Caveolin-1 abolishment attenuates the myogenic response in murine cerebral arteries

Author:

Adebiyi Adebowale,Zhao Guiling,Cheranov Sergey Y.,Ahmed Abu,Jaggar Jonathan H.

Abstract

Intravascular pressure-induced vasoconstriction (the “myogenic response”) is intrinsic to smooth muscle cells, but mechanisms that underlie this response are unresolved. Here we investigated the physiological function of arterial smooth muscle cell caveolae in mediating the myogenic response. Since caveolin-1 (cav-1) ablation abolishes caveolae formation in arterial smooth muscle cells, myogenic mechanisms were compared in cerebral arteries from control (cav-1+/+) and cav-1-deficient (cav-1−/−) mice. At low intravascular pressure (10 mmHg), wall membrane potential, intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i), and myogenic tone were similar in cav-1+/+and cav-1−/−arteries. In contrast, pressure elevations to between 30 and 70 mmHg induced a smaller depolarization, [Ca2+]ielevation, and myogenic response in cav-1−/−arteries. Depolarization induced by 60 mM K+also produced an attenuated [Ca2+]ielevation and constriction in cav-1−/−arteries, whereas extracellular Ca2+removal and diltiazem, an L-type Ca2+channel blocker, similarly dilated cav-1+/+and cav-1−/−arteries. Nω-nitro-l-arginine, an nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, did not restore myogenic tone in cav-1−/−arteries. Iberiotoxin, a selective Ca2+-activated K+(KCa) channel blocker, induced a similar depolarization and constriction in pressurized cav-1+/+and cav-1−/−arteries. Since pressurized cav-1−/−arteries are more hyperpolarized and this effect would reduce KCacurrent, these data suggest that cav-1 ablation leads to functional KCachannel activation, an effect that should contribute to the attenuated myogenic constriction. In summary, data indicate that cav-1 ablation reduces pressure-induced depolarization and depolarization-induced Ca2+influx, and these effects combine to produce a diminished arterial wall [Ca2+]ielevation and constriction.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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