Pressure-induced myogenic tone and role of 20-HETE in mediating autoregulation of cerebral blood flow

Author:

Harder David R.12,Narayanan Jayashree1,Gebremedhin Debebe1

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Physiology and Medicine, Cardiovascular Research Center, Medical College of Wisconsin, and

2. Clement Zablocki Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Abstract

While myogenic force in response to a changing arterial pressure has been described early in the 20th century, it was not until 1984 that the effect of a sequential increase in intraluminal pressure on cannulated cerebral arterial preparations was found to result in pressure-dependent membrane depolarization associated with spike generation and reduction in lumen diameter. Despite a great deal of effort by different laboratories and investigators, the identification of the existence of a mediator of the pressure-induced myogenic constriction in arterial muscle remained a challenge. It was the original finding by our laboratory that demonstrated the capacity of cerebral arterial muscle cells to express the cytochrome P-450 4A enzyme that catalyzes the formation of the potent vasoconstrictor 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (20-HETE) from arachidonic acid, the production of which in cerebral arterial muscle cells increases with the elevation in intravascular pressure. 20-HETE activates protein kinase C and causes the inhibition of Ca2+-activated K+ channels, depolarizes arterial muscle cell membrane, and activates L-type Ca2+ channel to increase intracellular Ca2+ levels and evoke vasoconstriction. The inhibition of 20-HETE formation attenuates pressure-induced arterial myogenic constriction in vitro and blunts the autoregulation of cerebral blood flow in vivo . We suggest that the formation and action of cytochrome P-450-derived 20-HETE in cerebral arterial muscle could play a critically important role in the control of cerebral arterial tone and the autoregulation of cerebral blood flow under physiological conditions.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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