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Departments of 1 Sports Medicine, and 2 Molecular Oncology and Angiology, Research Center on Aging and Adaptation, Shinshu University School of Medicine, Matsumoto 390-8621, Japan
Calponin is an actin binding protein in
vascular smooth muscle that modifies contractile responses. However,
its role in mean arterial pressure (MAP) regulation has not been
clarified. To assess this, MAP and heart rate (HR) were measured in
calponin knockout (KO) mice, and the results were compared with those
in wild-type (WT) mice. The measurements were performed every 100 ms
during a 60-min free-moving state each day for 3 days. Mice in both
groups rested during ~70% of the total measuring period. The mean HR
during rest was significantly lower in KO mice than in WT mice but with
no significant difference in MAP between the groups. The change in HR
response (
HR) to spontaneous change in MAP (
MAP) varied in a
wider range in KO mice with an 80% increase in the coefficient of
variation for HR (P < 0.05), whereas MAP in KO mice
was controlled in a narrow range similar to that in WT mice. The
baroreflex sensitivity (
HR/
MAP), determined from the change in HR
to the spontaneous change in MAP, was twofold higher in KO mice than
that in WT mice (P < 0.01), whereas there were no
significant differences in the baroreflex sensitivity determined by
intravascular administration of phenylephrine and sodium nitroprusside
between the two groups (P > 0.1). The MAP response to
the administrated doses of phenylephrine in KO mice was reduced to
one-half of that in WT mice (P < 0.01) but with no
significant difference in the response to sodium nitroprusside between
the groups. The differences in HR variability and the spontaneous
baroreflex sensitivity between the two groups completely disappeared
after carotid sinus denervation. These results suggest that the higher
variability in HR for KO mice was caused by the increased spontaneous
arterial baroreflex sensitivity, though not detected by the
intra-arterial administration of the drug, and that the higher
variability of HR may be a compensatory adaptation to the blunted
-adrenergic response of peripheral vessels to sympathetic nervous activity.
carotid sinus denervation; heart rate variability
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