Hong Z, Weir E K, Varghese A, Olschewski A
Department of Medicine, VA medical Center and University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
Physiol Res. 2005;54(2):175-84.
At birth, the increase in O(2) tension (pO(2)) is an important cause of the decrease in pulmonary vascular resistance. In adult animals there are impressive interspecies differences in the level of hypoxia required to elicit a pulmonary vasoconstrictor response and in the amplitude of the response. Hypoxic inhibition of some potassium (K(+)) channels in the membrane of pulmonary arterial smooth muscle cells (PASMCs) helps to initiate hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction. To determine the effect of the change in pO(2) on fetal rabbit PASMCs and to investigate possible species-dependent differences, we measured the current-voltage relationship and the resting membrane potential, in PASMCs from fetal resistance arteries using the amphotericin-perforated patch-clamp technique under hypoxic and normoxic conditions. Under hypoxic conditions, the K(+) current in PASMCs was small, and could be inhibited by 4-aminopyridine, iberiotoxin and glibenclamide, reflecting contributions by Kv, K(Ca) and K(ATP) channels. The average resting membrane potential was -44.3+/-1.3 mV (n=29) and could be depolarized by 4-AP (5 mM) and ITX (100 nM) but not by glibenclamide (10 microM). Changing from hypoxia, that mimicked fetal life, to normoxia dramatically increased the K(Ca) and consequently hyperpolarized (-9.3+/-1.7 mV; n=8) fetal rabbit PASMCs. Under normoxic conditions K(+) current was reduced by 4-AP with a significant change in resting membrane potential (11.1+/-1.7 mV; n=8). We conclude that resting membrane potential in fetal rabbit PASMCs under both hypoxic and normoxic conditions depends on both Kv and K(Ca) channels, in contrast to fetal lamb or porcine PASMCs. Potential species differences in the K(+) channels that control resting membrane potential must be taken into consideration in the interpretation of studies of neonatal pulmonary vascular reactivity to changes in O(2) tension.
出生时,氧分压(pO₂)的升高是肺血管阻力降低的重要原因。在成年动物中,引发肺血管收缩反应所需的缺氧水平以及反应幅度存在显著的种间差异。肺动脉平滑肌细胞(PASMCs)膜中某些钾(K⁺)通道的缺氧抑制有助于启动缺氧性肺血管收缩。为了确定pO₂变化对胎兔PASMCs的影响并研究可能的种属依赖性差异,我们在缺氧和常氧条件下,使用两性霉素穿孔膜片钳技术测量了胎兔阻力动脉PASMCs的电流 - 电压关系和静息膜电位。在缺氧条件下,PASMCs中的K⁺电流较小,并且可被4 - 氨基吡啶、iberiotoxin和格列本脲抑制,这反映了Kv、K(Ca)和K(ATP)通道的作用。平均静息膜电位为 - 44.3±1.3 mV(n = 29),可被4 - AP(5 mM)和ITX(100 nM)去极化,但不能被格列本脲(10 μM)去极化。从模拟胎儿生活的缺氧状态转变为常氧状态,显著增加了K(Ca),从而使胎兔PASMCs超极化(-9.3±1.7 mV;n = 8)。在常氧条件下,4 - AP使K⁺电流减少,静息膜电位发生显著变化(11.1±1.7 mV;n = 8)。我们得出结论,与胎羊或猪的PASMCs不同,胎兔PASMCs在缺氧和常氧条件下的静息膜电位均依赖于Kv和K(Ca)通道。在解释新生儿肺血管对氧分压变化的反应性研究时,必须考虑控制静息膜电位的K⁺通道中潜在的种属差异。