Smooth Muscle Research Group, Libin Cardiovascular Institute and Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada.
Microcirculation. 2010 Apr;17(3):226-36. doi: 10.1111/j.1549-8719.2010.00022.x.
Tissue blood flow is controlled by a branching network of resistance arteries coupled in series and parallel with one another. To alter organ perfusion during periods of elevated metabolic demand, the arterial segments comprising these networks must dilate in a coordinated manner. Gap junctions are intercellular pores that facilitate arterial coordination by enabling electrical stimuli to conduct among and between endothelial and/or smooth muscle cells. Through this novel perspective, readers will be introduced to the vascular communication field, the process of intercellular conduction, and how key cellular properties influence charge flow. This overview will begin with a brief historical review and then introduce two differing theories on how electrical phenomena moves among and between vascular cells. The basis of the "syncytium" and "differential" hypothesis will be critically discussed within a framework of biophysical and experimental observations. This foundational understanding will be used to extend our mechanistic insight of: (i) "local" and "global" blood flow control; and (ii) debilitating disorders such as arterial vasospasm.
组织血液流动由相互串联和并联的阻力动脉分支网络控制。为了在代谢需求增加的时期改变器官灌注,这些网络的动脉段必须以协调的方式扩张。缝隙连接是细胞间的孔隙,通过使电刺激在内皮细胞和/或平滑肌细胞之间和之间传导,促进动脉协调。通过这种新的视角,读者将被引入血管通讯领域、细胞间传导过程以及关键细胞特性如何影响电荷流动。本综述将从简要的历史回顾开始,然后介绍两种关于电现象如何在血管细胞之间传播的不同理论。将在生物物理和实验观察的框架内批判性地讨论“合胞体”和“差异”假说的基础。这种基础理解将用于扩展我们对以下方面的机械洞察力:(i)“局部”和“全局”血流控制;以及(ii)动脉血管痉挛等衰弱性疾病。