首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 656 毫秒
1.
Control of cerebral vasculature differs from that of systemic vessels outside the blood-brain barrier. The hypothesis that the endothelium modulates vasomotion via direct myoendothelial coupling was investigated in a small vessel of the cerebral circulation. In the primary branch of the rat basilar artery, membrane potential, diameter, and calcium dynamics associated with vasomotion were examined using selective inhibitors of endothelial function in intact and endothelium-denuded arteries. Vessel anatomy, protein, and mRNA expression were studied using conventional electron microscopy high-resolution ultrastructural and confocal immunohistochemistry and quantitative PCR. Membrane potential oscillations were present in both endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells (SMCs), and these preceded rhythmical contractions during which adjacent SMC intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) waves were synchronized. Endothelium removal abolished vasomotion and desynchronized adjacent smooth muscle cell [Ca(2+)](i) waves. N(G)-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester (10 microM) did not mimic this effect, and dibutyryl cGMP (300 muM) failed to resynchronize [Ca(2+)](i) waves in endothelium-denuded arteries. Combined charybdotoxin and apamin abolished vasomotion and depolarized and constricted vessels, even in absence of endothelium. Separately, (37,43)Gap27 and (40)Gap27 abolished vasomotion. Extensive myoendothelial gap junctions (3 per endothelial cell) composed of connexins 37 and 40 connected the endothelial cell and SMC layers. Synchronized vasomotion in rat basilar artery is endothelium dependent, with [Ca(2+)](i) waves generated within SMCs being coordinated by electrical coupling via myoendothelial gap junctions.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
Investigating the recruitment and synchronization of smooth muscle cells (SMCs) is the key to understanding the physical mechanisms leading to contraction and spontaneous diameter oscillations of arteries, called vasomotion. We improved a method that allows the correlation of calcium oscillations (flashing) of individual SMCs with mean calcium variations and arterial contraction using confocal microscopy. Endothelium-stripped rat mesenteric arteries were cut open, loaded with dual calcium fluorescence probes, and stimulated by increasing concentrations of the vasoconstrictors phenylephrine (PE) and KCl. We found that the number and synchronization of flashing cells depends on vasoconstrictor concentration. At low vasoconstrictor concentration, few cells flash asynchronously and no local contraction is detected. At medium concentration, recruitment of cells is complete and synchronous, leading to strip contraction after KCl stimulation and to vasomotion after PE stimulation. High concentration of PE leads to synchronous calcium oscillations and fully contracted vessels, whereas high concentration of KCl leads to a sustained nonoscillating increase of calcium and to fully contracted vessels. We conclude that the number of simultaneously recruited cells is an important factor in controlling rat mesenteric artery contraction and vasomotion.  相似文献   

4.
We have formulated a mathematical model for the rat afferent arteriole (AA). Our model consists of a series of arteriolar smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells, each of which represents ion transport, cell membrane potential, and gap junction coupling. Cellular contraction and wall mechanics are also represented for the smooth muscle cells. Blood flow through the AA lumen is described by Poiseuille flow. The AA model's representation of the myogenic response is based on the hypothesis that changes in hydrostatic pressure induce changes in the activity of nonselective cation channels. The resulting changes in membrane potential then affect calcium influx through changes in the activity of the voltage-gated calcium channels, so that vessel diameter decreases with increasing pressure values. With this configuration, the model AA maintains roughly stable renal blood flow within a physiologic range of blood flow pressure. Model simulation of vasoconstriction initiated from local stimulation also agrees well with findings in the experimental literature, notably those of Steinhausen et al. (Steinhausen M, Endlich K, Nobiling R, Rarekh N, Schütt F. J Physiol 505: 493-501, 1997), which indicated that conduction of vasoconstrictive response decays more rapidly in the upstream flow direction than downstream. The model can be incorporated into models of integrated renal hemodynamic regulation.  相似文献   

5.
It is well-known that cyclic variations of the vascular diameter, a phenomenon called vasomotion, are induced by synchronous calcium oscillations of smooth muscle cells (SMCs). However, the role of the endothelium on vasomotion is unclear. Some experimental studies claim that the endothelium is necessary for synchronization and vasomotion, whereas others report rhythmic contractions in the absence of an intact endothelium. Moreover, endothelium-derived factors have been shown to abolish vasomotion by desynchronizing the calcium signals in SMCs. By modeling the calcium dynamics of a population of SMCs coupled to a population of endothelial cells, we analyze the effects of an SMC vasoconstrictor stimulation on endothelial cells and the feedback of endothelium-derived factors. Our results show that the endothelium essentially decreases the SMCs calcium level and may move the SMCs from a steady state to an oscillatory domain, and vice versa. In the oscillatory domain, a population of coupled SMCs exhibits synchronous calcium oscillations. Outside the oscillatory domain, the coupled SMCs present only irregular calcium flashings arising from noise modeling stochastic opening of channels. Our findings provide explanations for the published contradictory experimental observations.  相似文献   

6.
In vitro, alpha-adrenoreceptor stimulation of rat mesenteric small arteries often leads to a rhythmic change in wall tension, i.e., vasomotion. Within the individual smooth muscle cells of the vascular wall, vasomotion is often preceded by a period of asynchronous calcium waves. Abruptly, these low-frequency waves may transform into high-frequency whole cell calcium oscillations. Simultaneously, multiple cells synchronize, leading to rhythmic generation of tension. We present a mathematical model of vascular smooth muscle cells that aims at characterizing this sudden transition. Simulations show calcium waves sweeping through the cytoplasm when the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) is stimulated to release calcium. A rise in cGMP leads to the experimentally observed transition from waves to whole cell calcium oscillations. At the same time, membrane potential starts to oscillate and the frequency approximately doubles. In this transition, the simulated results point to a key role for a recently discovered cGMP-sensitive calcium-dependent chloride channel. This channel depolarizes the membrane in response to calcium released from the SR. In turn, depolarization causes a uniform opening of L-type calcium channels on the cell surface, stimulating a synchronized release of SR calcium and inducing the shift from waves to whole cell oscillations. The effect of the channel is therefore to couple the processes of the SR with those of the membrane. We hypothesize that the shift in oscillatory mode and the associated onset of oscillations in membrane potential within the individual cell may underlie sudden intercellular synchronization and the appearance of vasomotion.  相似文献   

7.
Communication between vascular smooth muscle (VSM) cells via low-resistance gap junctions may facilitate vascular function by synchronizing the contractile state of individual cells within the vessel wall. We hypothesized that inhibition of gap junctional communication would impair constrictor responses of mesenteric resistance arteries. Immunohistochemical experiments revealed positive staining for connexin 37 (Cx37) in both endothelium and smooth muscle of rat mesenteric arterioles, whereas connexin 43 (Cx43) immunoreactivity was not detected in the mesenteric vasculature. Administration of the gap junction inhibitory peptide Gap27, which targets Cx37 and Cx43, significantly diminished myogenic vasoconstriction (8.6 +/- 3.8% of passive diameter at 100 Torr) and changes in vessel wall intracellular [Ca2+] of mesenteric resistance arteries compared with vessels treated with either vehicle (physiological saline solution) (33.5 +/- 6.1%) or a control peptide (32.1 +/- 6.5%). Administration of 18alpha-glycyrrhetinic acid, structurally distinct from Gap27, also significantly attenuated myogenic constriction compared with its vehicle control (DMSO) (9.6 +/- 3.2% vs. 23.8 +/- 4.6%). In contrast, phenylephrine-induced vasoconstriction was not altered by gap junction blockers. Attenuated myogenic vasoconstriction resulting from inhibition of gap junctions persisted after disruption of the endothelium. In additional experiments, VSM cell membrane potential was recorded in mesenteric resistance arteries pressurized to 20 or 100 Torr. VSM membrane potential was depolarized at 100 Torr compared with 20 Torr. However, VSM cells in arteries treated with Gap27 were significantly hyperpolarized (-48.6 +/- 1.4 mV) at the higher pressure compared with vehicle (-41.4 +/- 1.5 mV) and Gap20-treated (-38.4 +/- 0.7 mV) vessels. Our findings suggest that inhibition of smooth muscle gap junctions attenuates pressure-induced VSM cell depolarization and myogenic vasoconstriction.  相似文献   

8.
Vasomotion, the phenomenon of vessel diameter oscillation, regulates blood flow and resistance. The main parameters implicated in vasomotion are particularly the membrane potential and the cytosolic free calcium in smooth muscle cells. In this study, these parameters were measured in rat perfused-pressurized mesenteric artery segments. The application of norepinephrine (NE) caused rhythmic diameter contractions and membrane potential oscillations (amplitude; 5.3 +/- 0.3 mV, frequency; 0.09 +/- 0.01 Hz). Verapamil (1 microM) abolished this vasomotion. During vasomotion, 10(-5) M ouabain (Na(+)-K(+) ATPase inhibitor) decreased the amplitude of the electrical oscillations but not their frequency (amplitude; 3.7 +/- 0.3 mV, frequency; 0.08 +/- 0.002 Hz). Although a high concentration of ouabain (10(-3) M) (which exhibits non-specific effects) abolished both electrical membrane potential oscillations and vasomotion, we conclude that the Na+-K+ ATPase could not be implicated in the generation of the membrane potential oscillations. We conclude that in rat perfused-pressurized mesenteric artery, the slow wave membrane type of potential oscillation by rhythmically gating voltage-dependent calcium channels, is responsible for the oscillation of intracellular calcium and thus vasomotion.  相似文献   

9.
In blood vessels, the ability to control vascular tone depends on extracellular calcium entry and the release of calcium from inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor (IP3R)-gated stores located in both the endothelial and smooth muscle cells of the vascular wall. Therefore, we examined mRNA expression and protein distribution of IP3R subtypes in intact aorta, basilar and mesenteric arteries of the rat. IP3R1 mRNA was predominantly expressed in all three arteries. Immunohistochemistry showed that IP3R1 was present in both the muscle and endothelial cell layers, while IP3R2 and IP3R3 were largely restricted to the endothelium. Weak expression of IP3R2 was observed in the smooth muscle of the basilar artery. Co-localisation studies of IP3R subtypes with known cellular elements showed no association of any of the three subtypes with the endothelial cell plasma membrane, but a close association between the subtypes and actin filaments was observed in all cell layers. IP3R2 was found to be present near the endothelial cell nucleus. We are the first to demonstrate differential IP3R subtype distribution between the cell layers of the intact vascular wall and hypothesise that this may underlie the diversity of IP3R-dependent responses, such as vasoconstriction, vasodilation and vasomotion, displayed by arteries.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Long-term culture of resistance vessels allows introduction of molecular biology techniques for use in microvascular research. The aim of the present study was to establish a culture protocol that preserved vascular integrity and function in microvessels for 48 h in culture. Skeletal muscle resistance arteries were excised from the hamster gracilis muscle. Segments were assigned to immediate functional tests or to vessel culture, during which segments were perfused and superfused at a transmural pressure of 45 mmHg with Leibovitz (L15) medium containing 15% fetal calf serum and antibiotics for 48 h. Cultured and freshly isolated vessels showed similar levels of spontaneous tone, myogenic responses, changes in smooth muscle intracellular calcium (Ca(i)(2+)) (fura 2), and vascular diameter (video microscopy) in response to 0.3 M norepinephrine and similar concentration-response curves for acetylcholine (endothelium dependent, +/-N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine) and sodium nitroprusside (endothelium independent). Measurements of endothelial Ca(i)(2+) revealed similar acetylcholine-induced increases in endothelial Ca(i)(2+) in both groups. It is concluded that vascular function can be preserved while maintaining vessels in culture. Thus it is possible to utilize protocols that require long-term treatment.  相似文献   

12.
Microcirculatory vessel response to changes in pressure, known as the myogenic response, is a key component of a tissue's ability to regulate blood flow. Experimental studies have not clearly elucidated the mechanical signal in the vessel wall governing steady-state reduction in vessel diameter upon an increase in intraluminal pressure. In this study, a multiscale computational model is constructed from established models of vessel wall mechanics, vascular smooth muscle (VSM) force generation, and VSM Ca(2+) handling and electrophysiology to compare the plausibility of vessel wall stress or strain as an effective mechanical signal controlling steady-state vascular contraction in the myogenic response. It is shown that, at the scale of a resistance vessel, wall stress, and not stretch (strain), is the likely physiological signal controlling the steady-state myogenic response. The model is then used to test nine candidate VSM stress-controlled channel variants by fitting two separate sets of steady-state myogenic response data. The channel variants include nonselective cation (NSC), supplementary Ca(2+) and Na(+), L-type Ca(2+), and large conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channels. The nine variants are tested in turn, and model fits suggest that stress control of Ca(2+) or Na(+) influx through NSC, supplementary Ca(2+) or Na(+), or L-type Ca(2+) channels is sufficient to produce observed steady-state diameter changes with pressure. However, simulations of steady-state VSM membrane potential, cytosolic Ca(2+), and Na(+) with pressure show only that Na(+) influx through NSC channel also generates known trends with increasing pressure, indicating that stress-controlled Na(+) influx through NSC is sufficient to generate the myogenic response.  相似文献   

13.
The mechanisms leading to vasomotion in the presence of noradrenaline and inhibitors of the sarcoplasmic/endoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase were investigated in isolated rat mesenteric small arteries. Isobaric diameter and isometric force were measured together with membrane potential in endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells (SMC). Calcium in the endothelial cells and SMC was imaged with confocal microscopy. In the presence of noradrenaline and cyclopiazonic acid, ryanodine-insensitive oscillations in tone were produced. The frequency was about 1 min(-1) and amplitude about 70% of the maximal tone. The amplitude was reduced by indomethacin and increased with L-NAME. Vasomotion was inhibited by nifedipine and by 40 mM potassium. The frequency was increased and amplitude decreased by removal of the endothelium and by application of charybdotoxin and apamin. The vasomotion was associated with in-phase oscillations of membrane potential in endothelial cells and SMC and oscillations of [Ca2+]i that were in near anti-phase. We suggest a working model for the generation of oscillation based on a membrane oscillator where ion channels in both endothelial cells and SMC interact via a current running between the two cell types through myoendothelial gap junctions, which sets up a near anti-phase oscillation of [Ca2+]i in the two cell types.  相似文献   

14.
The present study investigated the influence of media thickness on myogenic tone and intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) in rat skeletal muscle small arteries. A ligature was loosely tied around one external iliac artery of 5-wk-old spontaneously hypertensive rats. At 18 wk of age, femoral artery blood pressure was 102 +/- 11 mmHg (n = 15) on the ligated side and 164 +/- 6 mmHg (n = 15) on the contralateral side. Small arteries feeding the gracilis muscle had a reduced media cross-sectional area and a reduced media-to-lumen ratio on the ligated side, where also the range of myogenic constriction was shifted to lower pressures. However, when expressed as a function of wall stress, diameter responses were nearly identical. [Ca(2+)](i) was higher in vessels from the ligated hindlimb at pressures above 10 mmHg, but vasoconstriction was not accompanied by changes in [Ca(2+)](i). Thus the myogenic constriction here seems due primarily to changes in intracellular calcium sensitivity, which are determined mainly by the force per cross-sectional area of the wall and therefore altered by changes in vascular structure.  相似文献   

15.
Elevations in systolic blood pressure are believed to be closely linked to the pathogenesis and progression of renal diseases. It has been hypothesized that the afferent arteriole (AA) protects the glomerulus from the damaging effects of hypertension by sensing increases in systolic blood pressure and responding with a compensatory vasoconstriction (Loutzenhiser R, Bidani A, Chilton L. Circ Res 90: 1316-1324, 2002). To investigate this hypothesis, we developed a mathematical model of the myogenic response of an AA wall, based on an arteriole model (Gonzalez-Fernandez JM, Ermentrout B. Math Biosci 119: 127-167, 1994). The model incorporates ionic transport, cell membrane potential, contraction of the AA smooth muscle cell, and the mechanics of a thick-walled cylinder. The model represents a myogenic response based on a pressure-induced shift in the voltage dependence of calcium channel openings: with increasing transmural pressure, model vessel diameter decreases; and with decreasing pressure, vessel diameter increases. Furthermore, the model myogenic mechanism includes a rate-sensitive component that yields constriction and dilation kinetics similar to behaviors observed in vitro. A parameter set is identified based on physical dimensions of an AA in a rat kidney. Model results suggest that the interaction of Ca(2+) and K(+) fluxes mediated by voltage-gated and voltage-calcium-gated channels, respectively, gives rise to periodicity in the transport of the two ions. This results in a time-periodic cytoplasmic calcium concentration, myosin light chain phosphorylation, and cross-bridge formation with the attending muscle stress. Furthermore, the model predicts myogenic responses that agree with experimental observations, most notably those which demonstrate that the renal AA constricts in response to increases in both steady and systolic blood pressures. The myogenic model captures these essential functions of the renal AA, and it may prove useful as a fundamental component in a multiscale model of the renal microvasculature suitable for investigations of the pathogenesis of hypertensive renal diseases.  相似文献   

16.
The autoregulation of blood flow, the maintenance of almost constant blood flow in the face of variations in arterial pressure, is characteristic of many tissue types. Here, contributions to the autoregulation of pressure-dependent, shear stress-dependent, and metabolic vasoactive responses are analyzed using a theoretical model. Seven segments, connected in series, represent classes of vessels: arteries, large arterioles, small arterioles, capillaries, small venules, large venules, and veins. The large and small arterioles respond actively to local changes in pressure and wall shear stress and to the downstream metabolic state communicated via conducted responses. All other segments are considered fixed resistances. The myogenic, shear-dependent, and metabolic responses of the arteriolar segments are represented by a theoretical model based on experimental data from isolated vessels. To assess autoregulation, the predicted flow at an arterial pressure of 130 mmHg is compared with that at 80 mmHg. If the degree of vascular smooth muscle activation is held constant at 0.5, there is a fivefold increase in blood flow. When myogenic variation of tone is included, flow increases by a factor of 1.66 over the same pressure range, indicating weak autoregulation. The inclusion of both myogenic and shear-dependent responses results in an increase in flow by a factor of 2.43. A further addition of the metabolic response produces strong autoregulation with flow increasing by a factor of 1.18 and gives results consistent with experimental observation. The model results indicate that the combined effects of myogenic and metabolic regulation overcome the vasodilatory effect of the shear response and lead to the autoregulation of blood flow.  相似文献   

17.
This review summarizes what is currently known about the role of integrins in the vascular myogenic response. The myogenic response is the rapid and maintained constriction of a blood vessel in response to pressure elevation. A role for integrins in this process has been suggested because these molecules form an important mechanical link between the extracellular matrix and the vascular smooth muscle cytoskeleton. We briefly summarize evidence for a general role of integrins in mechanotransduction. We then describe the integrin subunit combinations known to exist in smooth muscle and the vascular wall matrix proteins that may interact with these integrins. We then discuss the effects of integrin-specific peptides and antibodies on vascular tone and on calcium entry mechanisms in vascular smooth muscle. Because integrin function is linked to the cytoskeleton, we discuss evidence for the role of the cytoskeleton in determining myogenic responsiveness. Finally, we analyze evidence that integrin-linked signaling pathways, such as those involving protein tyrosine phosphorylation cascades and mitogen-activated protein kinases, are required for myogenic tone.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Intravascular pressure-induced vasoconstriction (the "myogenic response") is intrinsic to smooth muscle cells, but mechanisms that underlie this response are unresolved. Here we investigated the physiological function of arterial smooth muscle cell caveolae in mediating the myogenic response. Since caveolin-1 (cav-1) ablation abolishes caveolae formation in arterial smooth muscle cells, myogenic mechanisms were compared in cerebral arteries from control (cav-1(+/+)) and cav-1-deficient (cav-1(-/-)) mice. At low intravascular pressure (10 mmHg), wall membrane potential, intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)), and myogenic tone were similar in cav-1(+/+) and cav-1(-/-) arteries. In contrast, pressure elevations to between 30 and 70 mmHg induced a smaller depolarization, [Ca(2+)](i) elevation, and myogenic response in cav-1(-/-) arteries. Depolarization induced by 60 mM K(+) also produced an attenuated [Ca(2+)](i) elevation and constriction in cav-1(-/-) arteries, whereas extracellular Ca(2+) removal and diltiazem, an L-type Ca(2+) channel blocker, similarly dilated cav-1(+/+) and cav-1(-/-) arteries. N(omega)-nitro-l-arginine, an nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, did not restore myogenic tone in cav-1(-/-) arteries. Iberiotoxin, a selective Ca(2+)-activated K(+) (K(Ca)) channel blocker, induced a similar depolarization and constriction in pressurized cav-1(+/+) and cav-1(-/-) arteries. Since pressurized cav-1(-/-) arteries are more hyperpolarized and this effect would reduce K(Ca) current, these data suggest that cav-1 ablation leads to functional K(Ca) channel activation, an effect that should contribute to the attenuated myogenic constriction. In summary, data indicate that cav-1 ablation reduces pressure-induced depolarization and depolarization-induced Ca(2+) influx, and these effects combine to produce a diminished arterial wall [Ca(2+)](i) elevation and constriction.  相似文献   

20.
Organ perfusion is regulated by vasoactivity and structural adaptation of small arteries and arterioles. These resistance vessels are sensitive to pressure, flow and a range of vasoactive stimuli. Several strongly interacting control loops exist. As an example, the myogenic response to a change of pressure influences the endothelial shear stress, thereby altering the contribution of shear-dependent dilation to the vascular tone. In addition, acute responses change the stimulus for structural adaptation and vice versa. Such control loops are able to maintain resistance vessels in a functional and stable state, characterized by regulated wall stress, shear stress, matched active and passive biomechanics and presence of vascular reserve. In this modeling study, four adaptation processes are identified that together with biomechanical properties effectuate such integrated regulation: control of tone, smooth muscle cell length adaptation, eutrophic matrix rearrangement and trophic responses. Their combined action maintains arteries in their optimal state, ready to cope with new challenges, allowing continuous long-term vasoregulation. The exclusion of any of these processes results in a poorly regulated state and in some cases instability of vascular structure.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号