Articles |
2D-Adrenergic Receptor Contraction of Arteriolar Smooth Muscle and Reversal of Contraction by Hypoxia
From the Department of Physiology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Abstract Evidence in rat skeletal muscle suggests that local
metabolic control of blood flow is facilitated by the reliance on
2D-adrenergic receptors (ARs) for constriction of
arterioles, together with the strong sensitivity of this constriction
to inhibition by hypoxia. The present study examined the role of
ATP-sensitive K+ (KATP) channels in the
selective interaction between
2D-ARs and hypoxia.
Arterioles from rat cremaster muscle that possess both
1D (
1A/D)- and
2D-AR
subtypes were microcannulated, pressurized, and isolated in a tissue
bath for measurement of changes in lumen diameter. Three studies first
examined whether stimulation of
2D- and
1D-ARs involves inhibition of the KATP
channel. Concentration-dependent constriction by the KATP
antagonists glibenclamide (GLB, 0.01 to 10 µmol/L) and disopyramide
(0.001 to 1 mmol/L) were abolished during
2D stimulation
but unaffected during
1D stimulation. Activation of the
KATP channel by cromakalim inhibited
2D
constriction with greater potency than
1D
(EC50, 7.0±0.2 versus 6.3±0.1). Finally, GLB (0.5
µmol/L) abolished dose-dependent
2D constriction,
whereas
1D was unaffected. These data suggest that
2D but not
1D stimulation is
"coupled" with closure of the KATP channel, leading
to depolarization and contraction of vascular smooth muscle. In a
second series, hypoxic (PO2, 6 mm Hg)
inhibition of intrinsic smooth muscle tone was completely reversed by
0.1 µmol/L GLB, concentration-dependent GLB constriction was enhanced
during hypoxia, and hypoxia reversed GLB constriction. These data
confirm reports by others that hypoxia potentiates the activation of
KATP channels, leading to hyperpolarization and relaxation.
Finally, GLB constriction, which was abolished by concomitant
2D stimulation, was completely restored by simultaneous
activation of KATP channels with hypoxia. These findings
suggest that the sensitivity of
2D-AR constriction to
inhibition by hypoxia arises through "antagonistic coupling"
between these two stimuli, by which the
2D-AR inhibits
and hypoxia activates KATP channels.
Key Words:
-adrenergic receptor vascular smooth muscle microcirculation receptor coupling hypoxia
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