Alteration of ATP-sensitive K+ channels in rabbit aortic smooth muscle during left ventricular hypertrophy

Author:

Park Won Sun1,Hong Da Hye1,Son Youn Kyoung1,Kim Min Hee2,Jeong Seung Hun2,Kim Hyoung Kyu2,Kim Nari2,Han Jin2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology, Kangwon National University School of Medicine, Chuncheon, Korea; and

2. National Research Laboratory for Mitochondrial Signaling, Department of Physiology, College of Medicine, Cardiovascular and Metabolic Disease Center, Inje University, Busan, Korea

Abstract

We investigated the impairment of ATP-sensitive K+ (KATP) channels in aortic smooth muscle cells (ASMCs) from isoproterenol-induced hypertrophied rabbits. The amplitude of KATP channels induced by the KATP channel opener pinacidil (10 μM) was greater in ASMCs from control than from hypertrophied animals. In phenylephrine-preconstricted aortic rings, pinacidil induced relaxation in a dose-dependent manner. The dose-dependent curve was shifted to the right in the hypertrophied (EC50: 17.80 ± 3.28 μM) compared with the control model (EC50: 6.69 ± 2.40 μM). Although the level of Kir6.2 subtype expression did not differ between ASMCs from the control and hypertrophied models, those of the Kir6.1 and SUR2B subtypes were decreased in the hypertrophied model. Application of the calcitonin-gene related peptide (100 nM) and adenylyl cyclase activator forskolin (10 μM), which activates protein kinase A (PKA) and consequently KATP channels, induced a KATP current in both control and hypertrophied animals; however, the KATP current amplitude did not differ between the two groups. Furthermore, PKA expression was not altered between the control and hypertrophied animals. These results suggests that the decreased KATP current amplitude and KATP channel-induced vasorelaxation in the hypertrophied animals were attributable to the reduction in KATP channel expression but not to changes in the intracellular signaling mechanism that activates the KATP current.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Cell Biology,Physiology

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