Affiliation:
1. Department of Neurology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee 53226.
Abstract
The goal of this study was to define some of the cellular and ionic mechanisms of smooth muscle cell activation in dog renal arteries exposed to physiological levels of transmural pressure. Isolated interlobular arteries were cannulated and connected to a pressure reservoir to allow manipulation of transmural pressure in 20-mmHg increment steps from 20 to 120 mmHg. As transmural pressure was increased, vascular smooth muscle exhibited a linear depolarization from an average resting potential of -57+/- 2 mV at 20 mmHg to -38+/- 2.4 mV at 120 mmHg. Spontaneous action potentials could often be recorded at pressures greater than 80 mmHg. These appeared to occur primarily at bifurcation points of branching arteries. Vascular smooth muscle depolarization and action potentials occurring in response to increases in transmural pressure were associated with a maintenance of internal diameter of the vessel segments despite increases in transmural pressure in the range between 60 and 120 mmHg. The “pressure-induced” activation of vascular smooth muscle contraction and spontaneous action potentials of small renal arteries at higher transmural pressures were blocked on Ca2+ channel inhibition with verapamil (10(-6) M). These data document a membrane ionic mechanism (probably increased Ca2+ influx) for pressure-induced myogenic activation of isolated renal arteries. It is interesting that the contraction of these vessels occurs over the pressure range in which autoregulation of renal blood flow normally occurs. The physiological significance of these responses needs to be determined.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Cited by
155 articles.
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