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1 Department of Pediatrics, Academic Hospital Maastricht, and 2 Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Cardiovascular Research Institute Maastricht, Universiteit Maastricht, 6200 MD Maastricht, The Netherlands
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ABSTRACT |
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In the
embryo, hypoxemia causes redistribution of cardiac output from the
periphery toward the heart and the brain. In view of this, we
investigated developmental changes in the contractile and relaxing
properties of the peripheral femoral artery (Fem) and the more central
carotid artery (Car) at 0.7, 0.8, and 0.9 of the chicken embryo
incubation time. Isolated arteries were studied in myographs and were
exposed to norepinephrine or phenylephrine. High K+ (125 mM) and electrical field stimulation (0.25-16 Hz) were used to
induce receptor-independent and neurogenic contractions. Relaxing responses to ACh were evaluated in the absence and presence of the
nitric oxide (NO) synthase inhibitor
NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester
(L-NAME) and before and after endothelium removal.
1-Adrenergic contractile responses increased in a
time-dependent manner and were significantly larger in Fem than in Car.
Neurogenic contractions and adrenergic nerves could only be
demonstrated in Fem at 0.9 incubation. ACh caused relaxation in both
Fem and Car at 0.7, 0.8, and 0.9 incubation. The NO-independent part of the relaxation was more pronounced in Car than in Fem at all
developmental stages. We conclude that the chicken embryo is a useful
model to investigate the development of vasomotor control and vascular heterogeneity. The observed regional vascular differences may contribute to cardiac output redistribution during hypoxia in the
embryo and might result from endothelial and neurogenic influences on
vascular smooth muscle differentiation.
catecholamines; vascular smooth muscle; sympathetic nerves; endothelium; regional heterogeneity; chemoreflex
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INTRODUCTION |
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AT LATE STAGES of embryonic development, acute changes in arterial oxygen tension alter heart rate and the distribution of cardiac output (13). This chemoreflex produces an increase in vagal nerve activity to the heart and an increase in sympathetic activity toward the periphery (13, 18, 21). Through humoral and neurogenic catecholamines this can lead to an elevation of peripheral arterial tone (12, 13). The strength of the peripheral arterial constriction in the embryo depends on the degree of maturation of the arterial smooth muscle as well as the supply of vasoconstrictor stimuli. During acute embryonic hypoxemia, the flow to vital organs such as the brain and heart is preserved at the expense of the peripheral circulation (17, 19, 25, 26). Increases in arterial tone may occur predominantly in peripheral tissues (12, 19, 26). Alternatively, hypoxemia may increase the conductance of the central vascular compartments through local vasodilator substances such as adenosine (22) and endothelium-derived nitric oxide (NO) (1). In the adult, the pharmacological control of the coronary and cerebral circulations differs extensively from that of peripheral vascular beds. It is, however, not clear at which developmental stage this regionality emerges and which mechanisms promote it. The chemoreflex may be subject to developmental changes (17). In fetal sheep, peripheral vasomotor control starts to develop at 0.7 gestation and becomes more prominent as development proceeds (10, 15, 19). Control of the cerebral and coronary circulations may develop earlier and may rely on local myogenic and metabolic mechanisms rather than on neurohumoral mediators (15).
The chicken embryo is an attractive model to study cardiovascular responses during fetal development (25, 30, 31). Unlike in mammalian species, cardiovascular responses in avian embryos are not influenced by maternal or placental vasoactive hormones. We previously demonstrated in 0.47- to 0.9-gestation chicken embryos that acute hypoxemia leads to bradycardia (30) and redistribution of cardiac output in favor of the heart and brain (26). We noted that, similar to results in fetal sheep, the fraction directed to the heart and brain increased with gestational age (26), indicating a maturation of vascular control mechanisms. This may be due to changes in the efficacy of the chemoreceptors and changes in the ability of peripheral arteries to regulate resistance, as well as developmental changes in sympathetic nervous and endothelium-dependent control of these peripheral arteries.
The goal of the present study was to describe development and regionality of arterial vasomotor control in the chicken embryo. A central artery, the carotid artery, and a peripheral artery, the femoral artery, were isolated from 0.7-, 0.8-, and 0.9-incubation chicken embryos (i.e., after 15, 17, and 19 days of the 21-day incubation period). Their responses to adrenergic stimuli, sympathetic nerve stimulation, and ACh were compared. The latter compound is generally considered to be an endothelium-dependent vasodilator (5, 7, 8, 10, 14), but this has not yet been demonstrated in the chicken embryo. The choice of carotid and femoral arteries was justified by their anatomic location, their size, and by the relative ease with which these vessels could be isolated from even the smallest embryos investigated.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Vessel isolation. Experimental procedures followed Dutch laws for animal experiments. Fertilized Lohman-selected White Legghorn eggs were incubated at 38°C and 60% relative air humidity and were rotated once every hour, until day 15, 17, or 19 (0.7, 0.8, or 0.9 incubation time, respectively). The eggs were opened at their blunt side. The eggshell and the outer eggshell membrane were carefully removed using forceps to expose the inner eggshell membrane, which was then superfused with Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate (KRB) solution. An incision of 2 cm was then made in the chorioallantoic membrane. The egg was turned upside down, and the embryo was collected on a petri dish. The extraembryonic membranes were removed, and the embryo was transferred to a petri dish that had been coated with Sylgard (Dow Corning) and filled with KRB. The right carotid and right femoral artery were carefully dissected from the embryo.
Recording of arterial reactivity.
The isolated arteries were mounted as ring segments (length 1.7 to 2.0 mm) between an isometric force transducer (Kistler Morce DSC 6, Seattle, WA) and a displacement device in a myograph (model 610M, J.P.
Trading, Aarhus, Denmark) using two stainless steel wires (diameter 40 µm). Force was divided by twice the vessel segment length to
calculate wall tension. During mounting and experimentation, the
myograph organ bath (5 ml vol) was filled with KRB maintained at
37°C and aerated with 95% O2-5% CO2. Each artery was stretched to its individual optimal lumen diameter, i.e.,
the diameter at which it developed the strongest contractile response
to 125 mM K+-KRB (K-KRB), using a diameter-tension protocol
as previously described for mammalian small arteries (Ref. 29; Fig.
1).
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Morphometry.
Fixed vessels were transferred to 70% ethanol and embedded in
paraffin. To determine medial cross-sectional area, we performed immunohistochemistry on thin cross sections (4 µm) with antibodies against smooth muscle
-actin (Sigma Chemical, St. Louis, MO). Endogenous peroxidase was blocked by 0.1% H2O2
in methanol for 20 min at room temperature, and the sections were
incubated for 45 min with primary antibody (1:4,000). Horseradish
peroxidase-conjugated rabbit anti-mouse antibodies (Daka; dilution
1:200) and diaminobenzioline-H2O2 substrate
were subsequently used to visualize the immunoreactivity. The area
occupied by smooth muscle
-actin was determined using a Zeiss
Axioscope (Zeiss, Germany), a standard CCD camera (Stemmer, Germany),
and commercially available software (JAVA 1.21, Jandel Scientific,
Corte Madera, CA).
Staining of perivascular sympathetic nerves. To demonstrate the presence of l-norepinephrine (NE)-containing nerves, we stained whole mount vessel preparations with glyoxylic acid (24, 29). Vessel segments were opened longitudinally and were incubated for 30 min at 20°C in 2% glyoxylic acid in 10% sucrose containing phosphate buffer (pH 7.2). Subsequently, the vessel segments were transferred to a mounting glass, air-dried for 30 min, stretched at 100°C for 4 min, and enclosed with Etellan and a coverslip. The presence of glyoxylic acid-induced fluorescence, representing catecholamine-containing nerves, was visualized using fluorescent microscopy (microscope Nikon Diaphot, BA 470-DM 455 filter; Nikon FE2 camera). Photographs of the vessel segments were taken through the microscope (objective Fluo ×10, Nikon) using Kodak 320 ASA film.
Solutions and drugs. The composition of KRB solution (in mmol/l) was as follows: 118.5 NaCl, 4.7 KCl, 1.2 MgSO4 · 7H2O, 1.2 KH2PO4, 25.0 NaHCO3, 2.5 CaCl2, and 5.5 glucose. In K-KRB (125 mmol/l K+) all NaCl was replaced by an equimolar amount of KCl. K+-containing solution (35 mmol/l) was prepared by mixing appropriate volumes of K-KRB and KRB. Phosphate-buffered solution consisted of 0.1 mol/l NaH2PO4 · H2O and 0.1 mol/l Na2HPO4 · 2H2O. ACh, glyoxylic acid, L-NAME, l-NE, l-phenylephrine (PE), and prazosin were all obtained from Sigma Chemical. BHT-933 (azepexol) was a generous gift from Boehringer. For all agents 1,000× concentrated stock solutions were prepared in double-distilled water.
Data analysis.
Concentration-response curves were analyzed in terms of sensitivity and
maximal response by fitting the individual experimental data with a
nonlinear sigmoid regression curve (GraphPad Software, San Diego, CA).
Maximal contractile responses (Emax) were expressed in terms of active wall tension (force divided by twice the segment length; N/m); sensitivities are shown as pD2, where
pD2=
log10 EC50
(EC50 represents the concentration at which 50% of the
maximal responses were observed). Changes and differences in
Emax and pD2 with time and between
types of vessels were evaluated by ANOVA with Bonferroni's correction
for multiple comparisons. P < 0.05 was accepted to represent
statistical significance. Data are shown as means ± SE.
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RESULTS |
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Femoral and carotid arteries obtained from 0.7- to 0.9-incubation
chicken embryos responded to depolarizing high-K+ solution
with a contraction (Fig. 1). In both types of vessels, the diameter at
which maximal responses were obtained (Dopt) and the amplitude of the maximal response (Kmax) increased
significantly with increasing incubation (Figs.
2 and
3). In femoral arteries, Dopt averaged 357 ± 8, 409 ± 13, and 449 ± 15 µm and Kmax averaged 0.26 ± 0.03, 0.73 ± 0.15, and
1.78 ± 0.14 N/m at 0.7, 0.8, and 0.9 incubation, respectively
(n = 10-18). In carotid arteries, Dopt averaged 368 ± 8, 406 ± 8, and 468 ± 15 µm; and Kmax averaged 0.19 ± 0.02, 0.21 ± 0.04, and
1.01 ± 0.15 N/m at 0.7, 0.8, and 0.9 incubation, respectively
(n = 8-13). Despite comparable diameters (Fig. 2),
contractile responses to K+ were significantly larger in
femoral than in carotid arteries at 0.8 and 0.9 incubation (Fig. 3).
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Part of the reason for these results seems to be the significantly larger medial mass in femoral than in carotid arteries (Fig. 2), but statistically significant differences between both vessels persist when contractility was normalized to medial thickness. Active wall stress averaged 69 ± 7 and 41 ± 5 N/m2 at 0.8 incubation and 142 ± 11 and 85 ± 9 N/m2 at 0.9 incubation in femoral and carotid arteries, respectively.
In femoral and carotid arteries at 0.7, 0.8, and 0.9 incubation, high concentrations of relaxing agonists, such as ACh (10 µmol/l), adenosine (1 mmol/l), and papaverine (1 mmol/l) failed to affect basal tension, indicating the absence of spontaneous tone under the experimental conditions.
In all femoral arteries from 0.7 incubation onwards, and in all carotid
arteries at 0.9 incubation, NE and the selective
1-adrenergic agonist PE induced concentration-dependent
tonic contractile responses (Figs. 3 and
4). At 0.7 and 0.8 incubation, only
30-40% of the carotid arteries investigated responded to the
agonists; maximal responses were close to the detection limit of 0.01 N/m. At all time points, Emax to the adrenergic
stimuli were significantly larger in femoral than in carotid arteries
(Fig. 3). At 0.9 incubation, the sensitivity (pD2) for NE
was significantly smaller in femoral (6.03 ± 0.8) than in carotid
arteries (6.53 ± 0.11), whereas the sensitivity for PE was comparable
in femoral (5.58 ± 0.09) and carotid arteries (5.27 ± 0.17). Both
femoral and carotid arteries failed to contract in response to BHT-933,
a selective
2-adrenergic agonist (data not shown),
indicating a lack of functional
2-adrenergic receptors
on arterial smooth muscle at the developmental stages investigated.
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Electrical field stimulation caused frequency-dependent contractions in
femoral arteries at 0.9 incubation (Fig. 4) but failed to induce
contraction in femoral arteries at earlier developmental stages and in
carotid arteries at all stages investigated. Glyoxylic acid staining
confirmed the presence of catecholamine-containing nerves in femoral
arteries at 0.9 incubation (Fig. 5). In the presence of the
1-adrenergic receptor antagonist
prazosin (0.1 µmol/l), contractile responses of 0.9-incubation
femoral arteries to electrical field stimulation were reduced by
>85% (data not shown).
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Embryonic arteries that had been constricted with 35 mmol/l
K+ responded to ACh with concentration-dependent
relaxations (Fig. 6). In 0.9-incubation
femoral arteries, the relaxing responses to ACh were abolished by
mechanical or chemical removal of the endothelium (Fig. 6). Sensitivity
to the cholinergic agonist and its maximal effect did not change
significantly between 0.7 and 0.9 incubation and did not differ
significantly between femoral and carotid arteries (Fig. 7).
L-NAME (0.1 mmol/l) increased the contractile responses to
35 mmol/l K+ in both femoral and carotid arteries (Fig. 6)
and reduced the sensitivity and the maximal responsiveness to the
endothelium-dependent relaxing effects of ACh in both types of vessels
(Fig. 7). Although K+-induced
contraction was both on an absolute and a relative basis stronger in
femoral than in carotid arteries, the L-NAME-resistant component of the relaxing effects of ACh was significantly more pronounced in carotid than in femoral arteries at 0.7 and at 0.9 incubation (Fig. 7). It is noteworthy that the contractile effect of
L-NAME in embryonic arteries was not significantly
altered by endothelium removal (Fig. 6).
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DISCUSSION |
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Between 0.7 and 0.9 incubation, the contractile reactivity to
1-adrenergic and receptor-independent stimulation
increased in the femoral and carotid arteries of chicken embryos. Late
developmental increases in contractile reactivity, in neurogenic
vasoconstrictor responses, and in the responsiveness to
endothelium-derived NO were more pronounced in the peripheral femoral
artery than in the central carotid artery. Such regional heterogeneity
may contribute to the redistribution of cardiac output during hypoxemia
in the embryo and may find its origin in neurogenic and endothelial
influences on the functional differentiation of arterial smooth muscle.
Previous studies of cardiovascular responses in chicken embryos revealed similarities to those in fetal sheep (17, 26). Most notably, acute hypoxemia results not only in bradycardia but also in a redistribution of cardiac output from the peripheral circulation to the heart and brain in both species. Catecholamines participate in this embryonic chemoreflex in both systems (12, 15, 17, 18, 20, 21, 25, 26, 30). In the present study we analyzed isolated arteries of the chicken embryo. The use of in vitro approaches, which are well established for adult arteries (e.g., 7, 8, 29), allow quantification of responses and sensitivities of individual blood vessels to various vasoactive agents and allow us to quantify neurogenic and endothelium-dependent responses in the absence of modulatory circulating hormones. We compared femoral and carotid arteries as model systems for a peripheral and a central vascular bed. The size and reactivity of the youngest arteries that we studied were only moderately above the limits of the in vitro techniques that are currently available. Vessels further downstream were therefore not included in this study.
In femoral and carotid arteries obtained from 0.7-incubation embryos, direct depolarization induced significant contraction. This indicates that at this developmental stage the arterial smooth muscle cells are already equipped with contractile proteins and an excitation-contraction coupling that most likely involves voltage-operated calcium channels. In both types of vessels, the receptor-independent contractile responses to depolarization increased five- to sevenfold between 0.7 and 0.9 incubation, whereas medial mass, as judged from measurements of medial cross-sectional area, increased only 65-75%. The contractile responses were larger in femoral than in carotid arteries despite comparable lumen diameter, and significant differences persisted after correction for differences in medial thickness. It is most likely that smooth muscle cell differentiation contributes to the developmental increase in arterial contractile reactivity in general and to the difference between femoral and carotid arteries as regards contractile strength in particular.
At all time points investigated, NE and PE induced contraction in the
embryonic femoral artery. Adrenergic responsiveness and
pharmacomechanical coupling thus develop rather early in the chicken
embryo. Previous research (11) established that cardiac adrenergic
responses can be observed as early as day 4 of incubation. In
sharp contrast, consistent
1-adrenergic contractile
responses could not be obtained in the carotid arteries before 0.9 incubation. With the use of 0.3 nM [3H]prazosin
and previously described ligand-binding techniques in intact arterial
segments (28), we observed that the density of
1-adrenergic receptors was comparable in 0.9-incubation
femoral arteries (10.8 ± 1.3 fmol/mg total protein, n = 8)
and carotid arteries (11.1 ± 1.8 fmol/mg total protein, n = 4). Consequently, aspects beyond the receptors, most likely involving
the coupling of these sarcolemmal structures to the contractile
apparatus, account for the regional difference. Little is known about
the mechanisms that control
1-adrenergic mechanisms in
general and during development in particular. The observed difference
between the two types of arteries excludes a major role for circulating factors such as glucocorticoids and catecholamines. Recent findings of
our group suggest, on the other hand, that local aspects of smooth
muscle cell differentiation and of perivascular sympathetic innervation
play a pivotal role in this respect. We demonstrated in adult arteries
that dedifferentiation of arterial smooth muscle resulting from balloon
injury is accompanied by a marked reduction of
1-adrenergic receptor density (3) and that the
perivascular sympathetic innervation promotes the presence of
1A-adrenergic receptors while reducing the density of
1B- and
1D-adrenergic receptors
(28).
In this study we approached perivascular sympathetic nerves
histochemically and from a functional point of view. Glyoxylic acid-induced fluorescence of perivascular nerve fibers was prominent in
late-incubation chicken femoral arteries. Prazosin-sensitive contractile responses to perivascular nerve stimulation were obtained in late-gestation femoral arteries but not in carotid arteries. In the
femoral arteries, constrictor responses to exogenous NE could be
obtained before neurogenic responses. In adult arteries, the density of
perivascular sympathetic innervation varies considerably between
anatomic locations (28). Regionally selective vascular sympathetic
innervation during development is brought about by timely secretion by
vascular smooth muscle of a mixture of nerve-attracting mediators such
as nerve growth factor and nerve-repelling substances. This secretion
is restricted to a rather limited period of time and may be limited to
an intermediate vascular smooth muscle cell phenotype (9, 16). It may
furthermore be more prominent in vascular smooth muscle cells of
mesodermal origin than in those that are derived from the neural crest
and which primarily populate the blood vessels in the cranial region.
In addition to altering the pharmacological properties of the
innervated blood vessel (e.g., see 29), the perivascular sympathetic
innervation can initially stimulate growth and proliferation of the
smooth muscle cells and subsequently promote the development and
maintenance of a contractile phenotype (for review, see Ref. 6). We
thus propose that the stronger contractility of femoral arteries during
late development and their larger responsiveness to
1-adrenergic stimulation are related to their
sympathetic innervation. The causal interrelationship between these
aspects clearly remains to be established.
Another vessel wall component that plays important roles in the morphogenesis and development of the vascular system and in the control of vasomotor tone is the endothelium. Endothelial cells give rise to the earliest vascular channels and later attract mesenchymal cells to the vessel wall (4). Subsequently, endothelium-derived mediators promote the differentiation of these vessel wall cells into contractile smooth muscle cells (4). Endothelium-derived NO that stimulates cGMP production and protein kinase G activity has been proposed to participate in this differentiating action (2, 23). We approached this mediator with the use of ACh, an agent that induces endothelium-dependent relaxation in adult arteries of various species (5, 7, 8, 10), including chicken aorta (14). Our experiments with mechanical and chemical endothelium removal demonstrate the endothelium dependency of cholinergic vasodilatation in the chicken embryo. Partial blockade of these relaxations by the NOS inhibitor L-NAME indicates an involvement of endothelium-derived NO. Relaxing effects of endothelium-derived NO could be demonstrated from the earliest developmental stages investigated and were at all stages more prominent in femoral arteries than in carotid arteries. Our current findings do not allow us to attribute the regional difference to a larger endothelial release of NO or to a more elaborated guanylate cyclase-protein kinase G system in femoral than in carotid arteries. Yet, the findings are consistent with a contribution of endothelium-derived NO to the differentiation of arterial smooth muscle (2, 23) and to the developmental increase in arterial contractile reactivity. Future pharmacological intervention studies are, however, needed to strengthen this proposal.
It is noteworthy that in chicken embryonic arteries, as in some adult mammalian systems (5) and in the aorta of mature chickens (14), the endothelium-dependent relaxing responses to ACh could only partly be blocked by L-NAME. A role for an endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor (5) seems unlikely because the relaxing effects of ACh were studied during contraction induced by depolarizing high-K+ solution. The exact nature of the L-NAME-resistant component of endothelium-dependent relaxation remains to be established in chicken embryonic arteries. This also applies for the observed endothelium-independency of the L-NAME-induced contraction.
In summary, we observed differences between carotid and femoral
arteries of chicken embryos as regards the developmental increase in
contractile strength,
1-adrenergic vasoconstriction,
perivascular sympathetic innervation, and endothelium-dependent
vasodilatation involving NO. From approximately "mid-incubation,"
the cardiovascular system of the chicken embryo can respond to
hypoxemia with a redistribution of cardiac output from peripheral
vascular beds to the heart and brain (25, 26). As development
progressed, this chemoreflex became more prominent. Based on our
observations, the development of arterial contractile reactivity, i.e.,
its pharmacological control and regional heterogeneity, may participate
herein and seems to involve neurogenic and endothelial influences on
arterial smooth muscle cell differentiation.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We gratefully acknowledge the assistance of Gregorio Fazzi, Rein van Gool, Ger Janssen, and Lilian Kessels in the morphometry, scanning electron microscopy, radioligand binding, and histofluorescence aspects of this study.
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FOOTNOTES |
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Present address of F. le Noble: Dept. of Physiology, Cardiovascular Research Institute Maastricht, Universiteit Maastricht, 6200 MD Maastricht, The Netherlands.
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: J. G. R. De Mey, Dept. of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Universiteit Maastricht, PO Box 616, 6200 MD Maastricht, The Netherlands (E-mail: j.demey{at}farmaco.unimaas.nl).
Received 9 April 1999; accepted in final form 19 October 1999.
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