Affiliation:
1. Gastrointestinal Research Group and the Department of Pediatrics, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Abstract
Previous studies have demonstrated that the longitudinal smooth muscle of rabbits infected withYersinia enterocoliticaand undernourished because of reduced food intake exhibit a significantly reduced ability to develop tension in response to carbachol compared with pair-fed animals, which are uninfected but equivalently undernourished. To determine whether the alteration in smooth muscle contractility results from changes in cell number (hypo- or hyperplasia), or in contractile protein content or isoform distribution, New Zealand White rabbits (600 to 1000 g) were randomly assigned to one of three treatment groups: infected, pair-fed or control. Tissue contractility was measured, morphometric studies were performed and immunoassays were developed for the measurement of total actin, gamma-enteric and alpha-vascular isoactins, and myosin heavy chain. Consistent with what was found in previous reports, the contractility of longitudinal smooth muscle in response to carbachol was found to increase in pair-fed animals and to decrease inY enterocolitica-infected animals. There was no significant change in the proportional thickness of the ileal longitudinal smooth muscle coat, and the number of cross-sectioned longitudinal smooth muscle cells/mm2was not significantly different in infected, pair-fed or control tissues. Immunoassay indicated that the proportion of each specific contractile protein, relative to total protein content in the muscularis propria, was unaffected byY enterocoliticainfection or by pair-feeding. Thus, the alterations in intestinal longitudinal smooth muscle function observed afterY enterocoliticainfection were concluded not to be associated with tissue hypo- or hyperplasia, or changes in the total content or isoform distribution of contractile proteins in the muscularis propria.
Subject
Gastroenterology,General Medicine