Impaired capillary-to-arteriolar electrical signaling after traumatic brain injury

Author:

Mughal Amreen1,Sackheim Adrian M2,Sancho Maria1,Longden Thomas A3,Russell Sheila2,Lockette Warren4,Nelson Mark T15,Freeman Kalev12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacology, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT, USA

2. Department of Surgery, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT, USA

3. Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD, USA

4. Department of Internal Medicine, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, MI, USA

5. Division of Cardiovascular Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK

Abstract

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) acutely impairs dynamic regulation of local cerebral blood flow, but long-term (>72 h) effects on functional hyperemia are unknown. Functional hyperemia depends on capillary endothelial cell inward rectifier potassium channels (Kir2.1) responding to potassium (K+) released during neuronal activity to produce a regenerative, hyperpolarizing electrical signal that propagates from capillaries to dilate upstream penetrating arterioles. We hypothesized that TBI causes widespread disruption of electrical signaling from capillaries-to-arterioles through impairment of Kir2.1 channel function. We randomized mice to TBI or control groups and allowed them to recover for 4 to 7 days post-injury. We measured in vivo cerebral hemodynamics and arteriolar responses to local stimulation of capillaries with 10 mM K+ using multiphoton laser scanning microscopy through a cranial window under urethane and α-chloralose anesthesia. Capillary angio-architecture was not significantly affected following injury. However, K+-induced hyperemia was significantly impaired. Electrophysiology recordings in freshly isolated capillary endothelial cells revealed diminished Ba2+-sensitive Kir2.1 currents, consistent with a reduction in channel function. In pressurized cerebral arteries isolated from TBI mice, K+ failed to elicit the vasodilation seen in controls. We conclude that disruption of endothelial Kir2.1 channel function impairs capillary-to-arteriole electrical signaling, contributing to altered cerebral hemodynamics after TBI.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Clinical Neurology,Neurology

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