Pressure-induced activation of membrane K+ current in rat saphenous artery.
Author(s) -
Viktor Bérczi,
William J. Stekiel,
S. J. Contney,
Nancy J. Rusch
Publication year - 1992
Publication title -
hypertension
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.986
H-Index - 265
eISSN - 1524-4563
pISSN - 0194-911X
DOI - 10.1161/01.hyp.19.6.725
Subject(s) - tetraethylammonium , depolarization , membrane potential , contraction (grammar) , biophysics , chemistry , vascular smooth muscle , tetraethylammonium chloride , anatomy , artery , medicine , potassium , biochemistry , smooth muscle , biology , organic chemistry
Pressurization of isolated arteries may result in Ca(2+)-dependent contraction and membrane depolarization. Because the open state probability of some vascular muscle K+ channels is augmented by rises in cytosolic Ca2+ and membrane depolarization, we investigated the possibility that increases in intraluminal pressure activate K+ channels in isolated, perfused rat saphenous arteries. Stepwise increases in intraluminal pressure from 5 to 205 mm Hg resulted in increasing, active arterial contraction, measured as smaller diameters in physiological salt solution than in Ca(2+)-free solution. Addition of 10 mM tetraethylammonium to the physiological salt solution to block arterial muscle K+ channels caused progressively greater diameter reductions at pressures above 25 mm Hg. Microelectrode measurements of membrane potential showed that tetraethylammonium depolarized arterial muscle more at 105 mm Hg (16 +/- 1 mV) than at 25 mm Hg (10 +/- 1 mV). The sensitivity of K+ current to tetraethylammonium was also demonstrated in patch-clamped vascular muscle cells from the same arteries. Peak whole-cell K+ current was suppressed 47% and 79% by 1 and 10 mM tetraethylammonium, respectively. This same current was enhanced 3.6-fold by the Ca2+ ionophore A23187 (10 microM), suggesting a Ca2+ dependence. We conclude that increases in intraluminal pressure progressively activate tetraethylammonium-sensitive K+ channels in the arterial muscle membrane. This can serve as a negative feedback mechanism to limit pressure-induced arterial constriction.
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