arterial contractility
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2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan von Kleeck ◽  
Paola Castagnino ◽  
Emilia Roberts ◽  
Shefali Talwar ◽  
Giovanni Ferrari ◽  
...  

AbstractChildren with Hutchinson–Gilford Progeria Syndrome (HGPS) suffer from multiple cardiovascular pathologies due to the expression of progerin, a mutant form of the nuclear envelope protein Lamin A. Progerin expression has a dramatic effect on arterial smooth muscle cells (SMCs) and results in decreased viability and increased arterial stiffness. However, very little is known about how progerin affects SMC contractility. Here, we studied the LaminAG609G/G609G mouse model of HGPS and found reduced arterial contractility at an early age that correlates with a decrease in smooth muscle myosin heavy chain (SM-MHC) mRNA and protein expression. Traction force microscopy on isolated SMCs from these mice revealed reduced force generation compared to wild-type controls; this effect was phenocopied by depletion of SM-MHC in WT SMCs and overcome by ectopic expression of SM-MHC in HGPS SMCs. Arterial SM-MHC levels are also reduced with age in wild-type mice and humans, suggesting a common defect in arterial contractility in HGPS and normal aging.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dongyu Ma ◽  
Dina Gaynullina ◽  
Nadine Schmidt ◽  
Mitko Mladenov ◽  
Rudolf Schubert

BackgroundVoltage-gated potassium (Kv) channels, especially Kv7 channels, are major potassium channels identified in vascular smooth muscle cells with a great, albeit differential functional impact in various vessels. Vascular smooth muscle Kv7 channels always coexist with other K channels, in particular with BK channels. BK channels differ in the extent to which they influence vascular contractility. Whether this difference also causes the variability in the functional impact of Kv7 channels is unknown. Therefore, this study addressed the hypothesis that the functional impact of Kv7 channels depends on BK channels.Experimental ApproachExperiments were performed on young and adult rat gracilis and saphenous arteries using real-time PCR as well as pressure and wire myography.Key ResultsSeveral subfamily members of Kv7 (KCNQ) and BK channels were expressed in saphenous and gracilis arteries: the highest expression was observed for BKα, BKβ1 and KCNQ4. Arterial contractility was assessed with methoxamine-induced contractions and pressure-induced myogenic responses. In vessels of adult rats, inhibition of Kv7 channels or BK channels by XE991 or IBTX, respectively enhanced arterial contractility to a similar degree, whereas activation of Kv7 channels or BK channels by retigabine or NS19504, respectively reduced arterial contractility to a similar degree. Further, IBTX increased both the contractile effect of XE991 and the anticontractile effect of retigabine, whereas NS19504 reduced the effect of retigabine and impaired the effect of XE991. In vessels of young rats, inhibition of Kv7 channels by XE991 enhanced arterial contractility much stronger than inhibition of BK channels by IBTX, whereas activation of Kv7 by retigabine reduced arterial contractility to a greater extent than activation of BK channels by NS19504. Further, IBTX increased the anticontractile effect of retigabine but not the contractile effect of XE991, whereas NS19504 reduced the effect of retigabine and impaired the effect of XE991.ConclusionKv7 and BK channels are expressed in young and adult rat arteries and function as negative feedback modulators in the regulation of contractility of these arteries. Importantly, BK channels govern the extent of functional impact of Kv7 channels. This effect depends on the relationship between the functional activities of BK and Kv7 channels.


2020 ◽  
Vol 40 (10) ◽  
pp. 2468-2480
Author(s):  
Vincenzo Barrese ◽  
Jennifer B. Stott ◽  
Samuel N. Baldwin ◽  
Gema Mondejar-Parreño ◽  
Iain A. Greenwood

Objective: The SMIT1 (sodium:myo-inositol transporter 1) regulates myo-inositol movement into cells and responses to hypertonic stimuli. Alteration of myo-inositol levels has been associated with several diseases, including hypertension, but there is no evidence of a functional role of SMIT1 in the vasculature. Recent evidence showed that in the nervous system SMIT1 interacted and modulated the function of members of the Kv7 family of voltage-gated potassium channels, which are also expressed in the vasculature where they regulate arterial contractility. Therefore, in this study, we evaluated whether SMIT1 was functionally relevant in arterial smooth muscle. Approach and Results: Immunofluorescence and polymerase chain reaction experiments revealed that SMIT1 was expressed in rat renal and mesenteric vascular smooth muscle cells. Isometric tension recordings showed that incubation of renal arteries with raffinose and myo-inositol (which increases SMIT1 expression) reduced the contractile responses to methoxamine, an effect that was abolished by preincubation with the pan-Kv7 blocker linopirdine and by molecular knockdown of Kv7.4 and Kv7.5. Knockdown of SMIT1 increased the contraction of renal arteries induced by methoxamine, impaired the response to the Kv7.2–Kv7.5 activator ML213 but did not interfere with the relaxant responses induced by openers of other potassium channels. Proximity ligation assay showed that SMIT1 interacted with heteromeric channels formed by Kv7.4 and Kv7.5 proteins in both renal and mesenteric vascular smooth muscle cells. Patch-clamp experiments showed that incubation with raffinose plus myo-inositol increased Kv7 currents in vascular smooth muscle cells. Conclusions: SMIT1 protein is expressed in vascular smooth muscle cells where it modulates arterial contractility through an association with Kv7.4/Kv7.5 heteromers.


2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (S1) ◽  
pp. 1-1
Author(s):  
Farzana Zerin ◽  
Ahasanul Hasan ◽  
Raquibul Hasan

2019 ◽  
Vol 116 (52) ◽  
pp. 27095-27104 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raquibul Hasan ◽  
M. Dennis Leo ◽  
Padmapriya Muralidharan ◽  
Alejandro Mata-Daboin ◽  
Wen Yin ◽  
...  

PKD2 (polycystin-2, TRPP1) channels are expressed in a wide variety of cell types and can regulate functions, including cell division and contraction. Whether posttranslational modification of PKD2 modifies channel properties is unclear. Similarly uncertain are signaling mechanisms that regulate PKD2 channels in arterial smooth muscle cells (myocytes). Here, by studying inducible, cell-specificPkd2knockout mice, we discovered that PKD2 channels are modified by SUMO1 (small ubiquitin-like modifier 1) protein in myocytes of resistance-size arteries. At physiological intravascular pressures, PKD2 exists in approximately equal proportions as either nonsumoylated (PKD2) or triple SUMO1-modifed (SUMO-PKD2) proteins. SUMO-PKD2 recycles, whereas unmodified PKD2 is surface-resident. Intravascular pressure activates voltage-dependent Ca2+influx that stimulates the return of internalized SUMO-PKD2 channels to the plasma membrane. In contrast, a reduction in intravascular pressure, membrane hyperpolarization, or inhibition of Ca2+influx leads to lysosomal degradation of internalized SUMO-PKD2 protein, which reduces surface channel abundance. Through this sumoylation-dependent mechanism, intravascular pressure regulates the surface density of SUMO-PKD2−mediated Na+currents (INa) in myocytes to control arterial contractility. We also demonstrate that intravascular pressure activates SUMO-PKD2, not PKD2, channels, as desumoylation leads to loss of INaactivation in myocytes and vasodilation. In summary, this study reveals that PKD2 channels undergo posttranslational modification by SUMO1, which enables physiological regulation of their surface abundance and pressure-mediated activation in myocytes and thus control of arterial contractility.


2018 ◽  
Vol 314 (3) ◽  
pp. R433-R446 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine P. Shen ◽  
Monica Romero ◽  
Alexander Brunelle ◽  
Craig Wolfe ◽  
Abigail Dobyns ◽  
...  

Long-term hypoxia (LTH) has a profound effect on pulmonary arterial vasoconstriction in the fetus and adult. Dysregulation in Ca2+ signaling is important during the development of LTH-induced pulmonary hypertension. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that L-type Ca2+ channels (CaL), which are voltage dependent and found in smooth, skeletal, and cardiac muscle, are important in the adaptation of pulmonary arterial contractions in postnatal maturation and in response to LTH. Pulmonary arteries were isolated from fetal or adult sheep maintained at low or high altitude (3,801 m) for >100 days. The effects were measured using an L-type Ca2+ channel opener FPL 64176 (FPL) in the presence or absence of an inhibitor, Nifedipine (NIF) on arterial contractions, intracellular Ca2+ oscillations, and ryanodine receptor-driven Ca2+ sparks. FPL induced pulmonary arterial contractions in all groups were sensitive to NIF. However, when compared with 125 mM K+, FPL contractions were greater in fetuses than in adults. FPL reduced Ca2+ oscillations in myocytes of adult but not fetal arteries, independently of altitude. The FPL effects on Ca2+ oscillations were reversed by NIF in myocytes of hypoxic but not normoxic adults. FPL failed to enhance Ca2+ spark frequency and had little impact on spatiotemporal firing characteristics. These data suggest that CaL-dependent contractions are largely uncoupled from intracellular Ca2+ oscillations and the development of Ca2+ sparks. This raises questions regarding the coupling of pulmonary arterial contractility to membrane depolarization, attendant CaL facilitation, and the related associations with the activation of Ca2+ oscillations and Ca2+ sparks.


Oncotarget ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (63) ◽  
pp. 106149-106150 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Dennis Leo ◽  
Jonathan H. Jaggar

2015 ◽  
Vol 309 (6) ◽  
pp. C392-C402 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Dennis Leo ◽  
Simon Bulley ◽  
John P. Bannister ◽  
Korah P. Kuruvilla ◽  
Damodaran Narayanan ◽  
...  

Arterial smooth muscle cells (myocytes) express large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (BK) channel α and auxiliary β1 subunits that modulate arterial contractility. In arterial myocytes, β1 subunits are stored within highly mobile rab11A-positive recycling endosomes. In contrast, BKα subunits are primarily plasma membrane-localized. Trafficking pathways for BKα and whether physiological stimuli that regulate arterial contractility alter BKα localization in arterial myocytes are unclear. Here, using biotinylation, immunofluorescence resonance energy transfer (immunoFRET) microscopy, and RNAi-mediated knockdown, we demonstrate that rab4A-positive early endosomes traffic BKα to the plasma membrane in myocytes of resistance-size cerebral arteries. Angiotensin II (ANG II), a vasoconstrictor, reduced both surface and total BKα, an effect blocked by bisindolylmaleimide-II, concanavalin A, and dynasore, protein kinase C (PKC), internalization, and endocytosis inhibitors, respectively. In contrast, ANG II did not reduce BKα mRNA, and sodium nitroprusside, a nitric oxide donor, did not alter surface BKα protein over the same time course. MG132 and bafilomycin A, proteasomal and lysosomal inhibitors, respectively, also inhibited the ANG II-induced reduction in surface and total BKα, resulting in intracellular BKα accumulation. ANG II-mediated BK channel degradation reduced BK currents in isolated myocytes and functional responses to iberiotoxin, a BK channel blocker, and NS1619, a BK activator, in pressurized (60 mmHg) cerebral arteries. These data indicate that rab4A-positive early endosomes traffic BKα to the plasma membrane in arterial myocytes. We also show that ANG II stimulates PKC-dependent BKα internalization and degradation. These data describe a unique mechanism by which ANG II inhibits arterial myocyte BK currents, by reducing surface channel number, to induce vasoconstriction.


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