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The mechanism of cryoinjury: In vitro studies on human internal mammary arteries
Author(s) -
MüllerSchweinitzer Else,
Brett Wolfgang,
Zerkowski HansReinhard,
Haefeli Walter E
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
british journal of pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.432
H-Index - 211
eISSN - 1476-5381
pISSN - 0007-1188
DOI - 10.1038/sj.bjp.0703326
Subject(s) - nifedipine , contraction (grammar) , chemistry , cryopreservation , mammary artery , staurosporine , in vitro , intracellular , biophysics , anatomy , andrology , signal transduction , medicine , protein kinase c , endocrinology , biology , calcium , biochemistry , embryo , microbiology and biotechnology , artery , organic chemistry
The mechanism of cryoinjury was investigated in human internal mammary arteries (IMA) by monitoring contractile responses to ET‐1 and KCl. For cryopreservation segments of IMA were equilibrated for 20 min with the cryomedium (RPMI 1640 culture medium containing 1.8  M DMSO and 0.1  M sucrose), frozen at a mean cooling rate of 1.3°C min −1 to −70°C and stored in liquid nitrogen. Before use, samples were thawed slowly and the cryomedium removed by dilution. Compared to unfrozen controls, ET‐1 stimulated frozen/thawed IMA with similar efficacy but at 3 fold lower concentrations ( P <0.001). Addition of ET‐1 (100 n M ) induced maximal contraction of unfrozen IMA within 10 min, declining thereafter to 25% after 90 min. In frozen/thawed IMA the ET‐1‐induced contraction was sustained but could be reversed if protein kinase C was blocked by staurosporine (100 n M ). Responses to ET‐1 of cryostored IMA were 5 fold more susceptible to blockade by nifedipine than those of controls. After cryostorage the efficacy of KCl was diminished to 40% ( P <0.05) and the KCl curve was shifted to the left (2 fold, P <0.001). In both unfrozen and cryostored IMA the KCl (60 m M ) effect was sustained and equally susceptible to nifedipine. It is suggested that the smooth muscle cell of IMA is receptive to physical forces which occur during cryopreservation. These forces modify transmembrane signal transduction and intracellular pathways, that are common to pharmacological agonists thereby changing vascular responses to several contractile agonists after thawing.British Journal of Pharmacology (2000) 130 , 636–640; doi: 10.1038/sj.bjp.0703326

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