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Hypertension, Vol 13, 256-261, Copyright © 1989 by American Heart Association
G Rinaldi and D Bohr
Aortic rings isolated from normotensive Sprague-Dawley rats (CONT)
exhibited spontaneous tone when the preparations were stretched. After
administering deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA), the rats became
hypertensive, and this spontaneous tone increased remarkably. The
spontaneous tone was dependent on the extracellular calcium concentration.
Incubation with the calcium entry blocker D-600 attenuated the spontaneous
response to a greater degree in rings from DOCA rats than in rings from
CONT rats. Nifedipine relaxed the already developed spontaneous tone.
Removal of the endothelium greatly depressed spontaneous tone, but did not
diminish the contraction caused by norepinephrine. On the basis of our
findings, we conclude that 1) spontaneous tone depends on calcium influx,
presumably through specific stretch-operated membrane channels, 2) these
stretch-dependent channels are blocked by D-600 and nifedipine, 3)
spontaneous tone is enhanced in DOCA hypertension, and 4) the endothelium
appears to act as a receptor for stretch, mediating--at least in part--the
spontaneous contractile response by releasing a constrictor agent.
ARTICLES
Endothelium-mediated spontaneous response in aortic rings of deoxycorticosterone acetate-hypertensive rats
University of Michigan, Department of Physiology, Ann Arbor.
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