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1.
Although postnatal maturation potently modulates agonist-induced cerebrovascular contractility, its effects on the mechanisms mediating cerebrovascular myogenic tone remain poorly understood. Because the regulation of calcium influx and myofilament calcium sensitivity change markedly during early postnatal life, the present study tested the general hypothesis that early postnatal maturation increases the pressure sensitivity of cerebrovascular myogenic tone via age-dependent enhancement of pressure-induced calcium mobilization and myofilament calcium sensitivity. Pressure-induced myogenic tone and changes in artery wall intracellular calcium concentrations ([Ca(2+)](i)) were measured simultaneously in endothelium-denuded, fura-2-loaded middle cerebral arteries (MCA) from pup [postnatal day 14 (P14)] and adult (6-mo-old) Sprague-Dawley rats. Increases in pressure from 20 to 80 mmHg enhanced myogenic tone in MCA from both pups and adults although the normalized magnitudes of these increases were significantly greater in pup than adult MCA. At each pressure step, vascular wall [Ca(2+)](i) was also significantly greater in pup than in adult MCA. Nifedipine significantly attenuated pressure-evoked constrictions in pup MCA and essentially eliminated all responses to pressure in the adult MCA. Both pup and adult MCA exhibited pressure-dependent increases in calcium sensitivity, as estimated by changes in the ratio of pressure-induced myogenic tone to wall [Ca(2+)](i). However, there were no differences in the magnitudes of these increases between pup and adult MCA. The results support the view that regardless of postnatal age, changes in both calcium influx and myofilament calcium sensitivity contribute to the regulation of cerebral artery myogenic tone. The greater cerebral myogenic response in P14 compared with adult MCA appears to be due to greater pressure-induced increases in [Ca(2+)](i), rather than enhanced augmentation of myofilament calcium sensitivity.  相似文献   

2.
Because cerebrovascular cGMP levels vary significantly during maturation, we examined the hypothesis that the ability of cGMP to relax cerebral arteries also changes during maturation. In concentration-response experiments, potassium-induced tone in basilar arteries was significantly more sensitive to a nonmetabolizable cell-permeant cGMP analogue 8-(p-chlorophenylthio)-cGMP (8-pCPT-cGMP) in term fetal [-log one-half maximal concentration (EC(50)) = 4.4 +/- 0.1 M] than in adult (-log EC(50) = 4.0 +/- 0.1 M) ovine basilar arteries. Serotonin-induced tone also revealed significantly greater sensitivity to the cGMP analogue in fetal (-log EC(50) = 4.9 +/- 0.1 M) than in adult (-log EC(50) = 4.7 +/- 0.1 M) basilars. In fura 2-loaded preparations, 8-pCPT-cGMP had no significant effect on cytosolic calcium concentrations in potassium-contracted arteries but at 6 microM significantly reduced calcium only in fetal basilars (Delta = 33 +/- 8%). Higher 8-pCPT-cGMP concentrations reduced cytosolic calcium in both fetal and adult basilars. Similarly, in both potassium- and 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)-contracted preparations, low concentrations of 8-pCPT-cGMP reduced myofilament calcium sensitivity only in fetal basilars (Delta = 29 +/- 6 and Delta = 42 +/- 10%, respectively), whereas higher concentrations reduced calcium sensitivity in both fetal and adult arteries. In beta-escin-permeabilized arteries, equivalent reductions in basal and agonist-enhanced myofilament calcium sensitivity were produced by much lower 8-pCPT-cGMP concentrations in fetal (172 and 61 microM, respectively) than in adult (410 and 231 microM, respectively) basilars. The mechanisms mediating cGMP-induced vasorelaxation appear similar in fetal and adult arteries, with the exception that they are much more sensitive to cGMP in fetal than adult arteries. These age-related differences in the sensitivity of cytosolic calcium concentration, basal, and agonist-enhanced myofilament calcium sensitivity to cGMP can easily explain why both potassium- and 5-HT-induced tone are more sensitive to cGMP in fetal than adult cerebral arteries.  相似文献   

3.
The present study tests the hypothesis that age-related changes in patterns of agonist-induced myofilament Ca(2+) sensitization involve corresponding differences in the relative contributions of thick- and thin-filament regulation to overall myofilament Ca(2+) sensitivity. Posterior communicating cerebral arteries from term fetal and nonpregnant adult sheep were used in measurements of cytosolic Ca(2+), myosin light chain (MLC) phosphorylation, and contractile tensions induced by varying concentrations of K(+) or serotonin [5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)]. The results were used to assess the relative contributions of the relationships between cytosolic Ca(2+) and MLC phosphorylation (thick-filament reactivity), along with the relationships between MLC phosphorylation and contractile tension (thin-filament reactivity), to overall myofilament Ca(2+) sensitivity. For K(+)-induced contractions, both fetal and adult arteries exhibited similar basal myofilament Ca(2+) sensitivity. Despite this similarity, thick-filament reactivity was greater in fetal arteries, whereas thin-filament reactivity was greater in adult arteries. In contrast, 5-HT-induced contractions exhibited increased myofilament Ca(2+) sensitivity compared with K(+)-induced contractions for both fetal and adult cerebral arteries, and the magnitude of this effect was greater in fetal compared with adult arteries. When interpreted together with our previous studies of 5-HT-induced myofilament Ca(2+) sensitization, we attributed the present effects to agonist enhancement of thick-filament reactivity in fetal arteries mediated by G protein receptor activation of a PKC-independent but RhoA-dependent pathway. In adult arteries, agonist stimulation enhanced thin-filament reactivity was also probably mediated through G protein-coupled activation of RhoA-dependent and PKC-independent mechanisms. Overall, the present data demonstrate that agonist-enhanced myofilament Ca(2+) sensitivity can be partitioned into separate thick- and thin-filament effects, the magnitudes of which are different between fetal and adult cerebral arteries.  相似文献   

4.
Postnatal decreases in vascular reactivity involve decreases in the thick filament component of myofilament calcium sensitivity, which is measured as the relationship between cytosolic calcium concentration and myosin light chain (MLC20) phosphorylation. The present study tests the hypothesis that downregulation of thick filament reactivity is due to downregulation of myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) activity in adult compared with fetal arteries. Total MLCK activity, calculated as %MLC20 phosphorylated per second in intact arteries during optimal inhibition of myosin light chain phosphatase activity, was significantly less in adult (6.56+/-0.29%) than in fetal preparations (7.39+/-0.53%). In situ MLC20 concentrations (microM) in adult (198+/-28) and fetal arteries (236+/-44) did not differ significantly. In situ MLCK concentrations (microM), however, were significantly greater in adult (8.21+/-0.59) than in fetal arteries (1.83+/-0.13). In situ MLCK activities (ng MLC20 phosphorylated.s(-1).ng MLCK(-1)) were significantly less in adult (0.26+/-0.01) than in fetal arteries (1.52+/-0.11). In contrast, MLCK activities in adult (15.8+/-1.5) and fetal artery homogenates (17.3+/-1.3) were not significantly different. When in situ fractional activation was calculated, adult values (1.72+/-0.17%) were significantly less than fetal values (9.08+/-0.83%). Together, these results indicate that decreased thick filament reactivity in adult compared with fetal ovine carotid arteries is due at least in part to greater MLCK activity in fetal arteries, which in turn cannot be explained by differences in MLCK, MLC20, or calmodulin concentrations. Instead, this difference appears to involve age-related differences in fractional activation of the MLCK enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
Several recent studies have implicated the RhoA-Rho kinase pathway in arterial myogenic behavior. The goal of this study was to determine the effects of Rho kinase inhibition (Y-27632) on cerebral artery calcium and diameter responses as a function of transmural pressure. Excised segments of rat posterior cerebral arteries (100-200 microm) were cannulated and pressurized in an arteriograph at 37 degrees C. Increasing pressure from 10 to 60 mmHg triggered an elevation of cytosolic calcium concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) from 113 +/- 9 to 199 +/- 12 nM and development of myogenic tone. Further elevation of pressure to 120 mmHg induced only a minor additional increase in [Ca(2+)](i) and constriction. Y-27632 (0.3-10 microM) inhibited myogenic tone in a concentration-dependent manner at 60 and 120 mmHg with comparable efficacy; conversely, sensitivity was decreased at 120 vs. 60 mmHg (50% inhibitory concentration: 2.5 +/- 0.3 vs. 1.4 +/- 0.1 microM; P < 0.05). Dilation was accompanied by further increases in [Ca(2+)](i) and an enhancement of Ca(2+) oscillatory activity. Y-27632 also effectively dilated the vessels permeabilized with alpha-toxin in a concentration-dependent manner. However, dilator effects of Y-27632 at low concentrations were larger at 60 vs. 100 mmHg. In summary, the results support a significant role for RhoA-Rho kinase pathway in cerebral artery mechanotransduction of pressure into sustained vasoconstriction (myogenic tone and reactivity) via mechanisms that augment smooth muscle calcium sensitivity. Potential downstream events may involve inhibition of myosin phosphatase and/or stimulation of actin polymerization, both of which are associated with increased smooth muscle force production.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
In light of previous observations that the range of arterial pressures over which cerebral blood flow is autoregulated differs dramatically in neonates and adults, the present experiments explored the hypothesis that pressure-induced intrinsic arterial tone is regulated differently in neonatal and adult cerebral arteries. In cannulated and pressurized endothelium-intact mouse cerebral arteries <150 microm in diameter, active intrinsic tone was evident at intraluminal pressures as low as 10 mmHg in neonatal arteries, but only at pressures of 60 mmHg or greater in adult arteries. Administration of 10 microM indomethacin produced no significant effect on tone at any pressure in either neonatal or adult arteries, but subsequent addition of 100 microroarginine methyl ester (NAME) significantly vasoconstricted both neonatal and adult arteries at all pressures. Conversely, administration of 100 microE alone significantly vasoconstricted adult arteries only, and subsequent addition of 10 microomethacin produced a significant additional vasoconstriction in adult arteries only, indicating an important interaction between the nitric oxide synthase and cyclooxygenase pathways, at least in adult arteries. In the presence of both indomethacin and NAME, intrinsic tone was significantly greater in neonatal than adult arteries, but when the endothelium was removed, tone was similar in neonatal and adult arteries at all pressures. Together, these results suggest that pressure-induced myogenic tone is regulated similarly in neonatal and adult mouse cerebral arteries but that the contribution of endothelial vasoactive factors to intrinsic tone is highly age dependent.  相似文献   

8.
This study tested the hypothesis that protein kinase C (PKC) has dual regulation on norepinephrine (NE)-mediated inositol 1,4, 5-trisphosphate [Ins (1,4,5)P(3)] pathway and vasoconstriction in cerebral arteries from near-term fetal ( approximately 140 gestational days) and adult sheep. Basal PKC activity values (%membrane bound) in fetal and adult cerebral arteries were 38 +/- 4% and 32 +/- 4%, respectively. In vessels of both age groups, the PKC isoforms alpha, beta(I), beta(II), and delta were relatively abundant. In contrast, compared with the adult, cerebral arteries of the fetus had low levels of PKC-epsilon. In response to 10(-4) M phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate (PDBu; PKC agonist), PKC activity in both fetal and adult cerebral arteries increased 40-50%. After NE stimulation, PKC activation with PDBu exerted negative feedback on Ins(1,4,5)P(3) and intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) in arteries of both age groups. In turn, PKC inhibition with staurosporine resulted in augmented NE-induced Ins(1,4,5)P(3) and [Ca(2+)](i) responses in adult, but not fetal, cerebral arteries. In adult tissues, PKC stimulation by PDBu increased vascular tone, but not [Ca(2+)](i). In contrast, in the fetal artery, PKC stimulation was associated with an increase in both tone and [Ca(2+)](i). In the presence of zero extracellular [Ca(2+)], these PDBu-induced responses were absent in the fetal vessel, whereas they remained unchanged in the adult. We conclude that, although basal PKC activity was similar in fetal and adult cerebral arteries, PKC's role in NE-mediated pharmacomechanical coupling differed significantly in the two age groups. In both fetal and adult cerebral arteries, PKC modulation of NE-induced signal transduction responses would appear to play a significant role in the regulation of vascular tone. The mechanisms differ in the two age groups, however, and this probably relates, in part, to the relative lack of PKC-epsilon in fetal vessels.  相似文献   

9.
With progressing age, large arteries diminish their longitudinal stretch, which in extreme cases results in tortuosity. Increased age is also associated with loss of vessel distensibility. We measured pressure-diameter curves from muscular porcine carotid arteries ex vivo at different longitudinal stretch ratios (lambda(z) = 1.4 and 1.8) and under different vascular smooth muscle (VSM) conditions (fully relaxed, normal VSM tone, and maximally contracted). Distensibility was found to be halved by decreasing longitudinal stretch from lambda(z) = 1.8 to 1.4 at physiological pressures. This counterintuitive observation is possible because highly nonlinear elastic modulus of the artery and anisotropic properties. Furthermore, a significantly larger basal VSM contraction was observed at lambda(z) = 1.8 than 1.4, although this was clearly not related to a myogenic response during inflation. This dependence of VSM tone to longitudinal stretch may have possible implications on the functional characteristics of the arterial wall.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
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   

12.
Epidemiologic studies have demonstrated that cardiovascular risk is not only determined by conventional risk factors in adulthood, but also by early life events which may reprogram vascular function. To evaluate the effect of maternal diabetes on fetal programming of vascular tone in offspring and its evolution during adulthood, we investigated vascular reactivity of third order mesenteric arteries from diabetic mother offspring (DMO) and control mother offspring (CMO) aged 3 and 18 months. In arteries isolated from DMO the relaxation induced by prostacyclin analogues was reduced in both 3- and 18-month old animals although endothelium (acetylcholine)-mediated relaxation was reduced in 18-month old DMO only. Endothelium-independent (sodium nitroprusside) relaxation was not affected. Pressure-induced myogenic tone, which controls local blood flow, was reduced in 18-month old CMO compared to 3-month old CMO. Interestingly, myogenic tone was maintained at a high level in 18-month old DMO even though agonist-induced vasoconstriction was not altered. These perturbations, in 18-months old DMO rats, were associated with an increased pMLC/MLC, pPKA/PKA ratio and an activated RhoA protein. Thus, we highlighted perturbations in the reactivity of resistance mesenteric arteries in DMO, at as early as 3 months of age, followed by the maintenance of high myogenic tone in older rats. These modifications are in favour of excessive vasoconstrictor tone. These results evidenced a fetal programming of vascular functions of resistance arteries in adult rats exposed in utero to maternal diabetes, which could explain a re-setting of vascular functions and, at least in part, the occurrence of hypertension later in life.  相似文献   

13.
Eclampsia is thought to be similar to hypertensive encephalopathy, whereby acute elevations in intravascular pressure cause forced dilatation (FD) of intrinsic myogenic tone of cerebral arteries and arterioles, decreased cerebrovascular resistance, and hyperperfusion. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that pregnancy and/or the postpartum period predispose cerebral arteries to FD by diminishing pressure-induced myogenic activity. We compared the reactivity to pressure (myogenic activity) as well as factors that modulate the level of tone of third-order branches (<200 microm) of the posterior cerebral artery (PCA) that were isolated from nonpregnant (NP, n = 7), late-pregnant (LP, 19 days, n = 10), and postpartum (PP, 3 days, n = 8) Sprague-Dawley rats under pressurized conditions. PCAs from all groups of animals developed spontaneous tone within the myogenic pressure range (50-150 mmHg) and constricted arteries at 100 mmHg (NP, 30 +/- 3; LP, 39 +/- 4; and PP, 42 +/- 7%; P > 0.05). This level of myogenic activity was maintained in the NP arteries at all pressures; however, both LP and PP arteries dilated at considerably lower pressures compared with NP, which lowered the pressure at which FD occurred from >175 for NP to 146 +/- 6.5 mmHg for LP (P < 0.01 vs. NP) and 162 +/- 7.7 mmHg for PP (P < 0.01 vs. NP). The amount of myogenic tone was also significantly diminished at 175 mmHg compared with NP: percent tone for NP, LP, and PP animals were 35 +/- 2, 11 +/- 3 (P < 0.01 vs. NP), and 20 +/- 7% (P < 0.01 vs. NP), respectively. Inhibition of nitric oxide (NO) with 0.1 mM N(omega)-nitro-l-arginine (l-NNA) caused constriction of all vessel types that was significantly increased in the PP arteries, which demonstrates significant basal NO production. Reactivity to 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) was assessed in the presence of l-NNA and indomethacin. There was a differential response to serotonin: PCAs from NP animals dilated, whereas LP and PP arteries constricted. These results suggest that both pregnancy and the postpartum period predispose the cerebral circulation to FD at lower pressures, a response that may lower cerebrovascular resistance and promote hyperperfusion when blood pressure is elevated, as occurs during eclampsia.  相似文献   

14.
Physiological functions of arterial smooth muscle cell ATP-sensitive K(+) (K(ATP)) channels, which are composed of inwardly rectifying K(+) channel 6.1 and sulfonylurea receptor (SUR)-2 subunits, during metabolic inhibition are unresolved. In the present study, we used a genetic model to investigate the physiological functions of SUR2-containing K(ATP) channels in mediating vasodilation to hypoxia, oxygen and glucose deprivation (OGD) or metabolic inhibition, and functional recovery following these insults. Data indicate that SUR2B is the only SUR isoform expressed in murine cerebral artery smooth muscle cells. Pressurized SUR2 wild-type (SUR2(wt)) and SUR2 null (SUR2(nl)) mouse cerebral arteries developed similar levels of myogenic tone and dilated similarly to hypoxia (<10 mmHg Po(2)). In contrast, vasodilation induced by pinacidil, a K(ATP) channel opener, was ~71% smaller in SUR2(nl) arteries. Human cerebral arteries also expressed SUR2B, developed myogenic tone, and dilated in response to hypoxia and pinacidil. OGD, oligomycin B (a mitochondrial ATP synthase blocker), and CCCP (a mitochondrial uncoupler) all induced vasodilations that were ~39-61% smaller in SUR2(nl) than in SUR2(wt) arteries. The restoration of oxygen and glucose following OGD or removal of oligomycin B and CCCP resulted in partial recovery of tone in both SUR2(wt) and SUR2(nl) cerebral arteries. However, SUR(nl) arteries regained ~60-82% more tone than did SUR2(wt) arteries. These data indicate that SUR2-containing K(ATP) channels are functional molecular targets for OGD, but not hypoxic, vasodilation in cerebral arteries. In addition, OGD activation of SUR2-containing K(ATP) channels may contribute to postischemic loss of myogenic tone.  相似文献   

15.
Gender is known to influence the incidence and severity of cerebrovascular disease. In the present study, luminal diameter was measured in vitro in pressurized middle cerebral artery segments from male rats that were either untreated, orchiectomized (ORX), ORX with testosterone treatment (ORX+TEST), or ORX with estrogen treatment (ORX+EST). The maximal passive diameters (0 Ca(2+) + 3 mM EDTA) of arteries from all four groups were similar. In endothelium-intact arteries, myogenic tone was significantly greater in arteries from untreated and ORX+TEST compared with arteries from either ORX or ORX+EST. During exposure to N(G)-nitro-L-arginine-methyl ester (L-NAME), an NO synthase (NOS) inhibitor, myogenic tone significantly increased in all groups. The effect of L-NAME was significantly greater in arteries from untreated and ORX+EST compared with arteries from ORX and ORX+TEST rats. Differences in myogenic tone between ORX and ORX+TEST persisted after inhibition of NOS. After endothelium removal or inhibition of the cyclooxygenase pathway combined with K(+) channel blockers, myogenic tone differences between ORX and ORX+TEST were abolished. Wall thickness and forced dilation were not significantly different between arteries from ORX and ORX+TEST. Our data show that gonadal hormones affect myogenic tone in male rat cerebral arteries through NOS- and/or endothelium-dependent mechanisms.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
A primary determinant of vascular smooth muscle (VSM) tone and contractility is the resting membrane potential, which, in turn, is influenced heavily by K+ channel activity. Previous studies from our laboratory and others have demonstrated differences in the contractility of cerebral arteries from near-term fetal and adult animals. To test the hypothesis that these contractility differences result from maturational changes in voltage-gated K+ channel function, we compared this function in VSM myocytes from adult and fetal sheep cerebral arteries. The primary current-carrying, voltage-gated K+ channels in VSM myocytes are the large conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels (BKCa) and voltage-activated K+ (KV) channels. We observed that at voltage-clamped membrane potentials of +60 mV in perforated whole cell studies, the normalized outward current densities in fetal myocytes were >30% higher than in those of the adult (P < 0.05) and that these were predominantly due to iberiotoxin-sensitive currents from BKCa channels. Excised, insideout membrane patches revealed nearly identical unitary conductances and Hill coefficients for BKCa channels. The plot of log intracellular [Ca2+] ([Ca2+]i) versus voltage for half-maximal activation (V(1/2)) yielded linear and parallel relationships, and the change in V(1/2) for a 10-fold change in [Ca2+] was also similar. Channel activity increased e-fold for a 19 +/- 2-mV depolarization for adult myocytes and for an 18 +/- 1-mV depolarization for fetal myocytes (P > 0.05). However, the relationship between BKCa open probability and membrane potential had a relative leftward shift for the fetal compared with adult myocytes at different [Ca2+]i. The [Ca2+] for half-maximal activation (i.e., the calcium set points) at 0 mV were 8.8 and 4.7 microM for adult and fetal myocytes, respectively. Thus the increased BKCa current density in fetal myocytes appears to result from a lower calcium set point.  相似文献   

18.
At birth, associated with the rise in oxygen tension, the pulmonary arteries (PA) dilate and the ductus arteriosus (DA) constricts. Both PA and DA constrict with vasoconstrictors and dilate with vasodilators. They respond in a contrary manner only to changes in oxygen tension. We hypothesized that the effects of changes in oxygen are mediated by changes in redox status. Consequently, we tested whether a reducing agent, DTT, and an oxidizing agent, dithionitrobenzoic acid (DTNB), would have opposite effects on a major oxygen signaling pathway in the PA and DA smooth muscle cells (SMCs), the sequence of change in potassium current (IK), membrane potential (Em), cytosolic calcium, and vessel tone. Under normoxic conditions, DTT constricted adult and fetal resistance PA rings, whereas in DA rings DTT acted as a potent vasodilator. In normoxia, voltage-clamp measurements showed inhibition of IK by DTT in PASMCs and, in contrast, activation in DASMCs. Consequently, DTT depolarized fetal and adult PASMCs and hyperpolarized DASMCs. [Ca2+]i was increased by DTT in fetal and adult PASMCs and decreased in DASMCs. Under hypoxic conditions, DTNB constricted DA rings and caused vasodilatation in fetal PA rings. DTNB inhibited IK and depolarized the cell membrane in DASMCs. In contrast, activation of IK and hyperpolarization was seen in PASMCs. Thus the same redox signal can elicit opposite effects on IK, Em, cytosolic calcium, and vascular tone in resistance PA and the DA. These observations support the concept that redox changes could signal the opposite effects of oxygen in the PA and DA.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) increases the risk of cardiovascular disease later in life. Vascular dysfunction occurs in adult offspring from animal models of IUGR including maternal undernutrition, but the influence of reduced fetal oxygen supply on adult vascular function is unclear. Myogenic responses, essential for vascular tone regulation, have not been evaluated in these offspring. We hypothesized that 7-mo-old offspring from hypoxic (12% O(2); H) or nutrient-restricted (40% of control; NR) rat dams would show greater myogenic responses than their 4-mo-old littermates or control (C) offspring through impaired modulation by vasodilators. Growth restriction occurred in male H (P < 0.01), male NR (P < 0.01), and female NR (P < 0.02), but not female H, offspring. Myogenic responses in mesenteric arteries from males but not females were increased at 7 mo in H (P < 0.01) and NR (P < 0.05) vs. C offspring. There was less modulation of myogenic responses after inhibition of nitric oxide synthase (P < 0.05), prostaglandin H synthase (P < 0.005), or both enzymes (P < 0.001) in arteries from 7-mo male H vs. C offspring. Thus reduced vasodilator modulation may explain elevated myogenic responses in 7-mo male H offspring. In contrast, there was increased modulation of myogenic responses in arteries from 7-mo female H vs. C or NR offspring after inhibition of both enzymes (P < 0.05). Thus increased vasodilator modulation may maintain myogenic responses in female H offspring at control levels. In summary, vascular responses in adult offspring from adverse intrauterine environments are impaired in a gender-specific, age-dependent, and maternal insult-dependent manner, with males more profoundly affected.  相似文献   

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