TY - JOUR
T1 - Stimulation history affects vasomotor responses in rat mesenteric arterioles
AU - Hald, Bjørn Olav
AU - Sørensen, Rasmus B.
AU - Sørensen, Preben Graae
AU - Sørensen, Charlotte Mehlin
AU - Jacobsen, Jens Christian Brings
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Resistance vessels regulate blood flow by continuously adjusting activity of the wall smooth muscle cells. These cells integrate a variety of stimuli from blood, endothelium, autonomic nerves, and surrounding tissues. Each stimulus elicits an intracellular signaling cascade that eventually influences activation of the contractile machinery. The characteristic time scale of each cascade and the sharing of specific reactions between cascades provide for complex behavior when a vessel receives multiple stimuli. Here, we apply sequential stimulation with invariant concentrations of vasoconstrictor (norepinephrine/methoxamine) and vasodilator (SNAP/carbacol) to rat mesenteric vessels in the wire myograph to show that (1) time elapsed between addition of two vasoactive drugs and (2) the sequence of addition may significantly affect final force development. Furthermore, force oscillations (vasomotion) often appear upon norepinephrine administration. Using computational modeling in combination with nitric oxide (NO) inhibition/NO addition experiments, we show that (3) amplitude and number of oscillating vessels increase over time, (4) the ability of NO to induce vasomotion depends on whether it is applied before or after norepinephrine, and (5) emergence of vasomotion depends on the prior dynamical state of the system; in simulations, this phenomenon appears as "hysteresis." These findings underscore the time-dependent nature of vascular tone generation which must be considered when evaluating the vasomotor effects of multiple, simultaneous stimuli in vitro or in vivo.
AB - Resistance vessels regulate blood flow by continuously adjusting activity of the wall smooth muscle cells. These cells integrate a variety of stimuli from blood, endothelium, autonomic nerves, and surrounding tissues. Each stimulus elicits an intracellular signaling cascade that eventually influences activation of the contractile machinery. The characteristic time scale of each cascade and the sharing of specific reactions between cascades provide for complex behavior when a vessel receives multiple stimuli. Here, we apply sequential stimulation with invariant concentrations of vasoconstrictor (norepinephrine/methoxamine) and vasodilator (SNAP/carbacol) to rat mesenteric vessels in the wire myograph to show that (1) time elapsed between addition of two vasoactive drugs and (2) the sequence of addition may significantly affect final force development. Furthermore, force oscillations (vasomotion) often appear upon norepinephrine administration. Using computational modeling in combination with nitric oxide (NO) inhibition/NO addition experiments, we show that (3) amplitude and number of oscillating vessels increase over time, (4) the ability of NO to induce vasomotion depends on whether it is applied before or after norepinephrine, and (5) emergence of vasomotion depends on the prior dynamical state of the system; in simulations, this phenomenon appears as "hysteresis." These findings underscore the time-dependent nature of vascular tone generation which must be considered when evaluating the vasomotor effects of multiple, simultaneous stimuli in vitro or in vivo.
KW - Contractile state
KW - Mesenteric artery
KW - Non-linear dynamics
KW - Vasomotion
U2 - 10.1007/s00424-018-2206-0
DO - 10.1007/s00424-018-2206-0
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 30219946
VL - 471
SP - 271
EP - 283
JO - Pflügers Archiv - European Journal of Physiology
JF - Pflügers Archiv - European Journal of Physiology
SN - 0031-6768
IS - 2
ER -