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1.
Hypoxia-induced dopamine (DA) release from carotid body (CB) glomus cells and activation of postsynaptic D(2) receptors have been proposed to play an important role in the neurotransmission process between the glomus cells and afferent nerve endings. To better resolve the role of D(2) receptors, we examined afferent nerve activity, catecholamine content and release, and ventilation of genetically engineered mice lacking D(2) receptors (D(2)(-/-) mice). Single-unit afferent nerve activities of D(2)(-/-) mice in vitro were significantly reduced by 45% and 25% compared with wild-type (WT) mice during superfusion with saline equilibrated with mild hypoxia (Po(2) approximately 50 Torr) or severe hypoxia (Po(2) approximately 20 Torr), respectively. Catecholamine release in D(2)(-/-) mice was enhanced by 125% in mild hypoxia and 75% in severe hypoxia compared with WT mice, and the rate of rise was increased in D(2)(-/-) mice. We conclude that CB transduction of hypoxia is still present in D(2)(-/-) mice, but the response magnitude is reduced. However, the ventilatory response to acute hypoxia is maintained, perhaps because of an enhanced processing of chemoreceptor input by brain stem respiratory nuclei.  相似文献   

2.
We have investigated the effects of preconditioning pheochromocytoma (PC12) cells with intermittent hypoxia (IH) on transmitter release during acute hypoxia. Cell cultures were exposed to either alternating cycles of hypoxia (1% O(2) + 5% CO(2); 30 s/cycle) and normoxia (21% O(2) + 5% CO(2); 3 min/cycle) for 15 or 60 cycles or normoxia alone (control) for similar durations. Control and IH cells were challenged with either hyperoxia (basal release) or acute hypoxia (Po(2) of approximately 35 Torr) for 5 min, and the amounts of dopamine (DA) and acetylcholine (ACh) released in the medium were determined by HPLC combined with electrochemical detection. Hypoxia augmented DA (approximately 80%) but not ACh release in naive cells, whereas, in IH-conditioned cells, it further enhanced DA release (ranging from 120 to approximately 145%) and facilitated ACh release (approximately 30%). Hypoxia-evoked augmentation of transmitter release was not seen in cells conditioned with sustained hypoxia. IH-induced increase in DA but not IH-induced ACh release during hypoxia was partially inhibited by cadmium chloride (100 microM), a voltage-gated Ca(2+) channel blocker. By contrast, 2-aminoethoxydiphenylborate (75 microM), a blocker of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP(3)) receptors, and N-acetyl-L-cysteine (300 microM), a potent scavenger of reactive oxygen species, either attenuated or abolished IH-evoked augmentation of transmitter release during hypoxia. Together, the above results demonstrate that IH conditioning increases hypoxia-evoked neurotransmitter release from PC12 cells via mechanisms involving mobilization of Ca(2+) from intracellular stores through activation of IP(3) receptors. Our findings also suggest that oxidative stress plays a central role in IH-induced augmentation of transmitter release from PC12 cells during acute hypoxia.  相似文献   

3.
Previously, we showed that carotid bodies express neutral endopeptidase (NEP)-like enzyme activity and that phosphoramidon, a potent inhibitor of NEP, potentiates the chemosensory response of the carotid body to hypoxia in vivo. NEP has been shown to hydrolyze methionine enkephalin (Met-Enk) and substance P (SP) in neuronal tissues. The purpose of the present study is to determine whether NEP hydrolyzes Met-Enk and SP in the carotid body and if so whether these peptides contribute to phosphoramidon-induced potentiation of the sensory response to hypoxia. Experiments were performed on carotid bodies excised from anesthetized adult cats (n = 72 carotid bodies). The hydrolysis of Met-Enk and SP was analyzed by HPLC. The results showed that both SP and Met-Enk were hydrolyzed by the carotid body, but the rate of Met-Enk hydrolysis was approximately fourfold higher than that of SP. Phosphoramidon (400 microM) markedly inhibited SP hydrolysis ( approximately 90%) but had only a marginal effect on Met-Enk hydrolysis ( approximately 15% inhibition). Hypoxia (PO(2), 68 +/- 6 Torr) as well as exogenous administration of SP (10 and 20 nmol) increased the sensory discharge of the carotid body in vitro. Sensory responses to hypoxia and SP (10 nmol) were potentiated by approximately 80 and approximately 275%, respectively (P < 0.01), in the presence of phosphoramidon. SP-receptor antagonists Spantide (peptidyl) and CP-96345 (nonpeptidyl) either abolished or markedly attenuated the phosphoramidon-induced potentiation of the sensory response of the carotid body to hypoxia as well as to SP. These results demonstrate that SP is a preferred substrate for NEP in the carotid body and that SP is involved in the potentiation of the hypoxic response of the carotid body by phosphoramidon.  相似文献   

4.
We have monitored cytosolic [Ca2+] and dopamine release in intact fura- 2-loaded glomus cells with microfluoroimetry and a polarized carbon fiber electrode. Exposure to low PO2 produced a rise of cytosolic [Ca2+] with two distinguishable phases: an initial period (with PO2 values between 150 and approximately 70 mm Hg) during which the increase of [Ca2+] is very small and never exceeds 150-200 nM, and a second phase (with PO2 below approximately 70 mm Hg) characterized by a sharp rise of cytosolic [Ca2+]. Secretion occurs once cytosolic [Ca2+] reaches a threshold value of 180 +/- 43 nM. The results demonstrate a characteristic relationship between PO2 and transmitter secretion at the cellular level that is comparable with the relation described for the input (O2 tension)output (afferent neural discharges) variables in the carotid body. Thus, the properties of single glomus cells can explain the sensory functions of the entire organ. In whole-cell, patch- clamped cells, we have found that in addition to O2-sensitive K+ channels, there are Ca2+ channels whose activity is also regulated by PO2. Ca2+ channel activity is inhibited by hpoxia, although in a strongly voltage-dependent manner. The average hypoxic inhibition of the calcium current in 30% +/- 10% at -20 mV but only 2% +/- 2% at +30 mV. The differential inhibition of K+ and Ca2+ channels by hypoxia helps to explain why the secretory response of the cells is displaced toward PO2 values (below approximately 70 mm Hg) within the range of those normally existing in arterial blood. These data provide a conceptual framework for understanding the cellular mechanisms of O2 chemotransduction in the carotid body.  相似文献   

5.
Current views suggest that oxygen sensing in the carotid body occurs in chemosensory type I cells, which excite synaptically apposed chemoafferent nerve terminals in the carotid sinus nerve (CSN). Prolonged exposure in a low-oxygen environment [i.e., chronic hypoxia (CH)] elicits an elevated stimulus-evoked discharge in chemoreceptor CSN fibers (i.e., increased chemosensitivity). In the present study, we evaluated cholinergic chemotransmission in the rat carotid body in an effort to test the hypothesis that CH enhances ACh-mediated synaptic activity between type I cells and chemoafferent nerve terminals. Animals were exposed in a hypobaric chamber (barometric pressure = 380 Torr) for 9-22 days before evaluation of chemoreceptor activity using an in vitro carotid body/CSN preparation. Nerve activity evoked by ACh was significantly larger (P < 0.01) after CH, suggesting increased expression of cholinergic receptors. Approximately 80% of the CSN impulse activity elicited by ACh (100- or 1,000-microg bolus) in both normal and CH preparations was blocked by the specific nicotinic receptor antagonist mecamylamine (100 microM). CSN activity elicited by acute hypoxia or hypercapnia in normal preparations was likewise blocked (> or =80%) in the presence of 100 muM mecamylamine, but after CH the enhanced CSN activity elicited by acute hypoxia or hypercapnia was not reduced in the presence of 100 or 500 microM mecamylamine. A muscarinic receptor antagonist, atropine (10 microM), and a specific nicotinic receptor alpha7 subunit antagonist, methyllycaconatine (50 nM), blocked approximately 50% of the hypoxia-evoked activity in normal preparations but were ineffective after CH. Prolonged exposure to hypoxia appears to dramatically alter chemotransmission in the carotid body, and may induce alternative neurotransmitter mechanisms and/or electrical coupling between type I cells and chemoafferent nerve terminals.  相似文献   

6.
We have reinvestigated the hypothesis of the relative importance of glomus cell plasma and mitochondrial membrane potentials (E(m) and psi(m), respectively) in acute hypoxia by a noninvasive fluorescence microimaging technique using the voltage-sensitive dyes bis-oxonol and JC-1, respectively. Short-term (24 h)-cultured rat glomus cells and cultured PC-12 cells were used for the study. Glomus cell E(m) depolarization was indirectly confirmed by an increase in bis-oxonol (an anionic probe) fluorescence due to a graded increase in extracellular K(+). Fluorescence responses of glomus cell E(m) to acute hypoxia (approximately 10 Torr Po(2)) indicated depolarization in 20%, no response in 45%, and hyperpolarization in 35% of the cells tested, whereas all PC-12 cells consistently depolarized in response to hypoxia. Furthermore, glomus cell E(m) hyperpolarization was confirmed with high CO (approximately 500 Torr). Glomus cell psi(m) depolarization was indirectly assessed by a decrease in JC-1 (a cationic probe) fluorescence. Accordingly, 1 microM carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone (an uncoupler of oxidative phosphorylation), high CO (a metabolic inhibitor), and acute hypoxia (approximately 10 Torr Po(2)) consistently depolarized the mitochondria in all glomus cells tested. Likewise, all PC-12 cell mitochondria depolarized in response to FCCP and hypoxia. Thus, although bis-oxonol could not show glomus cell depolarization consistently, JC-1 monitored glomus cell mitochondrial depolarization as an inevitable phenomenon in hypoxia. Overall, these responses supported our "metabomembrane hypothesis" of chemoreception.  相似文献   

7.
We examined the effects of acute hypoxia on Ba2+-sensitive inward rectifier K+ (K(IR)) current in rabbit coronary arterial smooth muscle cells. The amplitudes of K(IR) current was definitely higher in the cells from small-diameter (<100 microm) coronary arterial smooth muscle cells (SCASMC, -12.8 +/- 1.3 pA/pF at -140 mV) than those in large-diameter coronary arterial smooth muscle cells (>200 microm, LCASMC, -1.5 +/- 0.1 pA pF(-1)). Western blot analysis confirmed that Kir2.1 protein was expressed in SCASMC but not LCASMC. Hypoxia activated much more KIR currents in symmetrical 140 K+. This effect was blocked by the adenylyl cyclase inhibitor SQ-22536 (10 microM) and mimicked by forskolin (10 microM) and dibutyryl-cAMP (500 microM). The production of cAMP in SCASMC increased 5.7-fold after 6 min of hypoxia. Hypoxia-induced increase in KIR currents was abolished by the PKA inhibitors, Rp-8-(4-chlorophenylthio)-cAMPs (10 microM) and KT-5720 (1 microM). The inhibition of G protein with GDPbetaS (1 mM) partially reduced (approximately 50%) the hypoxia-induced increase in KIR currents. In Langendorff-perfused rabbit hearts, hypoxia increased coronary blood flow, an effect that was inhibited by Ba2+. In summary, hypoxia augments the KIR currents in SCASMC via cAMP- and PKA-dependent signaling cascades, which might, at least partly, explain the hypoxia-induced coronary vasodilation.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract: Using dissociated rat carotid body (CB) cultures, we compared levels of extracellular dopamine (DA) around oxygen-sensitive glomus cells grown for ~12 days in normoxia (Nox; 20% O2), chronic hypoxia (CHox; 6% O2), or chronic nicotine (CNic; 10 µM nicotine, 20% O2), with or without acetylcholine (ACh) receptor (AChR) agonists/antagonists and blockers of DA uptake. In Nox cultures, extracellular DA, determined by HPLC and normalized to the number of tyrosine hydroxylase-positive glomus cells present, was augmented by acute (~15-min) exposure to hypoxia (5% O2; ~6× basal), high extracellular K+ (30 mM; ~10× basal), nomifensine (1 µM; a selective DA uptake inhibitor; ~3× basal), and nicotine (100 µM; ~5× basal), but not methylcholine (300 µM; a specific muscarinic agonist). In contrast, in CHox cultures where basal DA release is markedly elevated (~9× control), the stimulatory effect of high K+ (3–4× basal) and acute hypoxia (~2× basal) on DA release persisted, but nicotine and nomifensine were no longer effective and methylcholine had a partial inhibitory effect. In CNic cultures, basal DA levels were also elevated (~9× control), similar to that in CHox cultures; however, although acute hypoxia had a stimulatory effect on DA release (~2× basal), nicotine, nomifensine, and high K+ were ineffective. The elevated basal DA in both CHox and CNic cultures was attenuated by acute or chronic treatment with mecamylamine (100 µM), a nicotinic AChR (nAChR) antagonist. In addition, long-term (16-h), but not acute (15-min), treatment with the muscarinic antagonist atropine (1 µM) produced an additional enhancement of basal DA levels in CHox cultures. Thus, after chronic hypoxia or nicotine in vitro, extracellular DA levels around CB chemoreceptor cell clusters appear to be set by a variety of factors including released ACh, positive and negative feedback regulation via nAChRs and muscarinic AChRs, respectively, and modulation of DA transporters. These results provide insight into roles of endogenous transmitters in the adaptation of CB chemoreceptors to chronic hypoxia and suggest pathways by which neuroactive drugs, e.g., nicotine, can interfere with the protective chemoreflex response against hypoxia.  相似文献   

9.
Hypoxia potentiates the ventilatory response to exercise, eliciting a greater decrease in arterial PCO2 (PaCO2) from rest to exercise than in normoxia. The mechanism of this hypoxia-exercise interaction requires intact carotid chemoreceptors. To determine whether carotid chemoreceptor stimulation alone is sufficient to elicit the mechanism without whole body hypoxia, ventilatory responses to treadmill exercise were compared in goats during hyperoxic control conditions, moderate hypoxia (PaO2 = 38-44 Torr), and peripheral chemoreceptor stimulation with the peripheral dopamine D2-receptor antagonist, domperidone (Dom; 0.5 mg/kg iv). Measurements with Dom were made in both hyperoxia (Dom) and hypoxia (Dom/hypoxia). Finally, ventilatory responses to inspired CO2 at rest were compared in each experimental condition because enhanced CO2 chemoreception might be expected to blunt the PaCO2 decrease during exercise. At rest, PaCO2 decreased from control with Dom (-5.0 +/- 0.9 Torr), hypoxia (-4.1 +/- 0.5 Torr), and Dom/hypoxia (-11.1 +/- 1.2 Torr). The PaCO2 decrease from rest to exercise was not significantly different between control (-1.7 +/- 0.6 Torr) and Dom (-1.4 +/- 0.8 Torr) but was significantly greater in hypoxia (-4.3 +/- 0.7 Torr) and Dom/hypoxia (-3.5 +/- 0.9 Torr). The slope of the ventilation vs. CO2 production relationship in exercise increased with Dom (16%), hypoxia (18%), and Dom/hypoxia (68%). Ventilatory responses to inspired CO2 at rest increased from control to Dom (236%) and Dom/hypoxia (295%) and increased in four of five goats in hypoxia (mean 317%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
The effects of acetylethylcholine mustard and its aziridinium derivative (AMMA) on acetylcholine (ACh) release and [3H]quinuclidinyl benzilate (QNB) binding were studied in rat cortical synaptosomes. After incubation for 5 min at 37 degrees C, AMMA reduced [3H]QNB binding with an IC50 of 9 microM. Following incubation for 5 min with 50 microM AMMA and washing, there was a 62% reduction in the [3H]QNB binding capacity with no change in the KD value for the remaining receptors, a result indicating the irreversibility of the AMMA binding. AMMA and oxotremorine both reduced the basal and 30 mM K+-induced release of newly synthesized [3H]ACh in dose-dependent manners over a 2.5-min period. At identical 50 microM concentrations, AMMA produced a much longer inhibition of basal [3H]ACh release than oxotremorine did. The inhibition of basal and 30 mM K+-induced [3H]ACh release by AMMA (10-250 microM) was blocked by 2 microM atropine during a 2.5-min release incubation, but not during a 30-min release incubation. After synaptosomes were treated with 50 microM AMMA for 5 min and the unbound drug was washed out from the tissue, [3H]ACh release (basal and K+-induced) was reduced. AMMA (50 microM) reduced high-affinity choline uptake and ACh synthesis by greater than 90% in this tissue, but these effects did not account for the [3H]ACh release inhibition, because they were not atropine sensitive and hemicholinium-3 had no effect on [3H]ACh release under the conditions used in these studies, i.e., after extracellular [3H]choline was washed out. Taken together, these results suggest that AMMA may be an irreversible agonist at presynaptic muscarinic autoreceptors.  相似文献   

11.
Carotid chemoreceptor type 1 cells release dopamine, which inhibits carotid chemoreceptor activity via dopamine D2 autoreceptors on type 1 cells. Postnatal changes in dopaminergic modulation may be involved in postnatal chemoreceptor development. The present study explores dopaminergic modulation of the intracellular calcium ([Ca(2+)](i)) response to hypoxia in type 1 cells from 1, 3, and 11- to 16-day-old rats. Using fura-2, we studied the effects of quinpirole, a D2 receptor agonist, on type 1 cell [Ca(2+)](i) response to 90-s hypoxia challenges (Po(2) approximately 1-2 mmHg). Cells were sequentially exposed to the following challenges: 1) hypoxia control, 2) hypoxia plus quinpirole, and 3) hypoxia plus quinpirole plus sulpiride (D2 receptor antagonist). In the 11- to 16-day-old group, type 1 cell [Ca(2+)](i) increased approximately 3 to 4-fold over resting [Ca(2+)](i) in response to hypoxia. Quinpirole (10 microM) significantly blunted the peak [Ca(2+)](i) response to hypoxia. Repeat challenge with hypoxia plus 10 microM quinpirole in the presence of 10 microM sulpiride partially restored the hypoxia [Ca(2+)](i) response. In sharp contrast to the older aged group, 10 microM quinpirole had minimal effect on hypoxia response of type 1 cells from 1-day-olds and a small but significant effect at 3 days of age. We conclude that stimulation of dopamine D2 receptors inhibits type 1 cell [Ca(2+)](i) response to hypoxia, consistent with an inhibitory autoreceptor role. These findings suggest dopamine-mediated inhibition and oxygen sensitivity increase with age on a similar time course and do not support a role for dopamine as a major mediator of carotid chemoreceptor resetting.  相似文献   

12.
Systemic hypoxia in mammals is sensed and transduced by the carotid body into increased action potential (AP) frequency on the sinus nerve, resulting in increased ventilation. The mechanism of hypoxia transduction is not resolved, but previous work suggested that fast Na(+) channels play an important role in determining the rate and timing of APs (Donnelly, DF, Panisello JM, and Boggs D. J Physiol. 511: 301-311, 1998). We speculated that Na(+) channel activity between APs, termed persistent Na(+) current (I(NaP)), is responsible for AP generation that and riluzole and phenytoin, which inhibit this current, would impair organ function. Using whole cell patch clamp recording of intact petrosal neurons with projections to the carotid body, we demonstrated that I(NaP) is present in chemoreceptor afferent neurons and is inhibited by riluzole. Furthermore, discharge frequencies of single-unit, chemoreceptor activity, in vitro, during normoxia (Po(2) 150 Torr) and during acute hypoxia (Po(2) 90 Torr) were significantly reduced by riluzole concentrations at or above 5 microM, and by phenytoin at 100 microM, without significant affect on nerve conduction time, AP magnitude (inferred from extracellular field), and AP duration. The effect of both drugs appeared solely postsynaptic because hypoxia-induced catecholamine release in the carotid body was not altered by either drug. The respiratory response of unanesthetized, unrestrained 2-wk-old rats to acute hypoxia (12% inspired O(2) fraction), which was measured with whole body plethysmography, was significantly reduced after treatment with riluzole (2 mg/kg ip) and phenytoin (20 mg/kg ip). We conclude that I(NaP) is present in chemoreceptor afferent neurons and serves an important role in peripheral chemoreceptor function and, hence, in the ventilatory response to hypoxia.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract: Using dissociated carotid body (CB) cultures prepared from neonatal (postnatal days 5–7; P7) or juvenile (postnatal day 19–20; P20) rats, we compared catecholaminergic properties and mechanisms of O2 sensing in glomus cells grown in normoxic (Nox; 20% O2) and chronically hypoxic (CHox; 6% O2) environments for up to 2 weeks. In Nox cultures, basal dopamine (DA) release, determined by HPLC and normalized to the number of tyrosine hydroxylase-positive glomus cells present, was similar for P7 and P20 cultures (∼0.3 pmol/1,000 cells/15 min) and was unaffected by culture duration (2 vs. 12 days). Acute hypoxia (5 and 10% O2) caused a dose-dependent stimulation (6× and 3× basal, respectively) in DA release, that was inhibited by nifedipine (10 µ M ). DA release was also stimulated by high extracellular K+ (30 m M ) and iberiotoxin (200 n M ), a selective blocker of P o 2-regulated, Ca-dependent K+ channel in glomus cells. The stimulatory effect of iberiotoxin was similar to 5% O2 in P20 cultures, but substantially less (about one-half) in P7 cultures. In contrast, in CHox cultures, basal DA release was substantially elevated, ∼8× Nox levels, although this did not correlate with significant differences in stores. Further, whereas acute hypoxia (5% O2) and high K+ also stimulated DA release in CHox cultures (∼2× and ∼3× basal), iberiotoxin (200 n M ) did not. Thus, after chronic hypoxia in vitro, there is an enhanced basal catecholamine release and an apparent down-regulation of functional Ca-dependent K+ channels in CB chemoreceptors. These cellular adaptations may relate to changes in CB chemosensitivity during chronic hypoxemia.  相似文献   

14.
The carotid body is an arterial chemoreceptor organ that senses arterial pO(2) and pH. Previous studies have indicated that both reactive oxygen species (ROS) and nitric oxide (NO) are important potential mediators that may be involved in the response of the carotid body to hypoxia. However, whether their production by the chemosensitive elements of the carotid body is indeed oxygen-dependent is currently unclear. Thus, we have investigated their production under normoxic (20% O(2)) and hypoxic (1% O(2)) conditions in slice preparations of the rat carotid body by using fluorescent indicators and confocal microscopy. NO-synthesizing enzymes were identified by immunohistochemistry and histochemistry, and the subcellular localization of the NO-sensitive indicator diaminofluorescein was determined by a photoconversion technique and electron microscopy. Glomus cells of the carotid body responded to hypoxia by increases in both ROS and NO production. The hypoxia-induced increase in NO generation required (to a large extent, but not completely) extracellular calcium. Glomus cells were immunoreactive to endothelial NO synthase but not to the neuronal or inducible isoforms. Ultrastructurally, the NO-sensitive indicator was observed in mitochondrial membranes after exposure to hypoxia. The data show that glomus cells respond to exposure to hypoxia by the enhanced production of both ROS and NO. NO production by glomus cells is probably mediated by endothelial NO synthase, which is activated by calcium influx. The presence of NO indicator in mitochondria suggests the hypoxic regulation of mitochondrial function via NO in glomus cells.  相似文献   

15.
We determined the effects of specific carotid body chemoreceptor inhibition on the propensity for apnea during sleep. We reduced the responsiveness of the carotid body chemoreceptors using intravenous dopamine infusions during non-rapid eye movement sleep in six dogs. Then we quantified the difference in end-tidal Pco(2) (Pet(CO(2))) between eupnea and the apneic threshold, the "CO(2) reserve," by gradually reducing Pet(CO(2)) transiently with pressure support ventilation at progressively increased tidal volume until apnea occurred. Dopamine infusions decreased steady-state eupneic ventilation by 15 +/- 6%, causing a mean CO(2) retention of 3.9 +/- 1.9 mmHg and a brief period of ventilatory instability. The apneic threshold Pet(CO(2)) rose 5.1 +/- 1.9 Torr; thus the CO(2) reserve was narrowed from -3.9 +/- 0.62 Torr in control to -2.7 +/- 0.78 Torr with dopamine. This decrease in the CO(2) reserve with dopamine resulted solely from the 20.5 +/- 11.3% increase in plant gain; the slope of the ventilatory response to CO(2) below eupnea was unchanged from normal. We conclude that specific carotid chemoreceptor inhibition with dopamine increases the propensity for apnea during sleep by narrowing the CO(2) reserve below eupnea. This narrowing is due solely to an increase in plant gain as the slope of the ventilatory response to CO(2) below eupnea was unchanged from normal control. These findings have implications for the role of chemoreceptor inhibition/stimulation in the genesis of apnea and breathing periodicity during sleep.  相似文献   

16.
The purpose of this study was twofold: one concerns carotid blood flow and tissue PO2 and the other the effect of chronic hypoxic hypoxia on enhanced catecholamine content. The rationale was that chronic CO inhalation would not mimic the effect of hypoxia on the carotid body if its tissue blood flow is sufficiently high to counteract the effect of CO on O2 delivery and, hence, on tissue PO2. The differential effects of CO on the carotid body and erythropoietin-producing tissue would also indicate that the effect of hypoxic hypoxia on the carotid body is the result of a direct action of a local low O2 stimulus rather than secondary to a systemic effect initiated by other O2-sensing tissues. To test these alternatives we studied the effects of chronic CO inhalation on carotid body catecholamine content and hematocrit in the rats, which were exposed to an inspired PCO of 0.4-0.5 Torr at an inspired PO2 of approximately 150 Torr for 22 days. The hematocrit of CO-exposed rats was 75 +/- 1.1% compared with 48 +/- 0.7% in controls. Dopamine and norepinephrine content of the carotid bodies (per pair) was 5.88 +/- 0.91 and 3.02 +/- 0.19 ng, respectively, in the CO-exposed rats compared with 6.20 +/- 1.0 and 3.29 +/- 0.6 ng, respectively, in the controls. Protein content of the carotid bodies (per pair) was 18.4 +/- 1.6 and 20.5 +/- 0.9 micrograms, respectively. Thus, despite a vigorous erythropoietic response, the CO-exposed rats failed to show any significant stimulation of carotid body in terms of the content of either catecholamine or protein. The results suggest that carotid body tissue PO2 is not compromised by moderate carboxyhemoglobinemia because of its high tissue blood flow and that the chronic effect of hypoxic hypoxia on carotid body is direct.  相似文献   

17.
In this study we use dissociated cell cultures of the rat carotid body to investigate the adaptive capabilities of endogenous oxygen chemoreceptors, following chronic stimulation by various environmental factors. These oxygen chemoreceptors are catecholamine-containing glomus cells, which derive from the neural crest and resemble adrenal medullary chromaffin cells. Using double-label immunofluorescence, we found that chronic exposure of carotid body cultures to hypoxia (2% to 10% oxygen) caused a significant fraction of tyrosine hydroxylase-positive (TH+) glomus cells to acquire detectable immunoreactivity for growth-associated protein gap-43. The effect was dose-dependent and peaked around an oxygen tension of 6%, where approximately 30% of glomus cells were GAP-43 positive. Treatment with agents that elevate intracellular cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) (i.e., dibutyryl cAMP or forskolin) also markedly stimulated GAP-43 expression. Since hypoxia is known to increase cAMP levels in glomus cells, it is possible that the effect of hypoxia on GAP-43 expression was mediated, at least in part, by a cAMP-dependent pathway. Unlike hypoxia, however, cAMP analogs also stimulated neurofilament (NF 68 or NF 160 kD) expression and neurite outgrowth in glomus cells, and these properties were enhanced by retinoic acid. Nerve growth factor, which promotes neuronal differentiation in related crest-derived endocrine cells, and dibutyryl cGMP were ineffective. Thus, it appears that postnatal glomus cells are plastic and can express neuronal traits in vitro. However, since hypoxia stimulated GAP-43 expression, without promoting neurite outgrowth, it appears that the two processes can be uncoupled. We suggest that stimulation of GAP-43 by hypoxia may be important for other physiological processes, e.g., enhancing neurotransmitter release or sensitization of G-protein–coupled receptor transduction. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
Neurochemical and morphological changes in the carotid body are induced by chronic hypoxia, leading to regulation of ventilation. In this study, we examined the time courses of changes in immunohistochemical intensity for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and cellular volume of glomus cells in rats exposed to hypoxia (10% O2) for up to 24 hr. Grayscale intensity for TH immunofluorescence was significantly increased in rats exposed to hypoxia for 12, 18, and 24 hr compared with control rats (p<0.05). The transectional area of glomus cells was not significantly different between experimental groups. The TH fluorescence intensity of the glomus cells exhibited a strong negative correlation with the transectional area in control rats (Spearman''s ρ = −0.70). This correlation coefficient decreased with exposure time, and it was lowest for the rats exposed to hypoxia for 18 hr (ρ = −0.18). The histogram of TH fluorescence intensity showed a single peak in control rats. The peaks were gradually shifted to the right and became less pronounced in hypoxia-exposed rats, suggesting that a hypoxia-induced increase in TH immunoreactivity occurred uniformly in glomus cells. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that short-term hypoxia induces an increase in TH protein expression in rat carotid body glomus cells. (J Histochem Cytochem 58:839–846, 2010)  相似文献   

19.
In a previous study, DBA/2J and A/J inbred mice showed extremely different hypoxic ventilatory responses, suggesting variations in their carotid bodies. We have assessed the morphological and functional differences of the carotid bodies in these mice. Histological examination revealed a clearly delineated carotid body only in the DBA/2J mice. Many typical glomus cells and glomeruli appeared in the DBA/2J but not in the A/J mice. The size of the carotid body in the DBA/2J and A/J mice was 6.3 +/- 0.5 x 10(6) and 1.5 +/- 0.3 x 10(6) micro m(3), respectively. The area immunostained for tyrosine hydroxylase, an estimation of the glomus cell quantity, was four times larger in the DBA/2J mice than in the A/J mice. The individual data points in the DBA/2J mice segregated from those in the A/J mice. ACh increased intracellular Ca(2+) in most clusters (81%) of cultured carotid body cells from the DBA/2J mice, but only in 18% of clusters in the A/J mice. These data suggest that genetic determinants account for the strain differences in the structure and function of the carotid body.  相似文献   

20.
The purpose of the present study is to clarify the effects of hypoxia on catecholamine release and its mechanism of action. For this purpose, using cultured bovine adrenal chromaffin cells, we examined the effects of hypoxia on high (55 mM) K(+)-induced increases in catecholamine release, in cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i), and in 45Ca2+ uptake. Experiments were carried out in media preequilibrated with a gas mixture of either 21% O2/79% N2 (control) or 100% N2 (hypoxia). High K(+)-induced catecholamine release was inhibited by hypoxia to approximately 40% of the control value, but on reoxygenation the release returned to control levels. Hypoxia had little effect on ATP concentrations in the cells. In the hypoxic medium, [Ca2+]i (measured using fura-2) gradually increased and reached a plateau of approximately 1.0 microM at 30 min, whereas the level was constant in the control medium (approximately 200 nM). High K(+)-induced increases in [Ca2+]i were inhibited by hypoxia to approximately 30% of the control value. In the cells permeabilized by digitonin, catecholamine release induced by Ca2+ was unaffected by hypoxia. Hypoxia had little effect on basal 45Ca2+ uptake into the cells, but high K(+)-induced 45Ca2+ uptake was inhibited by hypoxia. These results suggest that hypoxia inhibits high K(+)-induced catecholamine release and that this inhibition is mainly the result of the inhibition of high K(+)-induced increases in [Ca2+]i subsequent to the inhibition of Ca2+ influx through voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels.  相似文献   

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