Davis Michael J, Davis Ann M, Lane Megan M, Ku Christine W, Gashev Anatoliy A
Department of Medical Pharmacology and Physiology University of Missouri School of Medicine 1 Hospital Dr., Rm. M451 Columbia, MO 65212, USA.
J Physiol. 2009 Jan 15;587(1):165-82. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2008.162438. Epub 2008 Nov 10.
Phasic contractile activity in rat portal vein is more sensitive to the rate of change in length than to absolute length and this response is widely assumed to be a general characteristic of myogenic behaviour for vascular smooth muscle. Previously, we found that rat lymphatic vessels exhibit phasic contractile behaviour similar to that of portal vein. In the present study, we hypothesized that lymphatic muscle would exhibit rate-sensitive contractile responses to stretch. The hypothesis was tested on rat mesenteric lymphatics (90-220 microm, i.d.) using servo-controlled wire- and pressure-myograph systems to enable ramp increases in force or pressure at different rates. Under isometric conditions in wire-myograph preparations, both the amplitude and the frequency of phasic activity were enhanced at more optimal preloads, but superimposed upon this effect were bursts of contractions that occurred only during fast preload ramps. In such cases, the ratio of contraction frequency during the ramp to that at the subsequent plateau (at optimal preload) was > 1. Further, the frequency ratio increased as a function of the preload ramp speed, consistent with a rate-sensitive mechanism. In contrast, the amplitude ratio was < 1 and declined further with higher ramp speeds. Downward preload ramps produced corresponding rate-sensitive inhibition of contraction frequency but not amplitude. Similar findings were obtained in pressurized lymphatics in response to pressure ramps and steps. Our results suggest that lymphatics are sensitive to the rate of change in preload/pressure in a way that is different from portal vein, possibly because the pacemaker for generating electrical activity is rate sensitive but lymphatic muscle is not. The behaviour may be widely present in collecting lymphatic vessels and is probably an important mechanism for rapid adaptation of the lymphatic pump to local vascular occlusion.
大鼠门静脉的阶段性收缩活动对长度变化率比绝对长度更敏感,并且这种反应被广泛认为是血管平滑肌肌源性行为的一个普遍特征。此前,我们发现大鼠淋巴管表现出与门静脉相似的阶段性收缩行为。在本研究中,我们假设淋巴管肌肉对拉伸会表现出速率敏感的收缩反应。使用伺服控制的线式和压力肌动描记系统,以不同速率使力或压力呈斜坡式增加,在大鼠肠系膜淋巴管(内径90 - 220微米)上对该假设进行了测试。在等长条件下的线式肌动描记制备中,在更适宜的预负荷下,阶段性活动的幅度和频率均增强,但在此效应之上叠加了仅在快速预负荷斜坡期间出现的收缩爆发。在这种情况下,斜坡期间的收缩频率与随后平台期(在适宜预负荷下)的收缩频率之比>1。此外,频率比随着预负荷斜坡速度的增加而增加,这与速率敏感机制一致。相比之下,幅度比<1,并且随着斜坡速度的增加进一步下降。向下的预负荷斜坡产生了相应的速率敏感的收缩频率抑制,但幅度不受影响。在加压淋巴管中对压力斜坡和阶跃的反应也得到了类似的结果。我们的结果表明,淋巴管对预负荷/压力变化率的敏感方式与门静脉不同,可能是因为产生电活动的起搏器对速率敏感,而淋巴管肌肉则不然。这种行为可能广泛存在于集合淋巴管中,并且可能是淋巴泵快速适应局部血管阻塞的重要机制。