Gauthier-Rein K M, Bizub D M, Lombard J H, Rusch N J
Department of Physiology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee 53226, USA.
Am J Physiol. 1997 Mar;272(3 Pt 2):H1462-9. doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.1997.272.3.H1462.
The effect of reduced PO2 on the transmembrane potential and diameter of small cannulated coronary resistance arteries was evaluated by microelectrode and videomicroscopic methods. Bovine coronary resistance arteries (158 +/- 8 microm ID) were cannulated with glass micropipettes and perfused and superfused with physiological salt solution. Lowering the PO2 of the physiological salt solution from 140 +/- 4 to 36 +/- 2 mmHg increased the smooth muscle cell transmembrane potential from -51 +/- 2 to -62 +/- 2 mV in both endothelium-intact and -denuded coronary resistance arteries. This hyperpolarization was blocked by superfusion with the K+-channel blocker glibenclamide (1 microM). However, low PO2 did not significantly dilate either endothelium-intact or -denuded coronary resistance arteries, although superfusion with 1 microM cromakalim, a K+-channel activator, induced a 6-mV hyperpolarization and increased the diameter by 33 +/- 10 microm. These results suggest that reduced PO2 directly hyperpolarizes the vascular smooth muscle of coronary resistance arteries by activation of glibenclamide-sensitive K+ channels, but other nonvascular mechanisms may mediate the vasodilation response to low PO2.