an increase in Ca2+ concentration leading to the development of myogenic tone, which was inhibited by SKI. Exogenous S1P further increased the pressure-induced increased Ca2+ concentration and myogenic tone, but SKI had no effect. Pressure- and exogenous S1P-induced myogenic tone was inhibited by pre-treatment with the Rho kinase inhibitor and NADPH oxidase inhibitors. Pressure- and exogenous S1P-induced myogenic tone were inhibited by pre-treatment with S1P receptor blockers, W146 (S1P1), JTE013 (S1P2), and CAY10444 (S1P3). MLC20 phosphorylation was increased when the transmural pressure was raised from 40 to 80 mmHg and exogenous S1P further increased MLC20 phosphorylation. The pressure-induced increase of MLC20 phosphorylation was inhibited by pre-treatment of arteries with SKI.Conclusions
Our results suggest that the SK1/S1P pathway may play an important role in pressure-induced myogenic responses in rabbit PCAs under normal physiological conditions. 相似文献13.
Ibrahim J McGee A Graham D McGrath JC Dominiczak AF 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2006,290(3):H1081-H1089
Cerebral blood flow (CBF) is maintained constant despite changes in systemic blood pressure (BP) through multiple mechanisms of autoregulation such as vascular myogenic reactivity. Our aim was to determine myogenic characteristics of cannulated middle cerebral arteries (MCA) in male and female stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRSP) and Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY) at 12 wk of age under pressurised no-flow conditions. MCA pressure-diameter relationships (20-200 mmHg) were constructed in active (with calcium) and passive (without calcium) conditions, and myogenic and mechanical properties were determined. Myogenic reactivity in WKY (P < 0.05) and SHRSP (P < 0.05) males was impaired compared with their female counterparts. Comparison of SHRSP with WKY in males revealed similar myogenic reactivity, but in females SHRSP exhibited augmented myogenic reactivity (P < 0.05). In both sexes, myogenic tone yielded at lower pressure in SHRSP compared with WKY vessels (120-140 vs. 140-180 mmHg). Stress-strain relationships and elastic moduli in WKY rats showed that vessels were stiffer in females than in males. Conversely, in SHRSP, male vessels were stiffer than female vessels. Comparison of strains in males indicated that stiffness was increased in SHRSP compared with WKY vessels, whereas the converse was observed in females. These findings demonstrate that MCA myogenic and distensibility characteristics exhibit significant sex- and strain-dependent differences. Inappropriate myogenic adaptation and augmented vascular stiffness, particularly in male SHRSP, are potential limiting factors in blood flow autoregulation and may increase the predisposition for stroke-related cerebrovascular events. 相似文献
14.
Lagaud GJ Lam E Lui A van Breemen C Laher I 《Biochemical and biophysical research communications》1999,257(2):523-527
Activation of MAP kinase kinase, also called ERK kinase (MEK), may lead to desinhibition of thin filament regulatory proteins and we therefore investigated the acute effects of the potent MEK inhibitor, PD98059 on the contractile properties of pressurized rat middle cerebral arteries. Cerebral arteries (diameter 100-150 microm) were mounted on a pressure myograph and PD98059 (10 microM, 40 microM) significantly inhibited (15% and 64%) myogenic tone (P < 0.001). At these concentrations, PD98059 also significantly reduced the vasopressin (0.1 microM)- and KCl (60 mM)-induced tone. Cumulative addition of exogenous Ca2+ (0.4-1.6 mM) increased myogenic tone to approximately 50% of constriction at 80 mmHg. This effect was inhibited by PD98059 (P < 0.001). These results demonstrate that pressure-induced myogenic tone is inhibited by PD98059 at the concentrations that have been reported to be selective for inhibition of MEK and the MAP kinase cascade. However, our results also demonstrate that PD98059 may have nonspecific effects on voltage-sensitive Ca2+ entry in vascular smooth muscle. 相似文献
15.
Maneen MJ Cipolla MJ 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2007,292(2):H1042-H1050
This study investigated the effect of peroxynitrite (OONO(-))-induced nitrosylation of filamentous (F)-actin on myogenic tone in isolated and pressurized posterior cerebral arteries (PCAs). Immunohistochemical staining was used to determine 3-nitrotyrosine (NT) and F-actin content in vascular smooth muscle after exposure to 10(-7) M or 10(-4) M OONO(-) for 5 or 60 min in isolated third-order PCAs (n = 37) from male Wistar rats pressurized to 75 mmHg in an arteriograph chamber, quantified with confocal microscopy. Additionally, the role of K(+) channels in OONO(-)-induced dilation was investigated with 3 microM glibenclamide or 10 mM tetraethylammonium chloride before OONO(-) exposure. OONO(-) (10(-4) M) induced a 40% dilation of tone (P < 0.05) while diminishing F-actin content by half (P < 0.05) and causing a 60-fold increase in NT (P < 0.05) in the vascular smooth muscle of PCAs. Additionally, F-actin was inversely correlated with both diameter and NT content (P < 0.05) and was significantly colocalized in the vascular smooth muscle with NT (overlap coefficient = 0.8). The dilation to ONOO(-) was independent of K(+) channel activity and thiol oxidation as glibenclamide, tetraethylammonium chloride, and dithiothreitol had no effect on OONO(-)-induced dilation or F-actin or NT content in PCAs. Because NT was colocalized with F-actin, we hypothesize that OONO(-) induces nitrosylation of F-actin in vascular smooth muscle leading to depolymerization and the subsequent loss of myogenic tone, which may promote vascular damage during oxidative stress such as in ischemia and reperfusion injury. 相似文献
16.
Eckman DM Gupta R Rosenfeld CR Morgan TM Charles SM Mertz H Moore LG 《American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology》2012,303(4):R368-R375
Myogenic tone (MT) is a primary modulator of blood flow in the resistance vasculature of the brain, kidney, skeletal muscle, and perhaps in other high-flow organs such as the pregnant uterus. MT is known to be regulated by endothelium-derived factors, including products of the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) and/or the cyclooxygenase (COX) pathways. We asked whether pregnancy influenced MT in myometrial arteries (MA), and if so, whether such an effect could be attributed to alterations in NOS and/or COX. MA (200-300 μm internal diameter, 2-3 mm length) were isolated from 10 nonpregnant and 12 pregnant women undergoing elective hysterectomy or cesarean section, respectively. In the absence of NOS and/or COX inhibition, pregnancy was associated with increased MT in endothelium-intact MA compared with MA from nonpregnant women (P < 0.01). The increase in MT was not due to increased Ca(2+) entry via voltage-dependent channels since both groups of MA exhibited similar levels of constriction when exposed to 50 mM KCl. NOS inhibition (N(ω)-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester, l-NAME) or combined NOS/COX inhibition (l-NAME/indomethacin) increased MT in MA from pregnant women (P = 0.001 and P = 0.042, respectively) but was without effect in arteries from nonpregnant women. Indomethacin alone was without effect on MT in MA from either nonpregnant or pregnant women. We concluded that MT increases in MA during human pregnancy and that this effect was partially opposed by enhanced NOS activity. 相似文献
17.
Earley S Straub SV Brayden JE 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2007,292(6):H2613-H2622
Myogenic vasoconstriction results from pressure-induced vascular smooth muscle cell depolarization and Ca(2+) influx via voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channels, a process that is significantly attenuated by inhibition of protein kinase C (PKC). It was recently reported that the melastatin transient receptor potential (TRP) channel TRPM4 is a critical mediator of pressure-induced smooth muscle depolarization and constriction in cerebral arteries. Interestingly, PKC activity enhances the activation of cloned TRPM4 channels expressed in cultured cells by increasing sensitivity of the channel to intracellular Ca(2+). Thus we postulated that PKC-dependent activation of TRPM4 might be a critical mediator of vascular myogenic tone. We report here that PKC inhibition attenuated pressure-induced constriction of cerebral vessels and that stimulation of PKC activity with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) enhanced the development of myogenic tone. In freshly isolated cerebral artery myocytes, we identified a Ca(2+)-dependent, rapidly inactivating, outwardly rectifying, iberiotoxin-insensitive cation current with properties similar to those of expressed TRPM4 channels. Stimulation of PKC activity with PMA increased the intracellular Ca(2+) sensitivity of this current in vascular smooth muscle cells. To validate TRPM4 as a target of PKC regulation, antisense technology was used to suppress TRPM4 expression in isolated cerebral arteries. Under these conditions, the magnitude of TRPM4-like currents was diminished in cells from arteries treated with antisense oligonucleotides compared with controls, identifying TRPM4 as the molecular entity responsible for the PKC-activated current. Furthermore, the extent of PKC-induced smooth muscle cell depolarization and vasoconstriction was significantly decreased in arteries treated with TRPM4 antisense oligonucleotides compared with controls. We conclude that PKC-dependent regulation of TRPM4 activity contributes to the control of cerebral artery myogenic tone. 相似文献
18.
Pulmonary Hypertension is a terminology encompassing a range of etiologically different pulmonary vascular diseases. The most common is that termed pulmonary arterial hypertension or PAH; a rare but often fatal disease characterized by a mean pulmonary arterial pressure of >25?mmHg. PAH is associated with a complex etiology highlighted by core characteristics of increased pulmonary vascular resistance and elevation of mean pulmonary artery pressure. When sustained, pulmonary vascular remodeling occurs and eventually patients pass away due to right heart failure. Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction is an early event occurring in pulmonary hypertension due to chronic exposure to hypoxia. While the underlying mechanisms of hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction may be controversial, a role for RhoA/Rho kinase mediated regulation of intracellular Ca(2+) has been recently identified. Further study suggests that RhoA may have an integral role in other pathophysiological processes such as cell proliferation and migration occurring in all forms of PH. Indeed Rho proteins are known to play essential roles in actin cytoskeleton organization in all eukaryotic cells and thus Rho and Rho-GTPases are implicated in fundamental cellular processes such as cellular proliferation, migration, adhesion, apoptosis and gene expression. This review focuses on providing an overview of the role of RhoA/Rho kinase in currently available animal models of pulmonary hypertension. 相似文献
19.
Time-course changes of myogenic tone of mesenteric small artery in spontaneously hypertensive rat 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
To investigate the time-course changes of myogenic tone in mesenteric small artery (MSA) of spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR), thirty-two 7-week aged SHR rats were randomly divided into four groups (8, 16, 24, 32 weeks of age), and 32 sex- and age-matched Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats were assigned to control groups (CON). On the day of the study, segments of MSA were isolated and then cannulated to the two pipettes. Vascular diameters in response to the increased intraluminal pressure (from 0 mmHg to 150 mmHg, by 25 mmHg steps) of isolated MSA under no-flow conditions were recorded by a Pressure Myograph System both in physiologic salt solution (PSS) (active diameter, Da) and calcium-free PSS (passive diameter, Dp). The myogenic tone was calculated by (Dp - Da)/Dp × 100%. The tail artery pressure and vascular myogenic tone in SHR rats were significantly higher than those of the CON rats. Before 24 weeks, the vascular myogenic tone of MSA in SHR group increased monotonically, but at the end of 32 weeks, the vascular myogenic tone decreased in comparison with that in 24-week group, but was significantly higher than that in CON group. The tail artery pressure in SHR group slowly increased monotonically with increasing weeks of age, and the tail arterial pressure in 32-week group remained significantly higher than that in 24-week group. Vascular myogenic tone may participate in the whole process of hypertension. Early in the development of hypertension, because of the compensatory role of vascular tone, the vascular function has been partially compensated, thus guaranteeing adequate blood supply to organs. Late in the development of hypertension, because of the decompensation of myogenic tone, the vascular function is damaged, leading to the occurrence of severe vascular disease. 相似文献
20.
Ishiguro M Puryear CB Bisson E Saundry CM Nathan DJ Russell SR Tranmer BI Wellman GC 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2002,283(6):H2217-H2225
Cerebral artery vasospasm is a major cause of death and disability in patients experiencing subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). Currently, little is known regarding the impact of SAH on small diameter (100-200 microm) cerebral arteries, which play an important role in the autoregulation of cerebral blood flow. With the use of a rabbit SAH model and in vitro video microscopy, cerebral artery diameter was measured in response to elevations in intravascular pressure. Cerebral arteries from SAH animals constricted more (approximately twofold) to pressure within the physiological range of 60-100 mmHg compared with control or sham-operated animals. Pressure-induced constriction (myogenic tone) was also enhanced in arteries from control animals organ cultured in the presence of oxyhemoglobin, an effect independent of the vascular endothelium or nitric oxide synthesis. Finally, arteries from both control and SAH animals dilated as intravascular pressure was elevated above 140 mmHg. This study provides evidence for a role of oxyhemoglobin in impaired autoregulation (i.e., enhanced myogenic tone) in small diameter cerebral arteries during SAH. Furthermore, therapeutic strategies that improve clinical outcome in SAH patients (e.g., supraphysiological intravascular pressure) are effective in dilating small diameter cerebral arteries isolated from SAH animals. 相似文献