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1First Department of Physiology, Shinshu University School of Medicine, Matsumoto 390-8621, Japan; and 2Department of Molecular Physiology and Biological Physics, University of Virginia Health Sciences Center, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908-0736
Submitted 30 July 2002 ; accepted in final form 5 February 2003
We examined the role played by intracellular Ca2+ stores in
conducted vasomotor responses induced by phenylephrine (PE) in isolated
hamster cremasteric arterioles. When applied briefly (
1 s) to isolated,
cannulated arterioles by using pressure-pulse ejection from a micropipette, PE
produced a strong local vasoconstriction and a very small biphasic conducted
response (a small constriction followed by a dilation) that propagated several
hundred micrometers along the vessel length. The conducted vasomotion was
associated with a monophasic elevation of the endothelial cell intracellular
Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) at the site of
stimulation, as measured with the Ca2+ indicator fura 2. The
Ca2+ pump inhibitor thapsigargin was used to limit filling of
Ca2+ stores in smooth muscle and endothelial cells. Thapsigargin
reduced baseline diameter and elicited a strong dilator component at the local
site while enhancing both the constrictor and dilator components of the
PE-induced conducted response. The enhanced conducted constrictor component
induced by thapsigargin was mimicked by extraluminal application of
tetraethylammonium or charybdotoxin but not by iberiotoxin, apamin,
glibenclamide, barium, or 4-aminopirydine. Thapsigargin increased the
estimated basal endothelial cell [Ca2+]i by
60 nM
and converted the PE-induced change in [Ca2+]i from
monotonic to biphasic with a late elevation of [Ca2+]i
above baseline that coincided with the increased dilatory component of the
conducted response. Luminal application of charybdotoxin plus apamin
significantly reduced the dilatory component of the conducted response. These
results indicate that intracellular Ca2+ stores play a dynamic role
in regulating conducted vasomotor responses apparently through modulation of
KCa channels in both cell types.
phenylephrine; K+ channels; endothelium; intracellular Ca2+ concentration
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