Korean J Physiol Pharmacol.
2001 Feb;5(1):1-8.
Role of gap junctions in the endothelium-dependent hyperpolarization of
vascular smooth muscle cells
- Affiliations
-
- 1Department of Physiology, Nagoya City University Medical School,
Mizuho-ku, Nagoya, Japan. hisuzuki@med.nagoya-cu.ac.jp
Abstract
- Hyperpolarization of arterial smooth muscle by acetylcholine is
considered to be produced by the release of an unidentified chemical
substance, an endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor (EDHF).
Several chemicals have been proposed as the candidate for EDHF.
However, none of them fulfil completely the nature and property of
EDHF. Ultrastructural observation with electron microscope reveals that
in some arteries, gap junctions are formed between endothelial and
smooth muscle cells. In small arterioles, injection of gap junction
permeable dyes into an endothelial cell results in a distribution of
the dye to surrounding cells including smooth muscle cells. These
observations
allow the speculation that myoendothelial gap junctions
may have a functional significance. Simultaneous measurement of the
electrical responses in both endothelial and smooth muscle cells using
the double patch clamp method demonstrates that these two cell types
are indeed electrically coupled, indicating that they behave as a
functional syncytium. The EDHF-induced hyperpolarization is produced by
an activation of Ca2+-sensitive K+-channels that are inhibited by
charybdotoxin and apamin. Agonists that release EDHF increase (Ca2+)i
in endothelial cells but not in smooth muscle cells. Inhibition of gap
junctions with chemical agents abolishes the agonist-induced
hyperpolarization in smooth muscle cells but not in endothelial cells.
All these observations can be explained if EDHF is an electrotonic
signal propagating from endothelium to smooth muscle cells through gap
junctions.