Purinergic and adrenergic Ca2+ transients during neurogenic contractions of rat mesenteric small arteries
Contraction of small arteries is regulated by the sympathetic nervous system, but the Ca 2+ transients during neurally stimulated contraction of intact small arteries have not yet been recorded. We loaded rat mesenteric small arteries with the fluorescent Ca 2+ indicator fluo-4 and mounted them in a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 2003-06, Vol.549 (3), p.801-808 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Contraction of small arteries is regulated by the sympathetic nervous system, but the Ca 2+ transients during neurally stimulated contraction of intact small arteries have not yet been recorded. We loaded rat mesenteric
small arteries with the fluorescent Ca 2+ indicator fluo-4 and mounted them in a myograph that permitted simultaneous (i) high-speed confocal imaging of fluorescence
from individual smooth muscle cells, (ii) electrical stimulation of perivascular nerves, and (iii) recording of isometric
tension. Sympathetic neuromuscular transmission was achieved by electrical field stimulation (EFS) (frequency, 10 Hz; pulse
voltage, 40 V; pulse duration, 0.2 ms) in the presence of capsaicin and scopolamine (to inhibit âsensoryâ and cholinergic
nerves, respectively). During the first 20 s of EFS, force rose to a small peak and then declined. During this time, junctional
Ca 2+ transients (jCaTs) were present at relatively high frequency. We have previously attributed jCaTs to influx of Ca 2+ through post-junctional P2X receptors activated by ATP. Propagating asynchronous Ca 2+ waves, previously associated with bath-applied α 1 -adrenoceptor agonists, were not initially present. During the next 2.5 min of EFS, force rose slowly, and asynchronous propagating
Ca 2+ waves appeared. The selective α 1 -adrenoceptor antagonist prazosin abolished both the slowly developing contraction and the Ca 2+ waves, but reduced the initial transient contraction by only â¼25 %. During 3 min of EFS in prazosin, the frequency of jCaTs
declined markedly; at sites at which at least one jCaT occurred, the average probability of a jCaT was 0.008 ± 0.002 pulse â1 in the first 20 s and 0.0007 ± 0.0002 pulse â1 in the last 20 s. We suggest that (i) ATP released from sympathetic varicosities activates the initial, transient, contraction
and the activator Ca 2+ is derived largely from jCaTs, and (ii) sympathetically released noradrenaline (NA) activates the later, major contraction
through mechanisms involving α 1 -adrenoceptors and which are associated with propagating Ca 2+ waves. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.2003.043380 |