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Integrative Physiology |
From the Departments of Nephrology (R.K., S.B., M.K., C.B., C.D., J.H.) and Clinical Pharmacology (R.R., H.-D.O., M.P.), Benjamin Franklin Medical Center, and the Institute for Physiology (A.R.P.), Freie Universität, Berlin, Germany.
Correspondence to R. Köhler, Benjamin Franklin Medical Center, Hindenburgdamm 30, 12200 Berlin, Germany. E-mail koe{at}zedat.fu-berlin.de
| Abstract |
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Key Words: angioplasty neointima endothelium Ca2+-activated K+ channels endothelium-dependent vasodilation
| Introduction |
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Balloon catheterization, a procedure to relieve arterial stenosis and to increase blood flow, induces endothelial ablation and stimulates the proliferation of intimal VSMCs, which increases the risk of restenosis.10 After angioplasty, migration and proliferation of adjacent endothelium occur to reline the injured area within weeks. However, the function of this regenerated endothelium has been shown to be abnormal.1115 For instance, in porcine coronary arteries with a regenerated endothelium, decreased relaxations to serotonin,11 diminished activity of G proteins,13 alterations of endothelium-dependent hyperpolarization,14 increased uptake of modified LDL, and reduced NO formation15 have been described. However, relaxations to other endothelium-dependent vasodilators, such as bradykinin, ADP, and calcium ionophores, were normal or moderately reduced.13
The function of KCa channels has not been characterized in regenerated endothelium after angioplasty, so far. We hypothesized that a disturbed function of KCa channels might be present in regenerated endothelium, leading to a decreased endothelium-dependent relaxation. Therefore, we performed a study to compare the expression and function of KCa channels in native and regenerated endothelium after balloon catheter injury (BCI) of the rat carotid artery (CA). KCa expression and function were measured by single-cell reverse transcription (RT)polymerase chain reaction (PCR), patch-clamp techniques in situ, and analysis of in vitro vasoreactivity with use of a pressure myograph.
| Material and Methods |
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Cell Harvesting
Freshly isolated CA segments (1 to 2 mm in length) were cut open longitudinally and fixed on a holding capillary to give direct access to the luminal surface. For cell harvesting, vessel slices were preincubated with 0.05% trypsin and 0.02% EDTA in PBS without Ca2+/Mg2+ for up to 15 minutes.17 For washout, CAs were superfused with PBS for 5 minutes. Under microscopic control, a single endothelial cell (EC) was selectively fixed with the patch pipette and mechanically detached from the CA. For negative controls, samples of bath solution were aspirated next to the EC.
Reverse Transcription
ECs were transferred to a tube containing 1 µL "first-strand" buffer, 0.5 µL dNTPs (10 mmol/L each), 1 µL "random" hexamer primer (100 µmol/L), 1 µL dithiothreitol (0.1 mol/L), and 0.5 µL RNase inhibitor (40 U/µL). After one freeze-thaw cycle to induce breakdown of the cell membrane, 0.5 µL SuperScript RT (200 U/µL, Life Technologies) was added, and the final volume (
10 µL) was incubated for 1 hour at 37°C.
Polymerase Chain Reaction
Single-cell RT-PCR was performed as described previously.17 First and "nested" primer pairs (TIB MOLBIOL) for rat endothelial NO synthase (eNOS), the small-conductance KCa channel genes (rSK13), and the intermediate-conductance KCa channel gene (rIK1) were selected to span intronic sequences. The use of these primer pairs yielded no PCR product of expected size from genomic DNA of cell samples processed without RT (n=5) or of 50 ng/µL rat DNA after two PCR rounds. GenBank accession numbers are as follows: rIK1, AF156554; rSK1, AF000973; rSK2, U69882; rSK3, U69884; and eNOS, AJ011116.
In a single-cell sample, cDNAs of rIK1 and rSK13 were coamplified along with eNOS cDNA. A first "multiplex" PCR was performed in a final volume of 50 µL containing 5 µL PCR buffer (10x), 2 µL dNTPs (10 mmol/L each), 3 µL MgCl2 (50 mmol/L), 1 µL of each sense and antisense primer (10 pmol),
10 µL RT product, and 0.5 µL Taq DNA polymerase (5U/µL) (all Life Technologies) by using a Biozym Maxicycler PTC 9600. After initial denaturation for 5 minutes at 94°C, PCR amplification was carried out for 30 seconds at 94°C, 1 minute at 55°C, 1 minute at 72°C, and 10 minutes at 72°C for 50 cycles. In a second multiplex PCR round with nested primers, 5 µL of the first PCR product was used for reamplification (45 cycles, annealing temperature 60°C). PCR products were analyzed on a 2% agarose gel containing ethidium bromide. A 50-bp DNA ladder served as molecular weight markers. The identities of PCR products were verified by sequencing with the use of an ABI 377 automatic sequencer (ABI Prism). Respective forward and reverse primers were as follows: for rIK1, first primers were 5'-GAGAGGCAGGCTGTCAATG-3' and 5'-GGGAGTCCTTCCTTCGAGTG-3', and nested primers were 5'-CAT-CACGTTCCTGACCATTG-3' and 5'-GTGTTTCTCCGCCTT-GTTGA-3'; for rSK1, first primers were 5'-GCACACCTAC-TGTGGGAAGG-3' and 5'-AGCTCCGACACCACCTCATA-3', and nested primers were 5'-GCTGAGAAACACGTGCACAA-3' and 5'-TTGGCCTGATCATTCACCTT-3'; for rSK2, first primers were 5'-GGAATAATGGGTGCAGGTTG-3' and 5'-TTTGTTTCCAG-GGTGACGAT-3', and nested primers were 5'-CTTGGT-GGTAGCCGTAGTGG-3' and 5'-GAATTTCCGTTGATGCTTCC-3'; for rSK3, first primers were 5'-AACCCCTCCAGCTCTTCAGT-3' and 5'-TGTGGTAGGCGATGATCAAA-3', and nested primers were 5'-GATAACCATGCCCACCAGAC-3' and 5'-ATTTCAGGGCC-AACGAAAAC-3'; and for eNOS, first primers were 5'-GAGAGGCAGGCTGTCAATG-3' and 5'-GGGAGTCCTTC-CTTCGAGTG-3', and nested primers were 5'-CCAGCTCT-GTCCTCAGAAGG-3' and 5'-ATGGATGAGCCAACTCAAGG-3'.
Patch-Clamp Experiments
Membrane currents were recorded with an EPC-9 (HEKA) patch-clamp amplifier with the use of voltage ramps (duration 1000 ms) from -100 to 100 mV and were low passfiltered (-3 dB, 1000 Hz) at a sample time of 0.5 ms.17,18 Membrane potentials (Vms) were recorded in the current-clamp mode. Patch pipettes had a tip resistance of 2 to 4 M
in symmetrical KCl solution. If not otherwise stated, the pipette solution contained (mmol/L) KCl 135, MgCl2 4, EGTA 1, CaCl2 0.955 ([Ca2+]free=3 µmol/L), and HEPES 5 (pH 7.2). The NaCl bath solution contained (mmol/L) NaCl 137, Na2HPO4 4.5, KCl 3, KH2PO4 1.5, MgCl2 0.4, and CaCl2 0.7 (pH 7.4). Experiments were performed at 37°C. Data analysis was performed as described previously.17 If not otherwise stated, leak currents were not subtracted before or during data acquisition.
Pressure Myograph Experiments
Injured (n=5) and normal (n=9) CA segments of 3 to 4 mm in length were cannulated with micropipettes in an experimental chamber mounted on the stage of a Zeiss Axiovert 100. Vessel diameter was continuously monitored with a video camera. The bath and perfusion solution contained (mmol/L) NaCl 145.0, NaH2PO4 1.2, KCl 4.7, MgSO4 1.2, CaCl2 2.0, glucose 5.0, pyruvate 2.0, and MOPS buffer 3.0, along with 1 g/100 mL BSA (pH 7.4 at 37°C). CAs were pressurized to 80 mm Hg with a pressure myograph system (J.P. Trading P100) and continuously perfused at a flow rate of 0.6 mL/min and at constant intraluminal pressure. After an initial equilibration period, CAs were preconstricted with 1 µmol/L phenylephrine in the bath solution. After development of stable tone, vasodilatory responses were determined by perfusion with increasing concentrations of acetylcholine (ACh, 1x10-9 to 0.2x10-6 mol/L) alone or in combination with 2 µmol/L apamin (APA) and 0.1 µmol/L charybdotoxin (CTX). 1-Ethyl-2-benzimidazolinone (1-EBIO, 1 to 200 µmol/L) was made as
1000-fold stock solution in dimethyl sulfoxide and applied intraluminally. In a subset of experiments, the bath and perfusion medium contained the NO synthase inhibitor NG-nitro-L-arginine (L-NNA, 100 µmol/L) and the cyclooxygenase inhibitor indomethacin (10 µmol/L). Diameter changes were expressed as a percentage of the maximal dilation measured in response to 10 mmol/L sodium nitrite. 1-EBIO was obtained from TOCRIS; all other chemicals and toxins were from Sigma Chemical Co.
Statistical Analysis
Data are given as mean±SE. The Mann-Whitney U test was used to assess differences between groups. A value of P<0.05 was considered significant.
| Results |
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130 µmol/L (Figure 1C).
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In single ECs from regenerated endothelium of injured CAs, hyperpolarizing KCa currents were observed in only 3 of 10 ECs. Mean current densities at 0 mV (7±2 pA/pF, P<0.01) and Vrev (-23±3 mV, P<0.05) were significantly lower compared with those of native ECs from normal CAs. Current density and Vrev of those three ECs exhibiting a KCa current fraction were 15±5 pA/pF at 0 mV and -43±6 mV, respectively. Figure 1D shows current responses to intracellular Ca2+ dialysis of 5 native and 5 regenerated ECs.
To characterize KCa function in the control of Vm of native and regenerated endothelium, we performed current-clamp experiments in each vessel preparation and determined resting potentials and ACh-induced hyperpolarization in the electrically coupled ECs of injured and normal vessels (Figure 1E). Application of ACh (200 nmol/L) to the endothelium from normal CAs (n=10) induced hyperpolarization from a resting potential of -18±3 to -40±5 mV (
Vm -21±5 mV). In contrast, in regenerated endothelium of injured CAs (n=7), ACh induced significantly decreased hyperpolarization from a resting potential of -23±3 to -29±5 mV (
Vm -6±3 mV, P<0.05; Figure 1F). In the presence of 100 nmol/L CTX and 1 µmol/L APA (n=5) or of 1 µmol/L CLT and 1 µmol/L APA (n=3, Figure 1G), ACh-induced hyperpolarization in native endothelium was completely suppressed. IbTX (100 nmol/L, n=3) had no effect on ACh-induced hyperpolarization in the endothelium of CAs. This indicates that ACh-induced hyperpolarization is mediated by the activation of CTX/CLT-sensitive IK1 and APA-sensitive SK. In native endothelium, the addition of 100 µmol/L 1-EBIO further increased the degree of ACh-induced hyperpolarization by -17±5 mV (n=4, Figure 1H).
Single-Cell RT-PCR in Native and Regenerated Endothelium
Subsequent to patch-clamp experiments, we harvested 119 and 67 cells to analyze KCa gene expression in native endothelium (n=13) and regenerated endothelium (n=8), respectively (Figure 2A). To ensure the harvest of ECs, cell samples were analyzed for eNOS expression by use of the multiplex RT-PCR technique. EC-specific eNOS expression was detected in 43% and 54% of cell samples from native and regenerated endothelium, respectively. Medium samples (n=15) yielded no PCR products.
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Expression rSK3 and rIK1 was detected in 58±8% and 64±10%, respectively, of native eNOS+ EC samples. However, in regenerated eNOS+ ECs, the expression of rSK3 and rIK1 was detected in only 12±8% (P<0.01) and 22±9% (P<0.05), respectively (Figure 2B). In eNOS- cell samples from normal CAs, expression of rSK3 and rIK1 was detected in 8±4% and 3±2%, respectively. In eNOS- cell samples from injured CAs, the expression of rSK3 was detected in 1±1%. The expression of rIK1 was not detected in these samples. This indicates that the expression of rSK3 and rIK1 is greatly restricted to eNOS+ samples and thus to ECs from which mRNA was harvested successfully. The expression of other SK subtypes, rSK1 and rSK2, was not detected in either native or regenerated ECs by single-cell RT-PCR (n=10, Figure 2C).
In Vitro Vasoreactivity in Normal CAs and in CAs After BCI
In vitro vasoreactivity to endothelium-independent responses to phenylephrine and sodium nitrite was similar in pressurized nonendothelium-denuded CAs (n=5) at 6 weeks after BCI compared with normal CAs (n=12): phenylephrine constricted injured CAs by 82±11 µm and normal CAs by 100±12 µm. Sodium nitrite dilated injured CAs by 86±12 µm and normal CAs by 123±32 µm. For determination of endothelium-dependent dilation, ACh was applied to the lumen of injured CAs and normal CAs. ACh induced a dose-dependent dilation (EC50 14 nmol/L) in normal CAs (Figure 3, left), which was completely abolished after removal of the endothelium (n=3, not shown). At the highest dose tested (200 nmol/L ACh), the outer diameter increased by 72±11 µm. When ACh in combination with 2 µmol/L APA and 100 nmol/L CTX was applied to the endothelium (n=7), ACh-induced dilation was significantly reduced by
30%, and a right shift of the dose-response curve was observed (EC50 50 nmol/L, P<0.05; Figure 3, left). After preincubation with 100 µmol/L L-NNA and 10 µmol/L indomethacin to assess the contribution of EDHF-mediated vasodilation, the remaining NO- and prostacyclin-independent vasodilation induced by 0.2 µmol/L ACh (18±2%, n=7) was abolished when ACh was applied in combination with CTX and APA (1±1%, P<0.05; n=4).
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In injured CAs, ACh-induced dilation was severely impaired (Figure 3, right). At the highest dose tested (200 nmol/L), outer diameter increased by 14±5 µm (P<0.01). CTX and APA had no significant effect on the remaining ACh-induced dilation (n=4).
Intraluminal application of 1-EBIO induced dose-dependent dilation of normal CAs (EC50 110 µmol/L; Figure 3, right). The outer diameter increased by 61±12 µm at the highest dose (200 µmol/L) tested. This dilation was greatly reduced when 1-EBIO was applied together with APA and CTX. Perfusion of CA with vehicle substance (dimethyl sulfoxide
0.1%) alone was without effect on vessel diameter (n=4). In injured CAs (Figure 3), 1-EBIOinduced dilation was absent in four of five vessels, and only a small dilation was observed in one vessel at the highest dose tested (200 µmol/L, increase of outer diameter by 5 µm).
| Discussion |
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Endothelial KCa in Rat CAs
In in situ whole-cell patch-clamp experiments in native ECs from normal CAs, we observed hyperpolarizing Ca2+-dependent K+ currents, which exhibited the characteristics of SK and IK1 with respect to Ca2+ sensitivity, slight inward rectification, and sensitivity to the SK-selective blocker APA and the IK1-selective blocker CTL. With respect to IK1, the reported CLT-sensitive currents had similar electrophysiological properties of IK1 currents previously identified in human ECs,17 human lymphocytes,20,21 human pancreas,22 and human fibroblasts.23 The SK-related currents showed characteristics of SK currents observed in neuronal cells of the rat brain.24 Activation of maxi K did not considerably contribute to endothelial KCa currents of CAs, inasmuch as the selective maxi K blocker IbTX had no detectable blocking effects.
Current-clamp experiments in endothelial layers supported this interpretation because the combination of APA and CLT, but not IbTX, reversed ACh-induced hyperpolarization. A previous study in endothelium of the rat aorta25 showed that ACh-induced hyperpolarization was inhibited by CTX, whereas APA, a blocker of SK, had no inhibitory effect. In our patch-clamp experiments, only the combination of APA and CLT inhibited endothelial hyperpolarization. This indicates that in contrast to the aorta, endothelial hyperpolarization in the CA is mediated by activation of both small and intermediate KCa (SK and IK1, respectively) channels.
In single-cell RT-PCR experiments, we demonstrated that single ECs in situ expressed rSK3 and rIK1 genes, whereas expression of the other SK subtypes, rSK1 and rSK2, was not detected. In previous studies, rSK3 expression was detected in rat neuronal cells and in skeletal muscle,24 in which SK activity mediates afterhyperpolarization. IK1 expression was observed in human lymphocytes20,21 and human fibroblasts,23 in which IK1 expression was related to mitogenic cell growth and proliferation. In a recent study on human ECs of the mesenteric artery, we could show that IK1 mediates endothelial hyperpolarization in response to bradykinin.17 The results of the present study indicate that expression of rSK3 and rIK1 genes confers endothelial hyperpolarization in rat CAs.
In pressure myograph experiments, we could demonstrate that the combination of APA and CTX, when selectively applied to the endothelium, significantly blunted the dilatory response to ACh. CLT, the more selective blocker of IK1, was not tested in this experimental setup because it also inhibits cytochrome P-45021 and therefore could diminish the production of EDHF-related compounds.3 Our findings of blunted dilatory response to ACh in the presence of APA/CTX indicated that activation of endothelial SK and IK1 increases the formation of vasodilators in response to stimulation by humoral factors. Moreover, the opening of SK and IK1 by application of 1-EBIO to the endothelium induced dilation, thus indicating that endothelial hyperpolarization induces dilation by itself. Such a role of KCa channels in the endothelium has been proposed to be important in other species and other vascular beds, although the type of endothelial KCa channel being involved may differ substantially between species and the vascular beds investigated.17,25,26
KCa Function in Regenerated Endothelium
In regenerated endothelium, we observed a greatly blunted hyperpolarization in response to ACh, decreased hyperpolarizing KCa whole-cell currents in response to intracellular dialysis with Ca2+, and diminished expression of rIK1 and rSK3 at the single-cell level. Moreover, in pressure myograph experiments, intraluminal application of 1-EBIO failed to induce considerable dilation, and the combination of APA and CTX had no detectable effect on the remaining ACh-induced dilation. Taking together the results obtained from patch-clamp experiments, single-cell RT analysis, and measurements of in vitro vasoreactivity, we conclude that the regenerated endothelium has a reduced capacity to hyperpolarize and dilate because of the decreased expression of KCa channels. In native endothelium, KCa activation leads to endothelial hyperpolarization and thereby increases the electrochemical driving force for Ca2+ influx, which was interpreted as a positive-feedback mechanism for the production of vasodilating factors.47 However, because blocking of SK and IK1 only partially blunted ACh-induced vasodilation, endothelial hyperpolarization is not an overall prerequisite in mediating endothelium-dependent vasodilation. Thus, this presumably implies that there is still a substantial synthesis of NO and prostacyclin even when the electrochemical driving force for Ca2+ entry is not increased by ACh-induced hyperpolarization. Moreover, blocking of endothelial hyperpolarization might affect only EDHF-mediated vasodilation. There are several lines of evidence8,9 indicating that KCa-mediated endothelial hyperpolarization is directly propagated via gap junctions to VSMCs, leading to the closure of voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels and thus inducing relaxation. Also, K+ efflux through endothelial KCa channels has been shown to induce relaxation of VSMCs by stimulating inwardly rectifying K+ channels in VSMCs and was therefore proposed to serve as an EDHF.27 In the present study, blocking of endothelial hyperpolarization prevented such an EDHF-mediated vasodilation, thus indicating that activation of endothelial KCa channels is essential for non-NO and nonprostacyclin-mediated vasodilation.
Therefore, in regenerated endothelium, the decreased expression of KCa channels finally results in defective dilation. However, the small extent of remaining and KCa-independent ACh-induced vasodilation also suggests that presumably other mechanisms, such as reduced function of G proteins13 and diminished NO formation,15 are also impaired.
In conclusion, the impaired KCa function could contribute, at least in part, to the severely impaired function of the regenerated endothelium after angioplasty. Moreover, endothelial KCa channels can now be considered a new target for pharmacological treatment or gene therapy to improve vessel function after angioplasty.
| Acknowledgments |
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Received March 9, 2001; accepted May 23, 2001.
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J. M. Strotmann, J. Bauersachs, D. Fraccarollo, M. Kirchengast, P. A. Schnabel, J. Sykora, G. Ertl, and W. Voelker Trauma induced by nontraumatic coronary devices and its impact on vascular reactivity and morphology Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol, December 1, 2002; 283(6): H2356 - H2362. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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