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Department of Pharmacy and Pharmacology, University of Bath, Bath BA2 7AY, United Kingdom
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ABSTRACT |
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Smooth
muscle membrane potential and tension in rat isolated small mesenteric
arteries (inner diameter 100-200 µm) were measured simultaneously to investigate whether the intensity of smooth muscle
stimulation and the endothelium influence responses to exogenous
K+. Variable smooth muscle depolarization and contraction
were stimulated by titration with 0.1-10 µM phenylephrine.
Raising external K+ to 10.8 mM evoked correlated, sustained
hyperpolarization and relaxation, both of which were inhibited as the
smooth muscle depolarized and contracted to around
38 mV and 10 mN,
respectively. At these higher levels of stimulation, raising the
K+ concentration to 13.8 mM still hyperpolarized and
relaxed the smooth muscle. Relaxation to endothelium-derived
hyperpolarizing factor, released by ACh, was not altered by the level
of stimulation. In endothelium-denuded arteries, the
concentration-relaxation curve to K+ was shifted to the
right but was not depressed. In denuded arteries, relaxation to
K+ was unaffected by the extent of prior stimulation and
was blocked with 0.1 mM ouabain but not with 30 µM Ba2+.
The ability of K+ to stimulate simultaneous
hyperpolarization and relaxation in the mesenteric artery is consistent
with a role as an endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor activating
inwardly rectifying K+ channels on the endothelium and
Na+-K+-ATPase on the smooth muscle cells.
endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor; membrane potential; acetylcholine; vascular smooth muscle
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INTRODUCTION |
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THE IDENTITY OF THE HYPERPOLARIZING factor that mediates vascular smooth muscle relaxation independently of nitric oxide and prostacylin remains controversial. One recent suggestion is that endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor (EDHF) may simply be K+ released from endothelial cells during stimulation with ACh (8). This suggestion was based on the similarity between smooth muscle hyperpolarization and relaxation evoked with K+ or ACh (to release EDHF) in the rat hepatic and mesenteric arteries and the pharmacological profile of these responses. In addition, direct recording from endothelial cells showed that the hyperpolarization of these cells to ACh was abolished in the presence of apamin and charybdotoxin, but not apamin and iberiotoxin. This combination of K+ channel blockers provides a characteristic block of the EDHF pathway (4, 19, 23). This suggests that agents such as ACh, which release EDHF, do so as a consequence of their ability to raise endothelial cell Ca2+ levels and thereby activate small- and intermediate-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (KCa) channels, allowing K+ to efflux and act as EDHF. In this way, Edwards et al. (8) suggested that K+ could act universally as an EDHF, with the caveat that other pathways could also contribute to a greater or lesser extent in different vessels. This point was illustrated in the mesenteric artery, which, unlike the hepatic artery, did not appear to rely entirely on K+ as an EDHF. Therefore, a significant component of the EDHF-evoked relaxation in this vessel was due to an additional pathway. It was suggested that this may reflect the spread of hyperpolarization through myoendothelial gap junctions, a theory that was subsequently supported by experimentation (6, 9).
However, recent measurements of smooth muscle relaxation have questioned the role of K+ as an EDHF in the rat small mesenteric artery (14). These workers were able to obtain only modest K+-evoked relaxation in 30-40% of the vessels they studied. Furthermore, the relaxation was very transient compared with ACh-evoked relaxation and was abolished by removal of the endothelium. Clearly, these data question the role of K+ in the EDHF response of the mesenteric artery. We now provide the first simultaneous membrane potential and tension data showing robust hyperpolarization and relaxation to K+. Our data indicate that a failure by others to record consistent relaxation to K+ in the mesenteric artery can be explained simply by the intensity of stimulation against which K+ is applied. Our observations are consistent with the EDHF pathway in the mesenteric artery being explained in part by K+ acting directly as an EDHF and in part by the myoendothelial spread of endothelial cell hyperpolarization, reflecting K+ activation of inwardly rectifying K+ (KIR) channels and an efflux of this ion through these channels and KCa channels.
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METHODS |
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Male Wistar rats (200-250 g) were killed by cervical
dislocation and exsanguination following procedures required under
Schedule 1 of the Animals Scientific Procedure Act 1986 (United
Kingdom) and monitored by the Home Office. The mesentery was removed
and placed in Krebs buffer. A segment (2 mm long) of a third-order branch of the superior mesenteric artery was mounted in a
Mulvany-Halpern myograph (model 400A, J. P. Trading) at a tension
equivalent to that generated at 0.9 times the diameter of the vessel at
100 mmHg. Simultaneous recording of smooth muscle membrane potential and tension was achieved with glass electrodes (filled with 2 M KCl,
tip resistances ~100 M
) (10). Endothelial cell
viability was assessed as the ability to induce >95% relaxation with
1 µM ACh in arterial segments preconstricted with a submaximal
concentration of phenylephrine and in the presence of the nitric oxide
synthase inhibitor
N
-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester
(L-NAME, 100 µM) and indomethacin (2.8 µM). Endothelial
cells were removed where applicable by gentle rubbing with a human
hair. Subsequently, phenylephrine was titrated to induce variable
levels of depolarization and contraction against which repolarization
and relaxation could be assessed to single concentrations of exogenous
K+ to 10-15 mM final bath concentration.
Solutions and drugs. Tissues were maintained at 37°C in oxygenated Krebs buffer composed of (in mM) 118.0 NaCl, 25.0 NaHCO3, 3.6 KCl, 1.2 MgSO4 · 7H2O, 1.2 KH2PO4, 11.0 glucose, and 2.5 CaCl2, which was continuously aerated with 95% O2-5% CO2. All drugs used were purchased from Sigma (Poole, UK).
Analysis of data. Relaxation and repolarization are expressed as percent decreases in the respective levels of tone and depolarization. Values are means ± SE of n experiments.
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RESULTS |
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In the absence of phenylephrine, smooth muscle cells in the
mesenteric artery had a resting membrane potential of
51.4 ± 1.5 mV (n = 12). The application of increasing
concentrations of phenylephrine stimulated smooth muscle depolarization
associated with rhythmic spike discharges followed by contraction.
Raising the bath concentration of K+ to 10.8 mM reversed
the depolarization and contraction, an effect that was sustained for
2 min (Fig. 1A). However,
the ability of K+ to evoke repolarization and relaxation
was reduced if the smooth muscle cells were further depolarized and
contracted by phenylephrine (Fig. 1B). There was a strong
correlation between the hyperpolarization and relaxation to 10.8 mM
K+ (Fig. 1C), with both responses being markedly
depressed with increasing levels of depolarization and contraction
(Fig. 1, D and E). The influence of the extent of
stimulation on the responses to K+ varied with the
steady-state concentration of this ion. Increasing the extent of
stimulation depressed the relaxation evoked by 7.8 mM K+ in
a way similar to 10.8 mM K+ (Fig.
2A). However, neither the
relaxation with 13.8 mM K+ (Fig. 2C) nor the
hyperpolarization (118.2 ± 22.2% reversal of depolarization,
n = 5) was reduced in the same tissue under the same
conditions. Unlike the responses to K+, the relaxation to
different concentrations of ACh was not depressed by the intensity of
stimulation (Fig. 2, D-F).
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In the absence of a functional endothelium, the concentration-response
curve for relaxation to K+ was shifted to the right, but
the maximal relaxation was unaffected (Fig.
3A). However, the dependence
of K+-evoked relaxation on the intensity of stimulation was
now absent (Fig. 3, B-D). In intact arteries, 30 µM
Ba2+ (n = 6) or 0.1 mM ouabain
(n = 7) shifted the relaxation curve to K+
to the right. Although the maximal relaxation was reduced slightly, K+ was still able to evoke ~80% relaxation (Fig.
4, A and B).
However, in endothelium-denuded arteries, the relaxation to
K+ was abolished in the presence of 0.1 mM ouabain but was
unaffected by 30 µM Ba2+ (Fig. 4C).
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DISCUSSION |
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This study provides the first recordings of correlated smooth muscle hyperpolarization and relaxation in response to increases in extracellular K+. Most importantly, the results show that the ability of K+ to evoke these smooth muscle responses depends critically on the extent of prior contraction and the concentration of K+ applied in vessels with an intact endothelium. Furthermore, the mechanisms underlying relaxation are influenced by the endothelium.
The fact that K+ could stimulate smooth muscle hyperpolarization and relaxation in the mesenteric artery was a key piece of evidence in support of the suggestion that this ion acts as an EDHF (8). However, the membrane potential measurements in the original study were made at or close to the resting membrane potential, while the relaxation measurements required prior contraction. The demonstration that hyperpolarization and relaxation to K+ occur simultaneously is therefore very important. It extends the previous work, showing that both responses can be stimulated under exactly the same conditions, and as with the equivalent responses to EDHF (released by ACh) (22), they are closely correlated and sustained.
These data also unequivocally demonstrate that the degree of stimulation with phenylephrine influences the ability of extracellular K+ to evoke smooth muscle hyperpolarization and relaxation, providing the endothelium is intact. Hyperpolarization and relaxation to K+ were evoked every time this ion was applied, but only if a submaximal concentration of phenylephrine was used for stimulation. This contrasts dramatically with recent work in the same artery, where only modest relaxation (maximum ~35% with 10 mM K+) could be obtained in 30-40% of the arteries studied (14). This discrepancy simply relates to the degree of stimulation, inasmuch as in the latter study, 10 µM phenylephrine or 10 µM norepinephrine was used as the stimulant. The traces show that this resulted in contraction well in excess of 10 mN, a level where we show that 10.8 mM K+ cannot evoke hyperpolarization or relaxation. Why these workers failed to record K+-induced relaxation in endothelium-denuded arteries is not clear. It may be explained by endothelium removal abolishing an already very small response, or, alternatively, it may reflect the prevailing extracellular concentration of K+ at the surface of the smooth muscle cells, which will increase during contraction. During contraction with phenylephrine, an efflux of K+ occurs through large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels in the smooth muscle cells, which is sufficient to suppress the level of contraction by 75% (5). With higher levels of stimulation, the concentration of K+ at the surface of smooth muscle cells could increase to the extent that Na+-K+-ATPase activity was maximal before the addition of any exogenous K+. This would then reduce the ability of added K+ to evoke hyperpolarization and relaxation. This effect would occur in endothelium-intact and -denuded preparations but would be most apparent, in terms of a loss of relaxation, in the latter, which lack a significant route to relaxation through KIR channels in the endothelial cells.
Removal of the endothelium significantly shifted the relaxation curve to K+ to the right (Fig. 3). We previously showed in endothelium-intact mesenteric arteries that relaxation to K+ is shifted to the right by a combination of Ba2+ to block KIR channels and ouabain to block Na+-K+-ATPase (8). We now show that removal of the endothelium removes sensitivity to Ba2+ and enables ouabain to completely block relaxation (Fig. 4C). This suggests, first, that Ba2+ is acting on the endothelium and, second, that the endothelium appears to influence the action of ouabain. We recently demonstrated that KIR2.1 is expressed predominantly on the endothelium in mesenteric arteries, which is consistent with these functional data (11). Transcript of KIR2.1 has recently been reported in mesenteric smooth muscle cells, but no evidence for functional expression was presented (2). It is interesting to note that, with Ba2+ present, the relaxation curve to K+ in intact arteries is very similar to that in denuded arteries (cf. Figs. 3A and 4A). Ouabain, by itself, also shifted the relaxation curve for K+ to the right in intact arteries. However, the fact that in combination these agents do not further depress this relaxation (8) does indicate that K+ is acting through an additional mechanism. Inasmuch as ouabain totally blocked relaxation in denuded arteries, any additional mechanism is unlikely to reflect the release of dilator agents from perivascular nerves, which would be present in intact and denuded preparations.
The involvement of KIR will confer voltage sensitivity on
the relaxation responses to K+, inasmuch as the activity of
this channel is a function of voltage and extracellular K+
concentration (17). The ability of 13.8 mM K+
to evoke hyperpolarization and relaxation at a time when 10.8 mM
K+ was ineffective is consistent with these properties. It
also presumably explains why the presence of ouabain does not block relaxation when the endothelium is functional. K+
activating endothelial cell KIR and evoking
hyperpolarization to spread passively and relax the smooth muscle
before the direct smooth muscle depolarizing action of K+
predominates. However, it does not explain why relaxation persists in
the additional presence of Ba2+ (8). When
Ba2+ and ouabain are present, the action of K+
on the endothelial and smooth muscle cells should be prevented. It is
possible that smooth muscle depolarization coupled with the addition of
K+ is able to overcome the block with Ba2+.
Block of KIR does decrease with depolarization, but the
half-block constant at
40 mV is ~8 µM (2), so unless
exogenous K+ adds dramatically to the effect of
depolarization, this possibility seems unlikely. Alternatively,
K+ may facilitate endothelial cell hyperpolarization by
modulating another type of K+ channel on the endothelium,
to evoke spreading hyperpolarization and then smooth muscle relaxation.
For example, extracellular K+ is required for outward
current flow through some forms of KV channels
(18). This suggestion remains to be tested, but it is
interesting to note that charybdotoxin blocks KV channels
(12).
Depolarization with phenylephrine would be predicted to increase the
amplitude of the current attributed to
Na+-K+-ATPase, inasmuch as membrane potential
moves further from the reversal potential (16). The
2- and
3-isoforms of
Na+-K+-ATPase are present in mesenteric artery
smooth muscle cells, which have apparent affinities
(K0.5) for activation with K+
ranging from 3.6 to 6.2 mM (
2
1,
2
2,
3
1,
3
2) (1, 3). In
endothelium-denuded arteries, these characteristics will clearly allow
for enzyme activation by raised K+, an explanation
supported by the sensitivity of the relaxation to ouabain and the lack
of inhibition with increasing levels of stimulation with phenylephrine.
The fact that K+ can evoke correlated smooth muscle hyperpolarization and relaxation is very important, as it extends the available evidence that it can act as an EDHF in the mesenteric artery. The fact that these responses can be blocked depending on the extent of smooth muscle depolarization evoked with phenylephrine appears to apply only with lower effective concentrations of K+ (7.8 and 10.8 mM). So, despite the prevailing level of smooth muscle stimulation, if the concentration of K+ is sufficient, it should be able to mimic the hyperpolarization and relaxation to ACh. Discrepancies between relaxation to K+ and ACh, in terms of magnitude and reproducibility, do not negate a role for K+ as an EDHF. The finding that relaxation to ACh was not influenced by the extent of prior stimulation could be explained by K+ accumulating between the endothelial and smooth muscle cells in concentrations where relaxation is also uninfluenced by the extent of stimulation (~13 mM). In addition, ACh probably evokes smooth muscle relaxation by more than one route. Endothelial cell hyperpolarization, which follows the activation of muscarinic receptors with ACh, could pass passively to hyperpolarize and relax the adjacent smooth muscle cells, through the gap junctions that exist between these cells in the mesenteric artery (6, 20). An additional consideration arising from the present study is that K+ will amplify this effect through the activation of KIR channels on the endothelium. However, it is important to note that this may not be the scheme in all arteries. In coronary and cerebral arteries, the available evidence indicates that a KIR channel linked to relaxation is present on the smooth muscle cells (9).
It is not known whether K+ can act as an EDHF in
vivo. However, the evidence available from in vitro
experiments with pressurized arteries is consistent with such a role.
First, the inhibitory action of K+ is not solely restricted
to the mesenteric vasculature. Raising external K+ from 6 to 16 mM evoked a pronounced endothelium-independent hyperpolarization (12-14 mV from potentials around
45 mV) and vasodilation in
cerebral and coronary arteries (13). Second, increasing
extracellular K+ concentration evoked an
endothelium-independent vasodilation in the isolated, perfused
mesenteric vascular bed. As with individual mesenteric arteries, this
effect was blocked in the presence of a combination of Ba2+
and ouabain. This combination also significantly depressed the endothelium-dependent vasodilation to EDHF (released by ACh in the
presence of inhibitors for nitric oxide synthase and cyclooxygenase), again consistent with a role for K+ (15). In
the latter study, it is perhaps surprising that K+-evoked
dilation could be evoked, as the concentrations of methoxamine used to
stimulate the mesenteric bed were relatively high (>4 µM, giving
perfusion pressures of ~100 mmHg). The fact that K+ did
evoke dilation presumably reflects the fact that the pressure at the
level of the small mesenteric resistance arteries would be much less.
In addition, agonist stimulation would not evoke as much smooth muscle
depolarization or tension in pressurized arteries as in isometrically
mounted arteries. For example, in isolated mesenteric arteries, even
with pressures as high as 120 mmHg, the smooth muscle resting potential
was close to
50 mV and wall tension decreased as the diameter of the
artery decreased (21, 24).
However, as with isometrically mounted arteries, the extent of agonist stimulation does appear to be a relevant consideration when dilator responses are recorded in pressurized arteries. In isolated mesenteric arteries pressurized (no flow) to 80 mmHg and stimulated with phenylephrine, dilation to 10.58 mM K+ was recorded in only 30% of the vessels studied (7). In contrast to previous studies with the same preparation (24), these vessels failed to develop myogenic tone. Despite this finding, presumably the wall tension would still be relatively low, so that the extent of phenylephrine-evoked depolarization would explain the inability of K+ to evoke reproducible smooth muscle relaxation. In contrast, ACh consistently and fully reversed the phenylephrine-evoked constriction. However, for the reasons given above, this observation alone does not argue against K+ acting as an EDHF in this preparation. It simply indicates that, under the experimental conditions employed, the primary mechanism for relaxation was the spread of hyperpolarization from the endothelium. The fact that relaxation to ACh was depressed with gap junction inhibitors supports this view (7). It would clearly be interesting to show if relaxation to K+ was more pronounced and reproducible under similar experimental conditions, if the pressure was reduced below 80 mmHg.
In summary, these data clearly show that it is possible to stimulate
reproducible and direct smooth muscle hyperpolarization and relaxation
to K+ in the absence of a functional endothelium,
consistent with a possible role for K+ as an EDHF in the
mesenteric artery. Furthermore, they stress the importance of the
experimental conditions to reveal these responses with
11 mM
extracellular K+ and the importance of the endothelium in
modulating the responses.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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This work was supported by a Programme Grant from the Wellcome Trust (United Kingdom).
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FOOTNOTES |
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Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: C. J. Garland, Dept. of Pharmacy and Pharmacology, University of Bath, Bath BA2 7AY, UK (E-mail: c.j.garland{at}bath.ac.uk).
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. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Received 29 August 2000; accepted in final form 20 November 2000.
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W. B. Campbell and D. R. Harder Prologue: EDHF-what is it? Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol, June 1, 2001; 280(6): H2413 - H2416. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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