Viswanathan M, Bose R, Dakshinamurti K
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada.
Am J Hypertens. 1991 Mar;4(3 Pt 1):252-5. doi: 10.1093/ajh/4.3.252.
Moderate pyridoxine deficiency in rats has been shown to induce hypertension, which can be corrected by pyridoxine supplementation. In this study, calcium handling by isolated caudal arteries from pyridoxine-deficient and age-matched control rats was evaluated. We found 45Ca influx into the intracellular compartment to be significantly elevated in deficient rats. This increased influx could be attenuated with nifedipine, a calcium channel blocker, in a dose-dependent manner, suggesting alterations in the calcium channels that would make them leaky. The pyridoxine-deficient arterial segments maintained a higher resting tone; removal of extracellular calcium by EGTA or entry blockade by nifedipine decreased the tone significantly in the deficient arteries, compared with little or no effect in controls.