Vol. 284, Issue 4, H1307-H1312, April 2003
Influence of coronary artery diameter on eNOS protein
content
M. H.
Laughlin,
J.
R.
Turk,
W. G.
Schrage,
C. R.
Woodman, and
E. M.
Price
Departments of Veterinary Biomedical Sciences and Medical
Physiology, and Dalton Cardiovascular Research Center, University of
Missouri, Columbia, Missouri 65211
The
purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that the content of
endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) protein (eNOS protein/g total
artery protein) increases with decreasing artery diameter in the
coronary arterial tree. Content of eNOS protein was determined in
porcine coronary arteries with immunoblot analysis. Arteries were
isolated in six size categories from each heart: large arteries [301-
to 2,500-µm internal diameter (ID)], small arteries (201- to
300-µm ID), resistance arteries (151- to 200-µm ID), large
arterioles (101- to 150-µm ID), intermediate arterioles (51- to
100-µm ID), and small arterioles(<50-µm ID). To obtain sufficient
protein for analysis from small- and intermediate-sized arterioles,
five to seven arterioles 1-2 mm in length were pooled into one
sample for each animal. Results establish that the number of smooth
muscle cells per endothelial cell decreases from a number of 10 to 15 in large coronary arteries to 1 in the smallest arterioles. Immunohistochemistry revealed that eNOS is located only in endothelial cells in all sizes of coronary artery and in coronary capillaries. Contrary to our hypothesis, eNOS protein content did not increase with
decreasing size of coronary artery. Indeed, the smallest coronary
arterioles had less eNOS protein per gram of total protein than the
large coronary arteries. These results indicate that eNOS protein
content is greater in the endothelial cells of conduit arteries,
resistance arteries, and large arterioles than in small coronary arterioles.
arteries; blood flow; coronary disease; endothelium; endothelial-derived factors; capillary endothelium